Old and New at Williams College Museum of Art
Williams College Museum of Art occupies half of Lawrence Hall. It's original core is a neoclassical rotunda in an 1846 two-story brick octagon which served as a library. 'Eyes' by Louise Bourgeois were added in 2001 to mark the museum's 75th anniversary.
Williamstown Massachusetts
#williamstown #massachusetts
July 19, 2019
Williamstown is a town in Berkshire County, in the northwest corner of Massachusetts, United States. It shares a border with Vermont to the north and New York to the west. It is part of the Pittsfield, Massachusetts Metropolitan Statistical Area. The population was 7,754 at the 2010 census.[1] A college town, it is home to Williams College, the Clark Art Institute and the Tony-awarded Williamstown Theatre Festival.
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Clark Art Institute ,in Williamstown, Massachusetts, United States.
The Sterling & Francine Clark Art Institute, usually referred to simply as The Clark, is an art museum with a large and varied collection located in Williamstown, Massachusetts, United States. Along with the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art (MassMoCA) and the Williams College Museum of Art (WCMA), it forms a trio of significant art museums and resources in the north of The Berkshires.More info visit
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Williamstown, Massachusetts
Williamstown is a town in Berkshire County, in the northwest corner of Massachusetts. It shares a border with Vermont to the north and New York to the west. It is part of the Pittsfield, Massachusetts Metropolitan Statistical Area. The population was 7,754 at the 2010 census. A college town, it is home to Williams College, the Clark Art Institute and the Tony-awarded Williamstown Theatre Festival, which runs every July and August.
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The Artist in Society: Weaving, Wearing & Removing the Emperor's New Clothes
Robert Conway ’67 – June 10, 2017: Williams College Reunion Weekend, Williamstown, MA
Williamstown Massachusetts
Williamstown Massachusetts Victorian fully renovated and ready to move into. Superbly detailed. Harsch Associates Berkshire Real Estate proudly offers this stately home with exceptional renovation completed by a master craftsman. Call today 413-458-5000 to see this proud lady tomorrow.
748 Petersburg Road, Williamstown, MA Real Estate 01267
William Pitt Sotheby's International Realty takes you on a video tour of 748 Petersburg Road, Williamstown, MA.
Visit the listing agent's page:
This spectacular 200-acre parcel, abutting the Taconic State Park and Williams College's Hopkins Forest, comprises two well-maintained single-family residences---close enough to each other for conviviality, far enough apart for privacy---plus a barn and run-in shed. Totaling 1,128 and 2,145 square feet respectively, each of the houses offers three bedrooms and views of the surrounding landscape. You'll fall in love with the land: fields, woods, hiking trails, pond, streams, and glorious views of three states from various points on the property. These include a southward view toward Williamstown, which is a five-minute drive away. The setting offers total seclusion, along with the cachet and convenience of one of the Berkshire's most vibrant towns, with its restaurants, shops, Williams College and its athletic center and art museum, the Williamstown Theatre Festival, the Clark Art Institute, the Taconic and Waubeek golf courses, and skiing nearby at Jiminy Peak. For the discerning buyer, this is the perfect choice as a year-round home, idyllic getaway, or beautiful location for a new 21st-century estate.
Berkshire Properties for Sale Williamstown MA
Berkshire property for sale in Williamstown MA near Williams College and other venues such as the Williamstown Theater Festival, The Clark Art Institute, and MassMOCA. Offering 3 bedrooms, a huge living area that is open to the kitchen which as barn board cabinetry, wall over, and hardwood floors. A small shingled cottage is on the property also. New roof, new efficient heating system and new windows make this home warm and cozy for the Berkshire winter snow skiing season.
104 Forest Rd. Williamstown Massachusetts Residence for Sale
Just off Bulkley St. in Williamstown, the quiet wooded neighborhood surrounding this home was originally established for Williams College faculty and administrators so who knows, maybe some of that intelligent design may rub off. The cul-de-sac street provides a safe place for young children to learn to ride a bike and the spacious yard will invite play, relaxation and friends. An added attraction is the immediate access for walkers, X-C skiing etc. to the adjacent Hopkins Forest. The superb 3 BR ranch style home offers a handsome, sparkling new granite countertop kitchen, the dining space enjoys a view to the woods and yard and both flow in to the spacious fireplaced living room. The master bedroom has private bath while there is also a full bath in the bedroom wing hallway. The full basement affords additional opportunities for living, storage and recreation. Hardwood floors offer warmth and a sense of quality and the attached two car garage will be a welcome bonus in the coming winter months. Show just how smart you already are and settle in here!
