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Sculpture: A Wyoming InvitationalOngoingSculpture: A Wyoming Invitational is displayed throughout the UW Campus and the city of Laramie. This is an exhibition of large scale work comprised of 17 major works by artists of international, national, and regional reputation.
Now available: Sculpture A Wyoming: Invitational Cell Phone Audio Tour
View the
presentations and speakers from "Public Art and Community:
Inspiration and Reflection - Public Conversation about the
Importance of Public Art in Wyoming's Communities and Campuses," a
symposium held April 2-4 at the UW Conference Center.
Image: Ursula von Rydingsvard, Doolin Doolin, 1995-1997, cedar and graphite, 83 x 212 x 77 in / 210.8 x 538.5 x 195.5 cm, private collection. Installed on the Art Museum's terrace |  >FIND OUT MORE | Artists from France Paintings and Prints from the Art Museum CollectionMay 30, 2009 - Dec. 23, 2010Artists from France: Paintings and Prints from the Art Museum Collection showcases a number of artists who were working in late 19th to mid-20th century France. It was a time of change and development, and Paris was an international art center. Artists flocked to Paris to attend reputable art academies, study under established masters, or simply to gain inspiration. City life was vibrant and artists living in Paris were surrounded by modernization. This time period witnessed the emergence of some of the most influential art movements – including Impressionism, Cubism, Realism and Art Nouveau.
Now available: Artists from France: Paintings and Prints from the Art Museum Collection Cell Phone Audio Tour
Image: Charles-Francois Daubigny (French, 1817-1978/79), Le Lever Du Soleil, Not dated, lithograph, restrike, 5-1/4 x 9-1/8 inches, Anna Hoyt Mavor Collection, University of Wyoming Art Museum Collection, 1973.20 |  >FIND OUT MORE | Ichiro: A Life's Work of Netsuke, The Huey Shelton CollectionSept. 5 - Dec. 23, 2009Inada Ichiro (Japanese, 1891-1979) was an important 20th century netsuke artist. For centuries, the Japanese have used miniature sculptures hung by cords from the sash of their traditional garments such as the kimono to secure personal belongings in small pouches. Intricate and figurative, the netsuke reflect aspects of Japanese life.
Now available: Ichiro: Netsuke, A Life's Work Cell Phone Audio Tour
Image: Inada Ichiro (Japanese, 1891-1977), Standing Farmer Sowing Seed, not dated, Ivory, 1-1/4 x 3/4 x 7/8 inches, Gift of Huey G. and Phyllis T. Shelton, University of Wyoming Art Museum Collection, 2009.5.108 | _lowres.jpg) >FIND OUT MORE | Kwang-Young Chun: Aggregations, new work Sept. 12 - Dec. 23, 2009Kwang-Young Chun (Korean, b. 1944) makes intricate sculpture out of the recycled pages of old Korean books and medicine wrappers printed on mulberry paper. He wraps the handmade paper—inscribed with Korean characters— around thousands of Styrofoam tetrahedrons and other geometric forms that serve as the basic units of his compositions. The forms are then arranged in free-standing three-dimensional sculptures or mounted on the wall as two-dimensional low-reliefs. Image: Kwang-Young Chun, Aggregation 08-AU022, 2008, mixed media, 14 ft x 8 ft diameter, photo courtesy of Aldrich Museum of Art |  >FIND OUT MORE | American Heritage Center Exhibition: In Pursuit of EqualitySeptember 5 - December 23, 2009Curated from the American Heritage Center collection, In Pursuit of Equality tells the story of three women, Nellie Tayloe Ross, Thyra Thomson, and Liz Byrd, who through their actions as elected office holders, challenged and changed the conventional understanding of equality in Wyoming. More specifically, it will look at Ms. Ross' election as Governor, Ms. Thomson's advocacy for the Equal Rights Amendment, and Ms. Byrd's struggle to have Martin Luther King Jr. Day recognized in Wyoming. The exhibition features photographs and three historic documents. It was curated by Matt Francis, Assistant Archivist at the American Heritage Center. Image: Governor Nellie Tayloe Ross, circa 1925. |  >FIND OUT MORE |
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