December 5, 2008  |
World War II Museum Presents - Special Exhibition - Lives Remembered: Photographs of a Small Town September 25, 2008 - January 11, 2009 |
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Location: The National WWII Museum, 945 Magazine Street, New Orleans, LA
Phone: 877-813-3329 x 270
Lives Remembered: Photographs of a Town in Poland 1897-1939 illustrates Jewish life in Europe before the Holocaust through reproductions of more than 100 photographs of the small town of Szczuczyn, Poland. This special exhibition is on loan from the Holocaust Museum Houston. These photographs capture the ordinary lives of the residents during the years leading up to the Nazi invasion. These photographs were taken by Zalman Kaplan in Szczuczyn, where he established a business as the local photographer.Kaplan’s grandson, Michael Marvins, spent years collecting photographs by his grandfather from the descendants of the families that lived in Szczuczyn. The photographs reveal another side of the small Polish town contrary to the often associated images of Orthodox Jews. They show a rich and diverse way of life that was not so different from our own today. This exhibit puts faces on the millions of men, women and children who perished in the Holocaust. The photographs are of ordinary people leading common lives. The exhibit shows what can happen to everyday people when hate and intolerance are allowed to flourish. This glimpse into life before the war shows the people of Szczuczyn as similar to many around the world - enjoying life, advancements in technology and living free of labels or hate. Upon close examination, one must wonder, were their lives so different from our own? The exhibit contains over 100 prints of photographs taken by Zalman Kaplan who was a professional photographer in Szczuczyn, Poland. The Jewish community of Szczuczyn was wiped out by the Holocaust. The images were collected from survivors by Kaplan’s grandson Michael Marvins.
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A Closer Look October 1, 2008 - February 20, 2009 |
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Times: 9:30 am - 4:30 pm
www.hnoc.org
Location: The Historic New Orleans Collection, 533 Royal
Phone: (504) 523-4662
Admission: free
Through February 20, 2009, The Historic New Orleans Collection presents an exhibition of the earliest-known paper photographs of New Orleans in The Collection’s Williams Gallery. A Closer Look: The Antebellum Photographs of Jay Dearborn Edwards, 1858–1861 features three dozen images of a thriving southern city on the brink of the Civil War.
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Lunch at Dickie Brennan's Steakhouse is Back October 8, 2008 - December 31, 2010 |
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Times: Wednesday-Friday 11:30am - 2:30pm
http://www.dickiebrennanssteakhouse.com
Location: Dickie Brennan's Steakhouse - 716 Iberville Street
Phone: (504) 522-2467
Want a preview of the lunch menu? Guest favorites like the Prime Bacon Cheeseburger and the Tomato-Bleu Cheese Napoleon are back. And the cooler weather is a perfect excuse to try one of the new additions to the menu; our Chef's Prime Rib Chili yes, it's made with slow-roasted prime rib! Come join us in the bar, where Gerry, a fixture at the Steakhouse since we opened nearly 10 years ago, will be serving her guests. The more casual bar offers the full menu, and four high definition televisions. In the mood for a libation at lunch? Treat yourself to a $5 Grey Goose martini with 'dividends' kept chilled in a glass beaker. Not in the mood for a martini? Try a Bloody Bull - our version of the Bloody Mary, enhanced with housemade beef bouillon-also only $5 at lunch. These drink specials are available in the main dining room as well. Stop by and visit us soon!
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New Orleans Muesum of Art Free Admission November 1, 2008 - January 18, 2009 |
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Times: Wednesday noon - 8:00 pm; Thursday through Sunday 10:00 am - 5:00 pm
Location: The New Orleans Museum of Art, One Collins Diboll Cir. in City Park
Phone: (504) 659-4100
Admission: Free
The New Orleans Museum of Art will offer free admission to all through January 18, 2009. The dates of the free admittance offer, which began November 1, coincide with both Prospect.1 New Orleans, the international contemporary art biennial which is free at all of its 25 venues throughout the city, and Objects of Desire: Fabergé from the Hodges Family Collection, an exhibition of 108 precious objects by famed master jeweler Peter Carl Fabergé.
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Nine Artists to Exhibit at NOMA During Prospect.1 New Orleans November 1, 2008 - January 18, 2009 |
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http://www.noma.org
Location: The New Orleans Museum of Art, One Collins Diboll Cir. in City Park
Phone: (504) 659-4100
For 11 weeks, the New Orleans Museum of Art will showcase works by nine artists, from international superstars to locally based legends, as part of Prospect.1 New Orleans, the largest contemporary art biennial ever held in the United States. Prospect.1 New Orleans will feature 81 artists at 25 venues throughout the city. The artists whose work will be on view at the New Orleans Museum of Art and the adjacent City Park grounds are Monica Bonvicini, Willie Birch, Kalup Linzy, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, Victor Harris and the Fi Yi Yi, Jorge Macchi and Edgardo Rudnitzky, Kaz Oshiro, Xu Bing and Paul Villinski.
