Modern Art Comes to America: The Armory Show of 1913

Code: AA11011

Dates: November 1-8, 2021

Meets: 9:30 AM to 10:30 AM

Sessions: 2

Location: ONLINE

Course Fee: $49.00

Sorry, we are no longer accepting registrations for this course. Please contact our office to find out if it will be rescheduled, or if alternative classes are available.

When paintings by Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso, and other European modern artists were first seen in the United States at the 69th Street Armory in New York, many artists and critics were enthralled. Others were shocked and dismayed. The public was, for the most part, confused. Learn how the show came to be, its goals, and its importance in the history of American art. You will also be taken on a tour of the exhibition, exploring what you would have seen had you attended.
Fee: $49.00
You could save $10.00 on this course by becoming a member of MLSN Membership

ONLINE

Mariann Smith

Mariann Smith, MA. Prior to moving back to this area, she worked for 26 years in the Education Department--for the last 12 years as curator--in the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, NY, which focuses primarily on modern and contemporary art. Her major responsibilities included docent training; writing, recording, and editing audio tours and video programs; researching and preparing label copy and brochures for exhibitions; presenting lectures on a wide variety of topics; and curating a number of exhibitions. She is the author of Albright-Knox Art Gallery: Highlights of the Collection (2011) and a major contributor to The Long Curve: 150 Years of Visionary Collecting at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery (2011). Since moving back to Chester County, she had a one-year appointment as Curatorial Assistant, Art & Artifacts Dept., Special Collections, Bryn Mawr College, working with the Art and Artifacts staff on collection-based projects, exhibitions, and the museum studies program. She also worked as consultant at the Brandywine River Museum of Art, revising audio tour scripts and preparing exhibition labels. Mariann received her AB in French Studies from Bryn Mawr in 1981 and a Masters in Art History (1986) and Certificate of Museum Practice (1987) from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. She is also currently a consultant for the Center for Humanities in Medicine at the University at Buffalo School of Medicine and Biological Sciences.

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