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Ward Jackson (September 10, 1928 in Petersburg, Virginia – February 3, 2004) was an American visual artist most closely associated with post painterly abstraction and minimalism, an archivist at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, and the co-founder and editor of the publication "Art Now Gallery Guide".
The Fine Arts museum is facing the Springfield Science Museum; both buildings were designed together as a unit. [5] In 1943, the museum held a mural competition to find an artist to paint a mural in the museum's library, with Honoré Sharrer submitting a design; Sante Graziani ultimately won. [6] Graziani painted his winning mural in 1947. [6]
Barbara Mary Ward Jackson (1914-1981), a British economist and writer on the problems of developing countries Charles Ward-Jackson (1869-1930), a British soldier and Conservative Party politician Ralph Ward Jackson (1806-1880), a British railway promoter, entrepreneur, politician and founder of West Hartlepool
Looking toward the new year, the Springfield Art Museum is preparing for two new exhibitions and a temporary closure starting in the fall. All of the museum's exhibitions will conclude by Sept. 1 ...
Mayor Ken McClure and Springfield Art Museum Director Nick Nelson will talk about construction plans during the museum's Aug. 24 open house.
People wait to work with staff at the Jackson County Assessment office on Friday, March 29, 2024, in Independence, Missouri. What can be done about long lines in Independence?
In 1971 Ward-Jackson was appointed a director of Colnaghi's by Jacob Rothschild, having previously been an expert in the drawings department of Christie's auction house. [9] [1] He studied art in Vienna in the early 1970s as a research assistant at the drawing cabinet of the Albertina. [7] [4] He was the chairman and director of his own firm ...
The George Walter Vincent Smith Art Museum is an art museum in Springfield, Massachusetts. It is the oldest of the five museums on the Quadrangle. The museum is named for the collection's original owner. Smith and his wife, Belle Townsley Smith, bequeathed their notable collection to begin the museum. [1]