Visitor Experience Gallery
caseyp1970
afamilytraditiom
rolls
curtises
fortress
Hearts for Art is a project started by the Oakland Museum of California and the Columbus Museum of A
We’re excited to start rolling out some big changes happening here at the Museum as part of an excit
Who better to talk about what it’s like to work with Gaultier than one of his very own muses?
Take a look at the newest episode from New Learning Times, a division of the EdLab at Columbia Unive
Yes, it was a game! The game of senet reflects the belief that the deceased encountered demons on th
Visiting the Brooklyn Museum? Share your new family portraits with us using #mybkm and you may end u
That’s a really funny sketch from New Kingdom Egypt! Though the exact origin of this imagery i
Only one week left to see Georgia O’Keeffe: Living Modern. See it before July 23 and be sure to shar
Visiting the Brooklyn Museum? Share your new family portraits with us using #mybkm and you may end u
Although the seated versus standing poses are not as codified as the hand mudras (specific hand gest
It’s an early 20th century version of Realism. In the 1920s, some artists continued to work in
They are actually both! They express or advertise the artist’s skills, but still lifes also tr
That’s a great question. No there would not have been another layer. It would just have been h
Do you have an Android? We know you love it so much—and guess what?—our ASK Brooklyn Museum app is c
At the heart of our mission, the Brooklyn Museum strives to connect artworks in our diverse permanen
The flatness is primarily due to a lack of training! Most professional painters in the colonies had
The eyes and ears may have been filled with incrustation of precious metals or stones. The ears coul
At the heart of our mission, the Brooklyn Museum strives to connect artworks in our diverse permanen
Pre-Covid-19 #39: As I recall, this visitor had not experienced a sleepsack at that point. Reg
Airplane
Artist Eric N. Mack invites our Brooklyn visitors to move through and experience his site-responsive
Loïs Mailou Jones was associated with the Harlem Renaissance, although she also worked in Paris for
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