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Prospect 1 New Orleans November 1, 2008 - January 18, 2009 |
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http://www.prospectneworleans.org
Location: New Orleans Museum of Art and 19 other venues throughout New Orleans
Prospect.1 New Orleans will be the largest international exhibition of contemporary art ever presented in the United States, showcasing the work of 75 artists from around the globe while establishing New Orleans as a major center for contemporary visual art exhibitions.
The exhibition plan for Prospect.1 New Orleans calls for a total of 100,000 square feet of exhibition space, divided among several buildings in various historic New Orleans neighborhoods, including the Warehouse District, the Bywater, French Quarter, the Marigny, and the Treme.
A number of existing institutions and halls – CAC, NOMA, the Ogden -- will be used, along with converted warehouses, commercial structures and other public spaces in the city. Among the artists who have accepted the invitation to participate in Prospect.1 New Orleans are artists from the U.S. (including, naturally, artists from New Orleans and Louisiana), South Africa, Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, France, U.K., Spain, Japan, So. Korea, China, India, Iran, Italy, Germany, and Kenya.
The director and curator of Prospect.1 New Orleans is Dan Cameron, an international New York-based curator who was inspired to organize an exhibition in New Orleans shortly after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. From 1995 to 2006, Cameron was Senior Curator at the New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York, and is also widely known for such international surveys as Cocido y Crudo (Madrid, 1994); Poetic Justice: 8th Istanbul Biennial (2003); and Dirty Yoga: 5th Taipei Biennial (2006). He is also a frequent visitor to New Orleans since the late 1980s, and he organized the 1995 New Orleans Triennial for the New Orleans Museum of Art. In May 2007 Cameron took on the position of Visual Arts Director at the New Orleans Contemporary Arts Center (CAC), one of the leading venues for new art in the South, and a principal venue for Prospect.1 New Orleans.
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Prospect 1 New Orleans Installation by Rosângela Rennó (b. 1962, Belo Horizonte, Brazil) November 1, 2008 - January 17, 2009 |
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Times: Tuesday - Saturday 9:30 am - 4:30 pm
Location: Brulatour Courtyard, 520 Royal Street
Phone: (504) 523-4662
Prospect1 New Orleans Installation by Rosângela Rennó (b. 1962, Belo Horizonte, Brazil) Prospect.1 New Orleans, the largest biennial of international contemporary art ever organized in the United States, will open to the public in museums, historic buildings, and found sites throughout New Orleans. Prospect.1 New Orleans [P.1] has been conceived in the tradition of the great international biennials, and will showcase new artistic practices as well as an array of programs benefiting the local community. The Historic New Orleans Collection is pleased to host Rosângela Rennó in the historic Brulatour Courtyard at 520 Royal Street. Ms. Rennó lives and works in Rio de Janeiro. She has become known for her archival approach to photography and video, collecting anonymous portraits and other found photographs. Through her found visual data, she brings the lives of strangers to attention, and comments on the fragility of individual lives within a society. Rennó graduated in Architecture and Visual Arts in Belo Horizonte and went on to earn a doctorate from the University of São Paulo. She has had solo shows in institutions around the globe, among them, The Appel Foundation, Amsterdam (1995); the Museum of Contemporary art, Los Angeles (1996), the Museo do Chiado, Lisbon (2000), Centro Cultural Bando do Brasil, Rio de Janeiro (2003); the Festival d’Automne, Paris (2005); and most recently at the Museu de Arte Moderna Aloisio Magalhães, Recife, Brasil. She has participated in international group shows such as Aperto, Venice (1993); the São Paulo Biennial; Cocido y Crudo at the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid (1994); and represented Brazil, together with Beatriz Milhazes, at the Venice Biennale (2003).
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The Dutch Alley Artist Co-op November 1, 2008 - January 18, 2009 |
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Times: 10am - 6pm
http://www.neworleansthanksyou.com
Location: The Dutch Alley Artist Co-op, 912 North Peters
Phone: (504)412-9220
The Dutch Alley Artist Co-op and New Orleans Thanks You have teamed up to present and exhibition of artwork expressing thanks for the help received since Hurricane Katrina. "Draw, Design and Donate" is the title of the show. The artwork will be on display and available for purchase at the Dutch Alley Artist Co-op throughout the Propsect 1 Art Biennial. Participating artist are supporting the recovery effort by donating a portion of their proceeds to "River of Hope". River of Hope is a Minnesota based non-profit that has been helping with the recovery effort in the 9th Ward.
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Downtown Development District Welcome Center at Prospect 1 November 5, 2008 - January 18, 2009 |
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Times: Wednesday - Sunday 11:00 am - 6:00 pm
Location: 851 Magazine Street in the former Hefler Warehouse
Phone: (504) 715-3968 or (504) 613-8600
As Prospect.1 New Orleans, the largest biennial of international contemporary art in the United States, opens to the public in museums, historic buildings and found sites throughout the city, one old warehouse will serve as the initial greeting point for all visitors. Located at 851 Magazine Street in the former Hefler Warehouse, the official P.1 Welcome Center was& made possible through a collaboration between the Downtown Development District, local architecture studio Eskew+Dumez+Ripple and gallery owner Jonathan Ferrara. The welcome center’s cutting edge design is in keeping with the premise of the Prospect.1 exhibition. Surrounded by pieces from the P.1 exhibition, as well as another exhibition curated by Ferrara, the welcome center will serve as the point of respite and direction for the biennial visitors and the media, according to DDD President & CEO Kurt Weigle. The idea developed from the DDD’s desire to familiarize guests with other attractions and opportunities during their visit to the city.
