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The National Gallery of Art is an art museum in Washington, D.C., United States, located on the National Mall, between 3rd and 9th Streets, at Constitution Avenue NW. Open to the public and free of charge, the museum was privately established in 1937 for the American people by a joint resolution of the United States Congress.
Marsha Mateyka Gallery was a fine arts gallery in Washington, DC between 1983 and 2023. [1] The gallery was established in 1983 by art historian Marsha Perry Mateyka. [2] [3] [4] The gallery focused generally on national and regional contemporary artists. The gallery was located at 2012 R Street NW, Washington DC 20009.
Day to Night, The Erarta Museum of Contemporary Art, St. Petersburg, Russia, January 2023 [36] Day to Night, Florida Museum of Photographic Arts, September, 2019 [37] Bird Migration, National Museum of Wildlife Art of The United States, May, 2019 [38] Day to Night: In the Field with Stephen Wilkes, National Geographic Museum, Washington, DC ...
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Kirby's work has been widely exhibited in galleries and museums, including the Whitney Museum of American Art; the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Olympic Museum, Sarajevo; the Pompidou Centre in Paris; Arsenal in Berlin; Manage in St. Petersburg; Portland Museum of Art; the Kennedy Center and the Corcoran Gallery in Washington DC; LACE and MOCA in Los Angeles, the Pacific Film Archive in ...
Erarta is the largest private museum of contemporary art in Russia, located in Saint Petersburg. [1] The museum is combined with the Erarta Galleries.. The name of Erarta Museum is derived from uniting two words, "Era" and "Arta", whose combination can be translated from Russian as "the era of art".
A Petersburg Area Art League visitor checks out the "Around the Block, Ignatius Hats, The Petersburg Years, 2003 - 2022" exhibit in September 2024.
The Watkins Collection included more than 4500 works of art, with an emphasis on art produced in the Washington area since the 1940s. The collection was created in 1945 as a memorial to C. Law Watkins, the former chair of the Department of Art at American University. Originally only 25 works, it has been augmented by later donations. [2]