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Exhibition logo. Star Wars: Where Science Meets Imagination was a traveling exhibition created by the Museum of Science, Boston, featuring props and costumes used in the Star Wars films, and focusing primarily on the science behind George Lucas' science fiction epic.
The Lucas Museum of Narrative Art is a museum founded by filmmaker George Lucas and his wife, businesswoman Mellody Hobson. [2] Once completed, the museum will hold all forms of visual storytelling, including painting, photography, sculpture, illustration, comic art, performance, and video.
In winter of 2008, there was a special Leonardo da Vinci exhibit (called Leonardo: 500 Years into the Future) that displayed some of his inventions, discoveries, and artwork; it ended January 25, 2009, after a three-week extension. [46] [47] The Tech also hosted Star Wars: Where Science Meets Imagination from October 19, 2013, to March 23, 2014.
It has since been home to many premieres, including the 1977 debut of Star Wars, [4] as well as many private events and three Academy Awards ceremonies. Among the theater's features are the concrete blocks set in the forecourt, which bear the signatures, footprints, and handprints of popular motion picture personalities from the 1920s to the ...
By Don Babwin CHICAGO (AP) - "Star Wars" creator George Lucas has selected Chicago to house his much anticipated museum of art and movie memorabilia, a spokesman for the mayor's office said Tuesday.
An exhibition called Star Wars Launch Bay, featuring exhibits and meet-and-greets was also added. Disney, which bought the Star Wars franchise in 2012, has expressed plans to expand the franchise's presence in all of their theme parks. In 2015, a 14-acre Star Wars-themed land expansion, titled Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge, was announced.
Dolby SoHo is the temporary home of an immersive new (and free to enter) "Star Wars" pop-up currently slated to run through the end of December. In addition to "Rise of Skywalker"-centric features ...
Installation of the work by artist Olafur Eliasson began early this summer and had passersby curious about what was under the big yellow bubble.