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The foundation stone for the original building to house the Queen Victoria Museum & Art Gallery was laid by the Mayor of Launceston, Robert Carter, on 21 June 1887. [2] Alexander Morton, of the museum in Hobart, acted as honorary curator from its opening in 1891 until 1896, [3] with Herbert Hedley Scott assuming the role of curator in May 1897. [4]
Thus, after the Jablonka Gallery in 2002, Hauser & Wirth Gallery in 2006, and Richard Prince's solo exhibition with Gagosian Gallery in 2008, is the Galerie Eva Presenhuber who invested the space of the gallery Patrick Seguin in 2009, then Sadie Coles gallery in 2010, the gallery Massimo de Carlo in 2011, Paula Cooper in 2012, Kurimanzutto in ...
The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia is an art gallery that houses the Australian part of the art collection of the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV).. The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia is located at Federation Square in Melbourne, Victoria; while the gallery's international works are displayed at the NGV International on St Kilda Road.
The Art Gallery of Greater Victoria (AGGV) is an art museum located in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. Situated in Rockland, Victoria, the museum occupies a 2,474.5 square metres (26,635 sq ft) building complex; made up of the Spencer Mansion, and the Exhibition Galleries. The former building component was built in 1889, while the latter ...
Director of the NGV, the English curator Eric Westbrook, was determined to have the new gallery engage with contemporary art and accessible to broader audiences, [8] and he supported curators of the exhibition John Stringer, Exhibitions Officer, and Brian Finemore, Curator of Australian Art, in their aim to showcase contemporary Australian art not previously seen in major institutions, but ...
The Victoria Art Gallery is a public art museum in Bath, Somerset, England. It was opened in 1900 to commemorate the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria. It is a Grade II* listed building and houses over 1,500 objects of art including a collection of oil paintings from British artists dating from 1700 onwards. The ground floor was at one time a ...
In June 2020, the gallery opened a new 70 m 2 space on Avenue Matignon in western Paris. [3] The gallery participated in the FIAC (Foire Internationale d'Art Contemporain) in Paris until it closed in 2022. [4] It also participates in Art Paris, Paris+ by Art Basel, and Asia Now. [5] The Paris gallery welcomes up to 900 visitors daily for ...
Jeu de Paume was used from 1940 to 1944 to store Nazi plunder looted by the regime's Reichsleiter Rosenberg Taskforce (ERR) in France. These works included masterpieces from the collections of French Jewish families like the Rothschilds, the David-Weills, the Bernheims, [4] [5] and noted dealers including Paul Rosenberg who specialised in impressionist and post-impressionist works.