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Paintings in the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Pages in category "Collection of the Art Gallery of Ontario" The following 21 pages are in this category, out of 21 total.
The Great Pagoda, Mootoo Alaghur and East Gopurum from Tank, by Linnaeus Tripe (1858), part of the museum's photography collection. In 2019, the Art Gallery of Ontario had a photography collection of 70,000 photographs dating from the 1840s to the present. [91] The photograph collection includes 495 photo albums from the First World War. [91]
The Galeries Ontario / Ontario Galleries (GOG), formerly Ontario Association of Art Galleries / Association Ontarienne des Galeries d’Art (OAAG/AOGA), was established in 1968 to encourage development of public art galleries, art museums, community galleries and related visual arts organizations in Ontario, Canada.
Maia Sutnik joined the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) in 1967 [2] and held many positions at the AGO, including in the Department of Photographic Resources in the 1970s. [3] [4] Through her job, she accumulated resources and gained public support for annual exhibitions of photographs at the AGO; they included work by Robert Bourdeau, Lynne Cohen and others.
Art Gallery of Ontario: Toronto Ontario: 1900 974,736 (2018) [9] The art gallery is the largest provincially-managed art gallery in the country. Its collection includes 98,000 works ranging from the first century to present day, as well as the largest collection of Canadian art. Beaverbrook Art Gallery: Fredericton New Brunswick: 1959 10,333 ...
Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto The Marchesa Casati ( Italian pronunciation: [marˈkeːza kaˈzaːti] ) is a portrait of Luisa Casati by Augustus John , painted in oil on canvas in 1919. It is currently housed in the collection of the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) in Toronto .
Crooks joined the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) as Assistant Curator of Photography in 2017. [7] She curated her first exhibit Free Black North the same year. [2] [6] Featuring photographs from the Archives of Ontario and Brock University's Archives & Special Collections, the exhibit focused on the lives of descents of Black refugees and formally enslaved people from the United States living in ...
Frum was a collector of African art and donated over 80 pieces to the Art Gallery of Ontario, one of the largest in North America; and along with his son-in-law, Howard Sokolowski, built the gallery in which the collection is housed. [2] He later expanded into Renaissance art. [2]