Breaking News | Art and computing collide in pink art, an exploration of color at williams college
Art and computing collide in pink art, an exploration of color at williams college museum of art
Art and computing collide in pink art, an exploration of color at williams college museum of art
WILLIAMSTOWN, MASS. The Williams College Museum of Art debuted Pink Art, an exhibition that unpacks ...
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Art World with Nancy Mathews Marc Simpson, Williams College and Clark Art Institute
A conversation about the Winslow Homer exhibition at the Clark Art Institute during the summer of 2013 with curator, Marc Simpson.
John Singer Sargent: His Nomadic Life and Watercolors, Lecture, Part 1 by Jane M Mason
The lecture was filmed live at the OA Gallery in Kirkwood, MO in 2015. It introduces Sargent's early life, his education, and his approach to watercolor. Sargent (1856-1925) was an American artist who spent most of his life in Europe. Jane M. Mason’s lecture covers some of the unique techniques that Sargent incorporated into his painting style.
This is the first part of a two-part series. In the second part, Jane will examine and explain details on individual watercolor paintings of Sargent.
When you have the opportunity, we encourage you to visit and support the museums that collect and preserve the work of John Singer Sargent.
We have another video that talks about Sargent's watercolors:
CREDITS
FEATURING
Jane M Mason
MUSIC BY
Matt Musselman
PRODUCER
Jane M Mason
CO-PRODUCER
Graham T Mason
PRODUCTION COORDINATOR
Bryan Dressel
DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY
Graham T Mason
EDITED BY
Graham T Mason
SOUND RECORDIST
Moses Davis III
HAIR AND MAKE-UP
Danielle Dutton
PRODUCTION & LOCATION ASSISTANT
John D. Pysarchuk
CONSULTANT
Abby Battis
SPECIAL THANKS
OA Gallery
RESOURCES IN MISSOURI
John Dean
Painter and Former Studio Partner of Jane M. Mason
O’Fallon, MO
Pam and Bill Duggin
Hospitality for the WPD Crew
Des Peres, MO
Lisa Ober
Owner of OA Gallery
Kirkwood, MO
RESOURCES AT HARVARD ART MUSEUMS
Penley Knipe
Philip and Lynn Straus Senior Conservator of Works of Art on Paper and Head of Paper Lab
Miriam Stewart
Curator of the Collection for the Division of European and American Art
MUSEUMS REPRESENTING JOHN SINGER SARGENT’S WORK INCLUDED IN THE FILM
Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY brooklynmuseum.org
Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, MA harvardartmuseums.org
Imperial War Museum, London, England iwm.org.uk
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, MA gardnermuseum.org
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY metmuseum.org
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA mfa.org
The Clark, Williamstown, MA clarkart.edu
REFERENCE BOOK FROM WHICH JANE M. MASON CREATED PAINTINGS AFTER THE WATERCOLOR PAINTINGS OF JOHN SINGER SARGENT
Carl Little, “The Watercolors of John Singer Sargent”, 1999, University of California Press.
