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  1. Light up Your Life with “Electrifying Design”

    Apr 28, 2021 - , and material usage. Each section—Typologies, The Bulb, and Quality of Light—has moments of pure, alchemic wonder as well as works that frame our understanding of the field.” and design at the Dallas Museum of Art: “Electrifying Design: A Century of Lighting brings together over 85 examples of innovative lighting devices from the 1920s to today.

  2. Claude Monet: On Your Screen and in the MFAH Galleries

    Aug 5, 2020 - Often called the “father of Impressionism,” Monet pursued a lifelong passion: to convey the magic of light’s effects on objects, structures, and nature at different times of day. As you enjoy a virtual trip to top museums and famed locations around the world through the summer film series Armchair Travel: “Exhibition on Screen” don’t miss your stop in Europe to visit some of the very spots Claude Monet Katz Foundation; Institute of Museum and Library Services; H-E-B; MD Anderson Cancer Center; Sharon G.

  3. “Houston Chronicle” Top Texas Film Picks

    To celebrate Texas movies, the MFAH and Preview Houston team up for this series showcasing selections from the list of films chosen by Houston Chronicle staffers and readers.  “These are the 50 greatest Texas movies ever.

  4. Beyond Visible: UV-Visible Fluorescence in Works of Art

    Apr 11, 2017 - The top images of these two Ralph Albert Blakelock paintings—Afterglow on the left, Moonlight on the right—are the paintings shown using the new Target-UV tool. UVA light not only produces stunning visual effects, it can also provide valuable insight on an artwork’s structure, history, and more. As you see in the photos below, UVA radiation can increase the visibility of coatings and old repairs.

  5. Top 12 Wintry Works of Art, Selected by MFAH Curatorial Staff

    Dec 13, 2018 - The pink and light green of the silk mount are a reference to the traditional Christmas colors of Japan, which are lighter than our red and green. The smells, sounds, and visual wonders of the city were exaggerated by the cold weather and the city’s limitless festive spirit, making it one of the most wonderful places to be during the holidays. From scenes of ice and snow to objects that signify holiday and entertaining traditions, art at the MFAH shows how cultures around the world reflect on winter.

  6. Meet the Books | “The Gorgeous and the Grotesque: The Illustrations of Edward Gorey”

    March 7, 2024Find out more about the exhibition The Gorgeous and the Grotesque: The Illustrations of Edward Gorey, on view at the Hirsch Library through March 9. Rebekah Boulton, librarian and exhibition coordinator, discusses the macabre book illustrations from the career of renowned author and illustrator Edward Gorey.  Plan Your Visit Admission is free. The Hirsch Library is located on the lower level of the Beck Building. Parking Information | Museum Hours | MFAH Campus Map

  7. Hitchcock Silents

    Bruce Goldstein of the Film Forum hired a group of actors and a sound effects expert and the soundtrack was recreated live at the Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood for the Turner Classic Movie Film Festival in April of 2013. He also began experimenting with visual effects and sly devices such as his own cameo appearances in his films. MFAH members, students with ID, and senior adults receive a $3 discount. Hitchcock Silents are generously underwritten by Salle and James Vaughn, on behalf of The Vaughn Foundation.

  8. The Weird and Wonderful World of Industrial Musicals

    The MFAH film department is supported by Tenaris; The June Leaf and Robert Frank Foundation; the Vaughn Foundation; The Consulate General of the Republic of Korea; Nina and Michael Zilkha; Franci Neely; Carrin Patman and Jim Derrick Welcome to the bonkers alternate universe of industrial musical theater, presented by Letterman and Simpsons writer Steve Young. It’s a secret world of Americana that will astonish, amuse, perplex—and just might make you want to go out and sell, sell, sell!

  9. The Age of Kusama: Pop Art and Minimalism

    The Age of Kusama: Pop Art and Minimalism showcases works on paper created during the 1960s and 1970s, highlighting examples of the period. Kusama became a fixture of the New York avant-garde, exhibiting alongside Andy Warhol and other influential artists of the 1960s. Her evolving style incorporated Surrealism, Minimalism, and Pop Art. After moving to New York City in the late 1950s, she embraced experimentalism and the varied cultural currents of the postwar international art scene.

  10. Miguel Ángel Ríos: On the Edge

    They gently roil around each other, bumping, colliding, and ultimately killing themselves off until only one top is left. The final top stands victorious, if only for a moment—it, too, succumbs to the forces of gravity. The allegory of life and death skillfully and creatively plays out in On the Edge. This 2005 video offers a sense of refinement and control, the allegory pushed up against the classic specter of black and white. The use of multiple cameras allows a seamless interplay of motion—a white top, for example, gliding gracefully in front of a row of black tops in single file.