Arts and Entertainment
October 12, 2022
From: Mulvane Art Museum
From First Friday evening hours, to Slow Art lunchtime lectures, and a weekly Art Journaling Meet-up, the Mulvane Art Museum is hosting a series of free programs this fall that allow the public to engage with our artwork, exhibitions, and interactive art spaces.
Stay up to date on our in-person and digital offerings by following us on social media.
Slow Art
BROWN BAG LUNCHES
Wednesday, October 19
12 - 1 pm
First Floor Galleries
Mulvane Art Museum
The Slow Art Experience is a collection of encounters, offered monthly, regarding the principles of slow looking and mindfulness. Education Curator Jonathan Matteson will lead the event, discussing Robert Merrell Gage's Life Mask of Beethoven.
This program series is free and open to the public. Join us in conversation.
Art Journaling
MEET-UP
THURSDAYS
12:30 - 2:30 pm
Room 16, Garvey Fine Arts
This semester, join Monique Robins, MLS, Outreach CEP/ Coordinator, Washburn University College of Arts and Sciences, for weekly art journaling workshops in the Mulvane Art Museum's classroom.
Hurricane Ian claims the Dali Museum’s Wish Tree in St. Petersburg
(Tampa Bay Times)
John Oliver Roasts Museums in Episode on Looted Art (Hyperallergic)
A Disgruntled Tourist Smashed Two 2,000-Year-Old Statues in the Vatican Because He Was Denied a Meeting With Pope Francis (artnet news)
Strike by Philadelphia Museum of Art workers shows woes of 'prestige' jobs (NPR)
Clarisse Madeleine Laurent (American, 1857 - 1940): Pioneering Woman Artist
Clarisse Madeleine Laurent’s story is extraordinary in any context, but it resonates especially now. She was born to a family of French political exiles, forced to flee their home when their government was overthrown and a military dictatorship was installed... READ MORE
If education is the heart of the Mulvane Art Museum, exhibitions are its life-blood. They challenge, inspire, open minds, ignite ideas, and speak to us about the human endeavor. Select exhibitions and museum programs are supported by a National Endowment For The Humanities (NEH) #SHARP Grant.