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Museums, Art Galleries, Aquariums, and Planetariums

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Museums, Art Galleries, Aquariums, and Planetariums
« on: August 13, 2024, 10:52:08 AM »
Field Museum - Chicago Natural History Museum - Full Walkthrough - Walking Tour - Relaxing - 4K




Exploring the Chicago Field Museum


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Re: Museums, Art Galleries, Aquariums, and Planetariums
« Reply #1 on: August 13, 2024, 10:54:45 AM »
Museum of Science and Industry Chicago Tour & Review




Full Tour of the Museum of Science and Industry - Museum Access | Full Episode


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Re: Museums, Art Galleries, Aquariums, and Planetariums
« Reply #2 on: August 13, 2024, 10:57:19 AM »
CHICAGO Walking Tour - The Art Institute of Chicago, Downtown Chicago | 4k 60fps




Art Institute of Chicago: Top Attractions | Cinematic tour


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Re: Museums, Art Galleries, Aquariums, and Planetariums
« Reply #3 on: August 13, 2024, 10:59:56 AM »
Diving Into Chicago's Shedd Aquarium // One of the World's Largest Aquariums!




xploring the Shedd Aquarium: A Must-Visit in Chicago Illinois


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Re: Museums, Art Galleries, Aquariums, and Planetariums
« Reply #4 on: August 13, 2024, 11:02:34 AM »
Adler Planetarium Tour - Chicago, Illinois




AMAZING ASTRONOMICAL VISIT to The Adler Planetarium | Things to Do in Chicago


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Re: Museums, Art Galleries, Aquariums, and Planetariums
« Reply #5 on: August 13, 2024, 11:07:40 AM »
Cernan Earth and Space Center Triton College
Tour of the Cernan Earth and Space Museum




Here is a quick tour of the Triton College Cernan Earth and Space Center.  A hidden Gem on the west side of Chicago, a few miles from where the last man to make footprints on the Moon was born and raised.

We go over some of the NASA Artifacts from the Gemini and Apollo Programs. We also show how to use the camera function of your smart device to access the actual NASA documents used to train the Apollo and Gemini Astronauts. Original NASA information has been digitized for visitors to dig deep into the operation of the artifacts.



LOVE THEIR SATURDAY NIGHT LASER LIGHT SHOWS!!!

https://www.triton.edu/campus/cernan-center/cosmic-light-shows/




Queen Bohemian Rhapsody - Laser Light show




Pink Floyd "Time" Laser show, Laser Pictures




U2. Pulzar Lasershow











« Last Edit: August 13, 2024, 11:32:06 AM by droidrage »

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Re: Museums, Art Galleries, Aquariums, and Planetariums
« Reply #6 on: August 13, 2024, 11:38:42 AM »
A Day at the Arizona Sonora Desert Museum!




Tucson's Arizona-Sonoran Desert Museum




ARIZONA-SONORA DESERT MUSEUM | Tucson, Arizona | 2022 Tour


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Re: Museums, Art Galleries, Aquariums, and Planetariums
« Reply #7 on: August 13, 2024, 11:43:19 AM »
Monterey Bay Aquarium | FULL TOUR




The Monterey Bay Aquarium in Monterey, California




Amazing Monterey Bay Aquarium in California


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Re: Museums, Art Galleries, Aquariums, and Planetariums
« Reply #8 on: August 13, 2024, 12:13:45 PM »
Night At The Museum Trailer (2006)




Night At The Museum: Secret Of The Tomb [Official Theatrical Trailer in HD (1080p)]


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Re: Museums, Art Galleries, Aquariums, and Planetariums
« Reply #9 on: August 13, 2024, 12:21:10 PM »
Smithsonian Natural History Museum Tour - Washington, DC




Washington DC's Smithsonian Museum of American History (Full Tour)




Natural History Museum (New Dinosaur Exhibit) Walking Tour in 4K -- Washington, D.C.




Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum Washington DC Full Tour 2024


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Re: Museums, Art Galleries, Aquariums, and Planetariums
« Reply #10 on: September 28, 2024, 02:00:55 AM »
Pima Air and Space Museum, Davis-Monthan Boneyard




Why Thousands of Aircraft are Abandoned in the Arizona Desert




The World's Largest Airplane Boneyard Stores 3,100 Aircraft | Big Business




The Boneyard: Where Aircrafts Go to Die




The Davis Monthan - Aircraft Boneyard




Abandoned Planes - Air Force Boneyard 2024 - Davis-Monthan Air Force Base - Guided Tour by Drone


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Re: Museums, Art Galleries, Aquariums, and Planetariums
« Reply #11 on: September 28, 2024, 02:08:02 AM »
KITT PEAK IS BACK! | TUCSON ASTRONOMY




Walking the Grounds at Kitt Peak Observatory




Groundbreaking work continues at Kitt Peak




Kitt Peak Observatory Private Tour - TMWE S3 E7




Kitt Peak


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Re: Museums, Art Galleries, Aquariums, and Planetariums
« Reply #12 on: October 28, 2024, 08:07:45 PM »
The 20 best art museums in America

The Post’s art critics rank their favorite museums across the country, based on their collections, exhibitions and history of public engagement.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/art/2024/10/24/20-best-art-museums-in-america/





Some art museums overawe with the sweep of their collections. Others thrill with a few perfectly placed masterworks.

The best of them embody their cities’ ambitions and fulfill an ideal: that anyone can walk in for a moment of rest and leave with a brain buzzing or a soul stirred.

For our annual Museums Issue, The Washington Post’s critics highlight the country’s wealth of art museums, from its neoclassical temples to its modern jewels (and those that offer both). Below, we rank our favorites, based, for starters, on the depth and breadth of the museums’ collections, the quality of their exhibitions, and their history of public engagement. So many others could have made the list, among them gems in Minneapolis, Pittsburgh, Toledo, Kansas City, and too many in New York and D.C. to mention.

Below, we rank the heavyweights, but don’t miss our picks for the best smaller art museums and the best college museums, too. Make your own list, plan a day trip and take a companion — plus an open mind.

20. Dallas Museum of Art
Situated in an arts precinct in downtown Dallas that also includes the neighboring Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas’s bellwether art museum occupies an unusual building that’s not always sympathetic and is occasionally disorienting. But its collection is deep and diverse. Highlights include important works by Mondrian, Monet, Renoir and Morisot. Its exhibitions are both popular and scholarly. In other words, it generally meets the challenge implied in early director John Ankeney’s rousing statement: “Nature made Dallas rich, Time will make her powerful, but only Art can make her great.” — Sebastian Smee

19. Whitney Museum of American Art
Not everyone celebrated the 2015 relocation of the Whitney Museum of American Art from a beloved mid-century home by architect Marcel Breuer on the Upper East Side of Manhattan to a new, bristling modernist one designed by Renzo Piano. But now the museum lives on the dynamic edge of the meatpacking district, the West Village and Chelsea and is connected to the wildly popular High Line park. The Whitney Biennial, with roots dating back to 1932, is a must-see failure, a futile but noble effort every two years to make sense of the sprawling, amorphous and wildly diverse contemporary art world. And the Whitney’s permanent collection of more than 25,000 works checks all the boxes of American art since the late 19th century. — Philip Kennicott

18. Wadsworth Atheneum
The Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, Connecticut, is open to the public only four days a week, from noon until 5 p.m. — presumably because of financial constraints. It’s a shame, because the Wadsworth, having opened in 1844, claims to be the oldest continually operating art museum in the United States and completed a major renovation as recently as 2015. It has a splendid collection — not at all dusty (its long-running Matrix program for contemporary art has helped keep it current). Its baroque, surrealist and Hudson River School holdings are tremendous. It boasts the Serge Lifar collection of Ballets Russes drawings and costumes, the Samuel Colt firearms collection, a terrific “Wunderkammer” display, great costumes and textiles, and destination paintings by, among others, William Holman Hunt, Caravaggio, Joseph Wright of Derby and Norman Rockwell. — Smee

