Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Dixon Gallery and Gardens is an art museum within 17 acres of gardens, established in 1976, and located at 4339 Park Avenue, Memphis, Tennessee, United States.. Sculpture gardens, conservatory, and fountain South Lawn gardens and rear museum facade Sculpture in the Formal Gardens
The showcase is held every October in conjunction with the larger Indie Memphis Film Festival run by Delta Axis. The Creative Directory: Memphis' only comprehensive artist and industry directory for Memphis Music, Film and the Arts. Live From Memphis also host various music, short films, videos, and works of art, all of which are locally produced.
The three murals were commissioned in 1934 by the Public Works of Art Project of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's government, as part of a series of numerous art and public works projects to employ artists and others during the Great Depression. [4] Callicott, who died in 2004, taught at the Memphis College of Art. [5]
The Memphis Brooks Museum of Art has received a donation of 75 significant works — including paintings, drawings, photographs, sculptures and videos — by Black artists, museum officials ...
WPXX-TV (channel 50) is a television station in Memphis, Tennessee, United States, affiliated with Ion Television.Owned by Inyo Broadcast Holdings, WPXX-TV maintains studios and transmitter facilities on Brother Boulevard in Bartlett, Tennessee.
The facility consists of 29 galleries, art classrooms, a print study room with over 4,500 works of art on paper, a research library with over 5,000 volumes, and an auditorium. The collection has over ten thousand works of art, including paintings, sculptures, drawings, prints, photographs, and examples of the decorative arts.
The highlight of the event will be Collierville’s 18-minute fireworks show, one of the largest in the Mid-South, set to a live music performance. When: 6-10 p.m. July 3 Where: H.W. Cox Park, 440 ...
The Belz Museum of Asian and Judaic Art is located at 119 South Main Street at the intersection of Gayoso Avenue in Memphis, Tennessee, USA. The museum was opened in 1998 as the Peabody Place Museum and in January 2007 it received its present name.