ARTISTS WHOSE WORK IS SHOWN AT THE OA GALLERY IN THE FILM
Bo Kim & Hannah Freeman
ADDITIONAL
If you find any of the information or the attributions to be incorrect, please contact Hello at watchingpaintdry.com
The museum images are in order of appearance:
Venetian Canal
Sargent, 1913
Metropolitan Museum of Art
metmuseum.org
Mt. Pilatus,
Sargent Age 14
Metropolitan Museum of Art
metmuseum.org
Matterhorn,
Sargent, Age 14
Harvard Art Museums
harvardartmuseums.org
Woman Sketching
Sargent, Age 14
Metropolitan Museum of Art
metmuseum.org
Drawing studies for Gassed
Study for Gassed: Five studies of legs
Imperial War Museum
iwm.org.uk
Gassed
Sargent, 1919
Imperial War Museum
iwm.org.uk
William Sturgis Bigelow
Sargent, 1917
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
mfa.org
Anna R. Mills
Sargent, 1917
Metropolitan Museum of Art
metmuseum.org
Mme. Pierre Gautreau
Sargent, 1883
Metropolitan Museum of Art
metmuseum.org
Madame Gautreau (Madame X)
Sargent, 1883
Harvard Art Museums
harvardartmuseums.org
Madame X
Sargent, 1883-4
Metropolitan Museum of Art
metmuseum.org
Duchess of Marlborough
Sargent, 1905
Metropolitan Museum of Art
metmuseum.org
Carolus Duran
Sargent, 1879
The Clark
clarkart.edu
Carolus Duran
Unidentified Photographer, 1880
Harvard Art Museums
harvardartmuseums.org
Stream and Rocks
Sargent, 1901-1908
Metropolitan Museum
metmuseum.org
Venetian Canal
Sargent, 1913
Metropolitan Museum
metmuseum.org
After Sargent’s Venetian Canal,
Jane M. Mason
Corfu, Light and Shadows
Sargent, 1908
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
mfa.org
After Sargent’s Corfu, Light and Shadows
Jane M. Mason
Photo of Miriam Stewart, curator of the collection for the Division of European and American Art, Harvard Art Museums, with Jane M. Mason. Photo from the personal collection of Jane M. Mason.
Photo of the brushes Sargent used for oil painting. From the collection of the Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, MA. Photo from the personal collection of Jane M. Mason.
Photo of the watercolor brushes of John Singer Sargent. From the collection of the Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, MA. Photo from the personal collection of Jane M. Mason.
Photo of the watercolor paint of John Singer Sargent. From the collection of the Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, MA. Photo from the personal collection of Jane M. Mason.
Wonder Women in the Arts - Panel featuring Darsie Alexander, Kaywin Feldman, and Pamela Franks
Only one of the nation’s 13 largest museums is run by a woman. Women today are nearing equity in the arts, leading 48 percent of art museums, which is up from 43 percent three years ago. However, a gender gap persists at the largest museums — of those with budgets of $15 million and higher, just 30 percent have female directors. As the budgets grow, the ranks of women thin, with just three women heading the 20 largest-budget institutions in the association.
In this workshop we explored the path women in the arts, particularly in museums, take to the top and the role strategic plans play in moving women leaders along that path.
Meet the Panelists:
Darsie Alexander is the chief curator for the Jewish Museum in NYC. Alexander has been the executive director of the Katonah Museum of Art in Katonah, New York, since 2014. Prior to that, she had been chief curator at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, senior curator at the Baltimore Museum of Art, and a photography curator at the Museum of Modern Art.
Kaywin Feldman has served as the director of the Minneapolis Institute of Art (MIA) since 2008. She has used digital technologies to enhance audience engagement; diversified staff, audience, and board; and strategically acquired major collections and works of art for the collection. She is a past president of both the Association of Art Museum Directors (AAMD) and the American Alliance of Museums (AAM).
Pamela Franks is director of the Williams College Museum of Art in Williamstown, Massachusetts. Franks was previously at the Yale University Art Gallery in New Haven since 2004, and is currently holding the titles of senior deputy director and curator of modern and contemporary art. She also previously worked at the Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas and holds a Ph.D. in art history from the University of Texas at Austin.
OPG is an organizational development consulting firm that believes people and their ability to work together are critical to the success of an organization. Organizations that inspire and empower their employees have a competitive advantage. Simply put, we believe an organization’s success depends on its people.
Strategic Planning: OPG has assisted some of the top museums in the United States in developing a shared vision for their future through our unique strategic planning process. Our previous clients include the Cleveland Museum of Art, Katonah Museum of Art, and Minneapolis Institute of Art.
History of the Clark
In 1950 Sterling and Francine Clark chartered the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute as a home for their extensive art collection. Opened to the public in 1955, the Clark has built upon this extraordinary group of works to become one of the most beloved and respected art museums in the world, known for its intimate galleries and stunning natural environment. One of the few institutions in the United States that combines a public art museum with research and academic programs, including a major art history library, the Clark is now a leading international center for research and discussion on the nature of art and art history. Building upon the founders’ legacy, the Clark completed its master plan for the twenty-first century. This final phase of a transformational campus expansion program adds new facilities to support the growth of museum and academic programs; enhances the visitor experience of the Clark; improves circulation throughout the campus; and creates new levels of environmental sustainability across its 140-acre grounds while maintaining the unique character of its beautiful rural setting.
