Nationalmuseum Gripsholm Castle opens for the season

May 14, 2012 – 1:47 pm |

The Nationalmuseum in Sweden opens Gripsholm Castle fFrom Tuesday 15 May until the end of summer, Gripsholm Castle will be open daily from 10 am – 4 pm. The castle, which is celebrating its 475th anniversary, offers something for everyone – from a floor dedicated to a princess, an 18th-century theatre, an armoury and a prison tower to one of the world’s biggest portrait collections. This year the family tours will start at 1 pm. Nationalmuseum Gripsholm Castle Celebrating its 475th ... Read More

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Hunter Museum and Tennssee Aquarium Present Jellies: Living Art

September 21, 2010 – 2:14 pmNo Comment

Experience some of the best American studio glass as part of the special exhibition Jellies: Living Art. This unusual exhibition, on view at the Tennessee Aquarium, features jellyfish–some of nature’s most ethereal creatures–alongside breathtaking glass sculptures.

Before or after your visit to the Aquarium and Jellies: Living Art, visit the Hunter, where more spectacular glass awaits. The Tennessee Aquarium and Hunter Museum are linked by a walking corridor which leads guests through an outdoor sculpture garden and across a unique glass bridge.

The United States is considered the birthplace of the studio glass movement. Traditionally, glass could only be made in factory settings, however, advances in technology in the mid-20th century allowed individual artists to be involved in all aspects of the process. Today an artist can blow glass alone or with just a small team of assistants.
The artists you will see at the Hunter use glass in different ways – as sculptures, as vessels and as ways to tell stories. Artists in the exhibit include Dale Chihuly, Stephen Rolfe Powell, William Morris, Catharine Newell among others. Over 20 artists are on view in the Hunter’s spectacular glass exhibition. In addition, several videos of the artists at work are available for viewing in the galleries.

Although no animals will reside at the Hunter, art installations at the Museum will extend and complement what visitors experience inside the Jellies exhibit in the Aquarium’s Ocean Journey building.

In the exhibition Jellies: Living Art at the Aquarium, while jellyfish and studio glass may seem like a strange combination, they share many characteristics. These delicate and mysterious creatures of the deep have intrigued people and fueled artistic expression for centuries. Each species has a unique motion, rhythm, color and pattern. Guests will marvel at the way artists like world-renowned Dale Chihuly infuse glass with striking colors and patterns while creating works of art that appear to flow with a graceful motion and rhythm.

Works from Chihuly’s Macchia series will be on display at the Aquarium along with other stunning works from glass masters Stephen Powell, Cork Marcheschi and Thomas Spake.

“We have some interesting works of art to compliment the animal exhibits,” said Jackson Andrews, the Tennessee Aquarium’s director of husbandry and operations. “I believe Aquarium visitors will be surprised and intrigued by the relationship of art and nature found in the exhibit.”

Image: Stephen Rolfe Powell (b. 1951) Giverny Twilight Whipper, 40.25 x 26 x 15, 2008, blown glass, collection of the artist

www.huntermuseum.org

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