17. Crystal Bridges
There was deep skepticism when the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art opened in Bentonville, Arkansas, in 2011. A spending spree, including a glamorous bespoke building by architect Moshe Safdie and the acquisition of major works by key American artists, was funded by the museum’s founder, Walmart heiress Alice Walton. The Walmart connection, the Midwestern location and the assumption that the museum would be more celebratory than critical raised doubts. But the museum is thoroughly professional, innovative, open-minded and adventurous. It hosted the 2018 American debut of a major exhibition of Black Power artists and has been as keenly attentive to contemporary art and culture issues as it is to the longer arc of American art. — Kennicott

16. Baltimore Museum of Art
There’s more to the Baltimore Museum of Art than the legendary Cone collection, the massive trove of modern art acquired by the Cone sisters in the early decades of the 20th century. But that collection alone, with major works by Picasso, Matisse, Degas, Renoir, Gauguin and Van Gogh, would put the museum on the international map. Located on the campus of Johns Hopkins University, the museum has made valiant and sometimes controversial efforts — including the sale of major works to acquire more contemporary ones — to keep its focus on the living and evolving contemporary art world. A 2022 exhibition, “Guarding the Art,” gave the museum’s guards the opportunity to curate their own view of its phenomenal collection, a daring decision to empower museum workers who are not the usual elite gatekeepers. — Kennicott

15. Legion of Honor/De Young
The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco put two very different faces to the world. The Legion of Honor is a neoclassical temple with a significant collection of Western art, including major works from the Renaissance to the postimpressionists. The De Young, a low-slung, copper-clad pavilion with a torquing tower, designed by the blue-chip firm Herzog & de Meuron, is a trophy building in the city’s beloved Golden Gate Park. The De Young maintains the most ambitious exhibition schedule, and a solid commitment to contemporary art and art from outside the Western tradition. Taken together, you have a compelling archive and a window on the world, and both are a delight to visit. — Kennicott

14. San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
The first West Coast museum devoted exclusively to modern and contemporary art, SFMOMA is a linchpin of San Francisco’s cultural life. It’s where you go to see works by Diebenkorn, Asawa, Kahlo, Rivera, Matisse, Rauschenberg, Thiebaud and Hopper. Its distinctive Mario Botta-designed building was extended in 2016 by an equally striking expansion by Snohetta architects. The collection is particularly strong in photography. It was dramatically enhanced by the 100-year loan of the Doris and Donald Fisher collection. That deal has been controversial (there are unusual conditions attached). But the Fishers (Donald founded the Gap clothing company) collected artists like Gerhard Richter, Andy Warhol, Agnes Martin and Cy Twombly in depth, affording visitors the rare opportunity to spend time in galleries devoted exclusively to individual artists. — Smee

13. Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Not surprisingly, the largest museum on the nation’s left coast is both comprehensive in its overview of Western art and keenly alert to the art of Central and South America and the Pacific Rim. With some 150,000 objects surveying 6,000 years of human history, its collection has been as influential on the artists of Los Angeles as those of the Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art have been on the work of artists in New York. A relative newcomer, LACMA was founded as an independent art museum in 1961 and grew rapidly, expanding into a campus of buildings on Wilshire Boulevard. Much of the museum has been closed for years as a new main building, designed by Peter Zumthor, is being constructed, which is causing considerable anxiety among fans of the old institution. The world awaits, nervously, for the new building and reorganized collection opening in 2026. — Kennicott

12. St. Louis Art Museum
Situated in a huge gorgeous park just west of the Mississippi, St. Louis’s leading art museum is well-known for its deep holdings of the German painter Max Beckmann, of postwar German art (including by Gerhard Richter and Anselm Kiefer) and its masterpieces by Henri Matisse, Hans Holbein, Titian and Artemisia Gentileschi. But its collection is broad and deep. Its Oceanic art and carpet and textile collections are especially good, and it mounts thoughtfully ambitious exhibitions. — Smee

11. Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Two hours from the nation’s capital, the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond is a regional museum with national importance. A major expansion completed in 2010 added some 165,000 square feet of space and created one of the most inviting fusions of galleries and gardens of any museum in the country. The VMFA’s permanent collection is diverse and idiosyncratic, with important African, Asian and ancient collections, as well as a widely admired collection of art nouveau and art deco furnishings and decorative objects. Its temporary exhibitions also attract attention, including a fine Dawoud Bey exhibition this year and a new highly anticipated one of Southern photography. — Kennicott

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Re: Museums, Art Galleries, Aquariums, and Planetariums
« Reply #13 on: October 28, 2024, 08:35:36 PM »
The 20 best art museums in America

The Post’s art critics rank their favorite museums across the country, based on their collections, exhibitions and history of public engagement.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/art/2024/10/24/20-best-art-museums-in-america/

10. Getty Center/Getty Villa
No matter how many times you visit, arriving to the Getty Center’s hilltop acropolis in the Santa Monica Mountains of Los Angeles is a thrill. The museum, which grew out of the private collection of the oil baron Jean Paul Getty is part of a network of extraordinarily well-funded organizations under the umbrella of the J. Paul Getty Trust, the richest such organization in the world. It has a significant collection of European art and, at its satellite museum, the Getty Villa, an important collection of antiquities. But its programming tends to look like a deluxe version of a smaller, more rigorously focused museum, more academic, targeted, often quirky and almost always interesting. — Kennicott

9. Detroit Institute of Art
DIA’s collection is one of the best in the country. So it was shocking when, just over a decade ago, this magnificent museum came close to being forced to auction off large parts of its collection after the city of Detroit declared bankruptcy. The crisis cleared, and the museum was reestablished as an independent nonprofit. Anchored by Diego Rivera’s “Detroit Industry” cycle of murals, the museum’s other drawing cards include Pieter Bruegel the Elder’s “Wedding Dance,” Vincent van Gogh’s “Self-Portrait With Straw Hat” and James McNeill Whistler’s “Nocturne in Black and Gold — the Falling Rocket” — not to mention impressive collections of art and artifacts from across world history. — Smee

8. Museum of Modern Art
Watching the Museum of Modern Art, the world’s first and still leading museum of its type, change with the times over the past few decades has sometimes been painful. Once a New York temple to classic modernism, with a powerful educational mission rooted in a philosophy of close looking and serious scholarship, MoMA is now often compared to a shopping mall. Is it a victim of its own success? Yes. But it’s true, too, that it had no choice but to change — to broaden its parameters, become more flexible, welcome more people. After two recent expansions, MoMA is alive and well. If its exhibitions have fallen off in ambition and quality, it’s not the only museum of which this can be said. I don’t mind if MoMA is a bit messier than it used to be. But like many, I would like it to recover some of its conviction and clarity of purpose. — Smee

7. Cleveland Museum of Art
One of America’s oldest and wealthiest museums, the Cleveland Museum of Art is housed in a complex of buildings surrounded by a park, with additions and expansions by, among others, Marcel Breuer and Rafael Viñoly. It boasts a vast enclosed courtyard and lucid displays of European Old Masters, arms and armor, American, modern, and Islamic textiles, to name a few. Among its most famous masterpieces are Pablo Picasso’s early “La Vie,” George Bellows’s “Stag at Sharkey’s,” Claude Monet’s “The Red Kerchief,” Jacques-Louis David’s “Cupid and Psyche” and Caravaggio’s “The Crucifixion of Saint Andrew.” It also has reliably first-rate displays of contemporary art. Compared with peer institutions, its exhibition program has been sleepy of late. But it remains a cultural powerhouse with healthy attendance figures (more than 700,000 last year). — Smee

6. Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
Houston’s preeminent art museum has a huge, recently expanded campus (including buildings by Mies van der Rohe and a sculpture garden by Isamu Noguchi), a history of great directors and a dynamic exhibition program. With its modern and European Old Master holdings, MFA Houston can reliably draw in lovers of such European luminaries as Rogier van der Weyden, Rembrandt, Matisse and Picasso. But the museum is always seeking to engage Houston’s extremely diverse population. It runs an art school and a leading research institute for Latin American and Latino Art and has important holdings in art from all over the world, with special strength in African gold and Indian art. — Smee

5. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Like Boston to New York, or the Red Sox to the Yankees, Boston’s flagship art museum often feels itself overshadowed by the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Maybe so. But museums around the world would die to have Boston’s collection. MFA Boston has arguably the greatest collection of Asian art outside Asia itself (although it needs to do much more to display it), as well as enviable depth in ancient Greek and Roman, American, and European art. Its impressionist, American, and Dutch and Flemish holdings are ridiculously strong: a handsome new wing for American art was built in 2010, and more recently a center for Netherlandish art was established. Somewhat thin in modern and contemporary art, its exhibition program is nonetheless dynamic and its overall collection (500,000 works!) so good and so eagerly sought after that it has little trouble persuading prestigious museums to lend works to MFA Boston exhibitions. — Smee

4. Philadelphia Museum of Art
Wander through the engagingly old-fashioned display of the Philadelphia Museum of Art’s permanent collection galleries — a linear march of period rooms full of art, furniture and priceless house wares, arrayed like trophies — and you’ll keep seeing old friends. A magnificent Crucifixion by Rogier van der Weyden, essential works by Cézanne and Monet, Winslow Homer’s thrilling “The Life Line.” The collection expresses the catholic taste and the tenacious ambition of a city determined to be a cultural beacon. The museum’s temporary exhibition galleries are rather dispiriting, architecturally, but a renovation plan by architect Frank Gehry has effectively opened up and transformed other parts of the museum’s hilltop building. — Kennicott

3. National Gallery of Art
The National Gallery of Art is the product of another age: It’s hard to imagine that anyone could convince the nation, or its cynical politicians, that we need a grand temple to the Western artistic tradition today. With a core collection of Old Master paintings donated by Andrew Mellon in 1937, supplemented by decades of largesse from other donors, the National Gallery surveys the history of art from the dawn of the Renaissance to the present day. It has gaps — don’t go there for the works of ancient Rome or Greece, or much else that isn’t part of the European tradition. But it recently added a trove of works by Haitian artists. Although its exhibition calendar has been meager over the past five years, it has a history of capacious and popular temporary shows. And … the only work by Leonardo da Vinci in the United States. — Kennicott

2. Art Institute of Chicago
Even if you’ve never visited the Art Institute of Chicago, you probably know it from that lingering, gorgeously inexplicable interlude in “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.” So, you know the museum has masterpieces like Caillebotte’s “Paris Street; Rainy Day,” Hopper’s “Nighthawks,” Seurat’s “A Sunday on La Grande Jatte” and stained-glass windows by Chagall. (How many students, emulating Ferris and Sloane, have kissed in front of this by now?) Indelible as those scenes are, you could make sequences of the same length with different but equally iconic works: Grant Wood’s “American Gothic,” Van Gogh’s “The Bedroom,” multiple Monet haystacks, a Rembrandt self-portrait …
The AIC organizes about 30 exhibitions a year and has about 1.5 million visitors annually. It is a powerhouse research institute and affiliated with the prestigious School of the Art Institute of Chicago. An encyclopedic museum with a history of strong leadership, it has deep collections of Asian, African, Native American and Meso-American art, to name just a few. Since the 2009 opening of the Modern Wing, designed by Renzo Piano, it has a footprint of over a million square feet and is at the geographic and cultural center of one of the world’s great cities. — Smee

1. Metropolitan Museum of Art
Washington, D.C., may boast the actual National Gallery of Art, but the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York is the country’s de facto national museum. It is the most comprehensive and most visited art museum in the country and, at its best, one of the most ambitious. Although landlocked in Central Park, it continues to evolve, with a recent and effective renovation of its core European art galleries, and a complete makeover of its Arts of Africa, the Ancient Americas and Oceania galleries slated to open in May. — Kennicott