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Yasuo Kuniyoshi, "I'm Tired," 1938 @whitneymuseum https://t.co/bUInBnXqBb
#OnThisDay—Juneteenth—in 1936, the Hall of Negro Life at the Texas Centennial Exposition was officially dedicated. Among the artworks it featured were four murals by Aaron Douglas, including "Aspiration," now @deyoungmuseum
As art historian Robert Lubar has argued, Picasso's iconic portrait of Gertrude Stein @metmuseum is informed by Stein's own challenge to heterosexual norms and gender codes https://t.co/T1TtytSVk2
David Alfaro Siqueiros's painting that turns three ordinary squash into a grouping of quasi-monumental forms
A small but captivating watercolor tondo of a man harvesting rice, in a @MUNALmx exhibition devoted to the importance of food and agriculture in Mexican art
Currently semi-obsessed with this cat thinking deeply about the meaning of life in 18th century painting of St. Joseph from Museo Internacional del Barroco in Puebla @PueblaMuseos @VisitaPuebla
Just incredible to take in these extremely well preserved and vibrantly colored mural paintings at archaeological site of Cacaxtla in Mexican state of Tlaxcala
My research allowed me to consider a largely overlooked subject: the iconography of vaccination. After British physician Edward Jenner started vaccinating people in late 18th century, artists produced numerous depictions of his discovery, including a painting shown at Paris Salon
Taking a tiny bit of solace this afternoon in a few of Ruth Asawa's achingly beautiful works on paper: Poppy, 1965 @MCASD