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Megan Hayes is a PhD candidate in the Environmental Sciences, Studies, and Policy program. Hayes helped write the label text for three pieces, Fossil Fuel, Ring of Akule, and The Material Realm: The Deep. You can find them in the On Earth: A Fragile Existence exhibition.
Albert Henry Payne lived and produced his work throughout the 1800s. He created Pilgrims in the Desert via steel engraving. Steel engraving was initially invented for printing banknotes, and was adapted for illustrations in 1820.
Birthday post to László Moholy-Nagy!
László was a Hungarian painter and photographer. As a Bauhaus professor he was an influential person. He believed in the inclusion of technology and industry with art.
#Happybirthday László!
Eleanor Welch's "Our Home Is Here" is currently showing at JSMA through NewArt Northwest Kids.
"The sun illuminates us and gives us life, but lately it has been our enemy. Global warming affects us and our everyday lives."
Sydney Therrell, 7th grade, used watercolor and acrylic to create "The Forest Witch."
"I want people to know that this painting was inspired by the beautiful forests in Oregon. We need to protect them because the forests are a unique habitat that house many animals."
#HungLiu focused with insight and compassion on the forgotten – elevating and imparting dignity and individuality on the poor, the afflicted, and the displaced.
Remember This: Hung Liu at Trillium is on view at the JSMA through August 28, 2022.
“Pop Art looks out into the world. It doesn’t look like a painting of something, it looks like the thing itself.”
Roy Lichtenstein, a leading figure in the #PopArt Movement, was #BornOnThisDay.🎂♏️
[Image: #RoyLichtenstein. Untitled Hand, 1973. Gift of Robert Rauschenberg]
We are deeply saddened to share the terrible news of the passing of Hung Liu, the renowned, Chinese-born American artist whose exhibition Remember This: Hung Liu at Trillium, will open at the JSMA in February 2022.
Read our full statement here: https://t.co/7wAoItA1G3
In honor of #Juneteenth, we are sharing the work Rise by Allison Saar. With one fist raised in a sign of protest, the woman in Saar’s Rise is surrounded by a halo of chisel-marks. Saar was inspired by the Black Lives Matter Movement.
In the late 90's, Belkis Ayón produced a series of prints with unusual circular formats and self-referential themes. These works speak of love stories, narrated in the heartbreaking style of traditional Latin American songs.
Explore the virtual tour: https://t.co/l2g9Xgvs3r