Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City (December 15, 1978 – April 15, 1979) M. H. de Young Memorial Museum, San Francisco, California (June 11–September 30, 1979) After the exhibit left the U.S. it went to: Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, Ontario, Canada (November 1–December 31, 1979)
Nov. 4, 2022, marks the 100th anniversary of the discovery of Tutankhamun’s tomb, and soon the world will be inundated with Tut mania: books, TV programs, museum exhibitions, and even an opera ...
A new digital art experience by the National Geographic Society brings King Tut's story to life in an accessible, immersive way. 'Beyond King Tut' is the new, immersive art experience bringing the ...
A sign above the entrance advertising Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition. Discovery Times Square (also known as Discovery TSX) was an exhibition space at 226 West 44th Street in New York City that opened June 24, 2009 and closed in September 2016. It specialized in traveling exhibitions with 60,000 square feet of exhibition space. [1]
By 2013, more than 25 million people had visited the company's Titanic exhibits in Orlando, Atlanta, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, and elsewhere. [4] In May 2015 the company opened Premier on 5th, [5] a flagship exhibition space on Fifth Avenue in New York City that housed "Saturday Night Live: The Exhibition" [6] and "The Discovery of King Tut."
The creative producer for "Beyond King Tut: The Immersive Experience" says Boston is a natural location for the world premiere of the exhibit.
In 1965, the Tutankhamun exhibit traveled to Tokyo National Museum in Tokyo, Japan (21 August–10 October) [165] where it garnered more visitors than the future New York exhibit in 1979. The exhibit next moved to the Kyoto Municipal Museum of Art in Kyoto (15 October–28 November) [ 165 ] with almost 1.75 million visitors, and then to the ...
Go inside "Beyond King Tut," a new, immersive exhibit about the Egyptian pharaoh Tutankhamun, with the exhibit's creative director as it opens in Boston's South End Friday.