Intellectual Capital, Cultural Entrepreneurialism: Williams and MASS MoCA
The birth of MASS MoCA (the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art) as an arts incubator and economic engine for North Adams and the Berkshires is at its core a story of creativity, collaboration, and the power of the liberal arts. Photograph of Thomas Krens used with permission of the photographer: David Heald©SRGF, NY
Artist On Artist Lecture - Senga Nengudi on Joan Jonas
Tuesday, May 22, 2018, 6:30 pm
Dia:Chelsea
535 West 22nd Street, 5th Floor
New York City
Senga Nengudi was born in Chicago in 1943. She studied art and dance at California State University, Los Angeles, from 1966 to 1971. Recent solo exhibitions have taken place at Galleries of Contemporary Art at the University of Colorado in Colorado Springs (2015), Lévy Gorvy in New York (2015), Warehouse Gallery at Syracuse University (2012), and Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia (2007). Recent group exhibitions include: Radical Presence: Black Performance in Contemporary Art at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, Grey Art Gallery at New York University, Studio Museum in New York, and Walker Art Center in Minneapolis (2012–15); Blues for Smoke at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York (2012–13); Now Dig This!: Art and Black Los Angeles, 1960–1980 at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, MoMA PS1 in New York, and Williams College Museum of Art in Williamstown, Massachusetts (2011–12); Under the Big Black Sun at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (2011); and Los Angeles Goes Live: Performance Art in Southern California, 1970–1983 at the Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions (2011). Nengudi’s work is in the collections of the Brooklyn Museum in New York, Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh, Hammer Museum, Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, Museum of Modern Art in New York, Studio Museum, and Whitney Museum of American Art. Nengudi lives and works in Colorado Springs.
List 8 Tourist Attractions in Amherst, Massachusetts | Travel to United States
Here, 8 Top Tourist Attractions in Amherst, US State..
There's Emily Dickinson Museum, Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art, Amherst Historical Society And Museum, Beneski Museum of Natural History, Mead Art Museum, Puffers Pond, Mount Norwottuck, Amethyst Brook Conservation Area and more...
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Williamstown Real Estate- Sold Home
Sold Home-Dramatic Post and Beam 3 bedroom, 2.5 baths, large awning covered deck and view of 18 hole Waubeeka Golf Course in Williamstown MA. A top place to retire and to live according to Money Magazine 2007 and one of the top 100 sites to vacation in the world according to National Geographic Traveler Magazine
The Clark Art Institute | Connecting Point | Web Premiere
Situated in Williamstown, MA, The Clark Art Institute opened in 1955, six years after its founders Stirling and Francine Clark first visited the town. This past summer, the Clark re-opened following a $100 million dollar building renovation project that included enhanced landscaping, a reflecting pool, and expanded gallery space. Producer Dave Fraser sat down with the Clarks Director Michael Conforti to learn more.
Retirement Community in the Berkshires of Western Massachusetts CALL 413-458-8371
Retirement Community in the Berkshires of Western Massachusetts
Are you looking for a retirement community in the Berkshires of Western Massachusetts?
Sweetwood of Williamstown located in Western Massachusetts is a retirement community set on 30 beautiful hillside acres in the Berkshires.
Part of a vibrant college town, Sweetwood retirement community in the Berkshires of Western Massachusetts is close to Williams College, the Tony Award-winning Williamstown Theatre Festival, the Clark Art Institute, Tony Award-winning Barrington Stage Company and world-renowned Tanglewood, the summer home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra.
Opened in 1987, Sweetwood retirement community in the Berkshires of Western Massachusetts offers 70 luxury apartments, delicious meals in our comfortable dining room, a busy library, an auditorium for our events, internet access, a fitness center and hiking trails.
If you're looking for a retirement community in the Berkshires of Western Massachusetts call Sweetwood of Williamstown retirement community at 413-458-8371
Or visit us online at
Sweetwood of Williamstown
1611 Cold Spring Road
Williamstown,MA 01267
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Retirement Community in the Berkshires of Western Massachusetts