Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Museo Rufino Tamayo is a public contemporary art museum located in Mexico City's Chapultepec Park, that produces contemporary art exhibitions, using its collection of modern and contemporary art, as well as artworks from the collection of its founder, the artist Rufino Tamayo. The museum building was designed by Mexican architects Teodoro ...
The Tamayo Contemporary Art Museum (Museo Tamayo de Arte Contemporáneo), located on Mexico City's Paseo de la Reforma boulevard where it crosses Chapultepec Park, was opened in 1981 as a repository for the collections that Rufino Tamayo and his wife acquired during their lifetimes, and ultimately donated to the nation.
The Museo Rufino Tamayo, dedicated to the Mexican artist of the same name, may refer to: Museo Rufino Tamayo, Mexico City; Museo Rufino Tamayo, Oaxaca
The museum contains collections of pre-Columbian art once owned by artist Rufino Tamayo. [1] It is housed in a colonial-style building. The displays are arranged according to aesthetic themes. One of the chief purposes of Tamayo and the museum was to collect the historic pieces, and to protect them from entering the illegal artifact traders market.
1.3 Baja California Sur. 1.4 Campeche. ... The Rufino Tamayo Museum [69] ... Rufino Tamayo Museum (Museum of Prehispanic Art)
Day and Night (Spanish: Día y noche) is a mural by Rufino Tamayo, painted using Vinylite resin on canvas and mounted on particleboard.As well as Still Life, it was originally created for the perfumes and pharmacy section of the Sanborns store on Lafragua Street in Mexico City. [2]
Contemporary art museums around the world specialize in collecting and ... Museo Rufino Tamayo, ... California; Pérez Art Museum Miami, Miami, Florida; P.S. 1 ...
Wolski's work is predominantly sculpture.Some of the projects he has undertaken in Mexico include; the sculpture "Infinity Chains" at the entrance of the Rufino Tamayo Museum, the series of works created for the Four Seasons Hotel in Punta Mita, and the Stelae arranged at Álvaro Obregón (at the exit of Metro Zapata) in Mexico City.