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New Orleans Museum of Art Presents Objects Of Desire: Fabergé from the Hodges Family Collection November 9, 2008 - January 18, 2009 |
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Times: Wednesday Noon until 8:00 p.m; Thursday-Sunday 10:00am - 5:00pm
Location: New Orleans Museum of Art, 1 Collins Diboll Circle
Phone: (504) 658-4100 or (504) 488-2631
This winter, the New Orleans Museum of Art presents OBJECTS OF DESIRE: Fabergé from the Hodges Family Collection --featuring sculpture, jewels, smoking accessories, scientific instruments and other precious objects by Peter Carl Fabergé. The opening of this major exhibition, featuring several pieces never before exhibited publicly in the United States, will coincide with the Forty-Third Odyssey Ball, the Museum's lavish annual gala, a perennial highlight of the New Orleans social calendar. The Hodges Family Fabergé Collection currently includes 106 diversified objects, a number that continues to grow as Louisiana resident D. Lee Hodges amasses one of this country's premier groups of Fabergé masterworks.
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New Orleans Museum of Art Presents - Photography and Depression November 19, 2008 - March 1, 2009 |
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Times: Wednesday Noon until 8:00 p.m; Thursday-Sunday 10:00am - 5:00pm
http://www.noma.org
Location: The New Orleans Museum of Art, One Collins Diboll Cir. in City Park
Phone: (504) 488-2631
The New Orleans Museum of Art presents Photography and Depression, an examination of depression in all its forms, including mental and financial, through 82 works from the Museum's permanent collection.Featured artists represent a who's who of photography, including Ansel Adams, William Eggleston, Walker Evans, Andrew Feininger, Lewis Hine, Dorothea Lange, Danny Lyon, Eadweard Muybridge, George Tice, Alfred Steiglitz, Weegee and many more. The works are accompanied by text excerpted from Culture and Depression, a 1985 book by Dr. Arthur M. Kleinman, the distinguished professor, psychiatrist, medical and social anthropologist based at Harvard University. Photography and Depression, the second exhibition in the museological series at NOMA, is a journey--or, as Brian Eno suggested in 1975, an "oblique strategy"--that began as a reaction to the notion of mania in contemporary art. Underneath the frivolity of contemporary art and fashion, one can quickly locate various types of psychological disorders that often lead to cataclysm, economic breakdown or illness. The works chosen were felt to be the most relevant to our present day. "It might have been more expedient to use the nineteenth-century term melancholia, rather than depression," said Diego Cortez, NOMA's Freeman Family Curator of Photography, "but it was felt that the latter term--a more twentieth-century disorder and phenomenon--most accurately described our modern and contemporary society." The history of photography, like that of the twentieth century, has an underlying thread of depression-economic, psychological, and destructive trends in society. These prints document all three facets. The exhibition employs the ideas of Dr. Arthur M. Kleinman, who has led a revolt against his own profession by calling for a broader, more cross-cultural understanding of depressive disorders-one which can encompass widely divergent cultural behaviors, rituals, and beliefs. Excerpts from Kleinman's 1985 book Culture and Depression, edited with Byron J. Good, juxtapose images of the last 150 years, helping to expose some of the underlying subtexts of society's sociological, psychological or anthropological collective attitudes.
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The New Orleans Museum of Art Workshop on African-American Art/Cox Art Contest December 3, 2008 - May 31, 2009 |
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Times: Wednesday Noon - 8:00 pm; Thursday - Sunday, 10:00 am - 5:00 pm; Closed Mondays and Tuesdays and all legal holidays
http://www.noma.org
Location: The New Orleans Museum of Art, One Collins Diboll Cir. in City Park
Phone: (504) 658-4128
Come join us for Sources of Inspiration African-American Art in the New Orleans Museum of Art. Artwork by African-American artists has long been part of the New Orleans Museum of Art's permanent collection. In an effort to familiarize viewers with this imagery, NOMA has created a self-guided tour through the permanent collection entitled Sources of Inspiration: African-American Art in the New Orleans Museum of Art that will be available to all visitors on December 2, 2008, through May of 2009.
These featured works will be the subject of an Educator's Workshop, held at NOMA on opening night, as well as the basis of a new online resource, intended to guide both educators and visitors to a deeper understanding of African-American art within the context of American art, history and culture. Ranging from the Romantic style of the early twentieth-century painter Henry O. Tanner to the abstraction of Lonnie Holley, this collection of paintings, sculpture, and works on paper span nearly a century of American art history. Included in this tour are the works of such renowned national and local artists as Romare Bearden, Elizabeth Catlett, Jacob Lawrence, Sam Gilliam, as well as local artists John T. Scott and Willie Birch. These artists highlight twentieth- and twenty-first-century issues, such as slavery, family life, work, notable figures, culture, the energy of city life, and local architecture as visible topics of discussion.
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