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The Art Gallery of Peterborough is a free admission, non-profit public art gallery in Peterborough, Ontario, Canada. A registered charity that depends on the support of its members, it was founded in 1974 by an independent board of volunteers.
Admission is $10 at the door and $8 pre-sale at the Canton Museum of Art. For ticket information, call 330-453-7666 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays. Ages 12 and younger are admitted free.
Applicants for Admission to the Casual Ward at Saint Martin in the Fields, smaller version held by the Tate Gallery, 22.5 by 37 inches (57 cm × 94 cm), after 1908 Applicants for Admission to a Casual Ward is an 1874 oil painting by British painter Luke Fildes , a key work in nineteenth-century British social realism.
The gallery was created to provide a permanent building as the core space for the second Yorkshire Fine Art and Industrial Exhibition of 1879, the first in 1866 having occupied a temporary chalet in the grounds of Bootham Asylum. The 1866 exhibition, which ran from 24 July to 31 October 1866 was attended by over 400,000 people and yielded a net ...
MAM's Yard School of Art is a regional art school offering an array of classes for children, youth, adults, seniors, and professional artists. [1] In the summer of 2014, MAM launched a new community outreach program called the Art Truck, using an ice cream truck refurbished with funds from a grant from the Partners for Health Foundation.
The Gallerie dell'Accademia is a museum gallery of pre-19th-century art in Venice, northern Italy.It is housed in the Scuola della Carità on the south bank of the Grand Canal, within the sestiere of Dorsoduro.
Larry Gagosian opened his first gallery in Los Angeles in 1980, [1] showing the work of young contemporary artists such as Eric Fischl and Jean-Michel Basquiat. The business expanded from Los Angeles to New York: In 1989, a new, spacious gallery opened on the Upper East Side of Manhattan at 980 Madison Avenue, with the inaugural exhibition "The Maps of Jasper Johns".
The design, by Boston architect E. Vernor Johnson (1937-2017, museum specialist), [14] featured a copper-roofed entry walkway; reception; gift shop; administrative offices; classrooms; a 240-seat auditorium; 6,600 sf of gallery space; a 4,800 square-foot double-height atrium with skylights and live trees; exhibit support facilities, the latter ...