Showing posts with label museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label museum. Show all posts

Thursday, April 12, 2007

Free Day

Feeling full of energy when we arrived late, yesterday afternoon, we decided to do all the booth setup at once. Because we did, we got to sleep in late and do a little sight-seeing today. Last year, we visited the American Association of Woodturners exhibit, Tops, Boxes, and Treenware. We enjoyed it so much, we wanted to visit again. The potter’s wheel and the lathe both function in a very similar way, and the current exhibit, Open/Closed, a collaborative effort between the American Association of Woodturners and the Northern Clay Center, highlights those similarities, as well as the differences, between the two techniques. Several of my favorite turner/carvers had work in the show, but I only managed a detail photograph of Jacques Vesery's dish with eggs and feather.

Next stop was the Minneapolis Institute of Arts. I loved the red branches of the Red Twig Dogwood at the entrance.


Mostly, we just wandered around. I particularly liked these baskets. The museum is very nice about letting one photograph items in their permanent collection.

Tuesday, April 3, 2007

Running Errands


Union Terminal, formerly a train station, now housing the city's Museum of Natural History & Science, History Museum, Omnimax Theater, and Children's Museum.

The kids at the vet. Only one is mine. The other is a friend's border collie/chow mix and the sweetest girl you could ever hope to find.

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

The Rocky Steps & Other Philadelphia Sights

The Rocky Steps started it all. This is the name given to the front steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. I learned about them when I came across an article on a book written about the people who climbed them. They are well known for the role they played in a famous scene in the film Rocky, in which the fighter, played by Sylvester Stallone, runs up the steps to the accompaniment of the song, "Gonna Fly Now." Visitors to the museum can often be seen mimicking Rocky's famous run up the front steps. I did not plan to run up the steps but I was hoping I would see others do so ... and, oh yes, tour the museum as well. I was not disappointed.

Looking up the address of the museum, I saw that the Rodin Museum was nearby. We decided to add this to our itinerary. But, before starting out, we stopped for lunch. Since I like dogs, The White Dog Cafe already had my "let's try" approval. Loved the doggie lamp and all the doggie paintings on the walls.


The Rodin Museum was the gift of movie theater magnate Jules Mastbaum (American, 1872–1926) to the city of Philadelphia. Mastbaum began collecting works by Rodin in 1923 with the intent of founding a museum to enrich the lives of his fellow citizens. Just three years later, he had assembled the largest collection of Rodin's works outside Paris.

This was the first time I had seen Rodin's work in person and it was a wonderful experience. It's difficult to explain the emotional impact of being face to face with work that one has only seen in books. Just as we were leaving we had the added pleasure of listening to this docent give her lecture on Rodin. She was so well-informed and entertaining, that we re-toured the museum with her.

Next stop, the "steps." This is what I found at the top of them. It was an interesting feeling stepping onto Rocky's footprints and no, I did not do the dance, but I saw a few who did.

When I was studying art history in college, I learned that those lightly veined white marble Greek statues that appear in every history of art book were painted. Maybe they looked like the statues in this frieze at the PMA?

On our way back to our hotel room, we passed an arched entrance to a school. It's the first time I have seen Michelangelo's name split in two and the first part spelled Michael, not Michel.

Thursday, February 22, 2007

Show Setup/American Visionary Museum


Yesterday was a travel day with my boss to Baltimore, Maryland for the American Craft Council Show. Today was setup. Here's a not very glamorous behind the scenes view of the dock area and the contents of our truck which needed unloading.

A must-see if you are ever in Baltimore, is the American Visionary Art Museum. We planned our day well and spent a good part of it there. We especially liked the exhibit of mechanical toys and automata. Paul Spooner was a favorite. He
re's a page that shows one of his creations in action. To learn about other mechanical sculpture artists and see more figures in action, visit the Cabaret mechanical Theatre site.