Kanuni portresi yerini buldu
Kanuni portresi yerini buldu
Fatih Sultan Mehmet’in portresinden sonra Kanuni’nin portresi de İBB’de. Başkan İmamoğlu, belediyenin sanat müzesinin Haliç Tersanesi’nde hazırlandığını da duyurdu. Abone Ol
Geçen mart ayında Sotheby’s Müzayede Evi tarafından açık artırmaya çıkarıldıktan sonra alıcısı tarafından İBB’ye bağışlanan Kanuni Sultan Süleyman’ın portresi Saraçhane’deki İBB Binası’nda düzenlenen törenle tanıtıldı. İBB Başkanı Ekrem İmamoğlu, “Sanat, kültür adına emanet etmek istediğiniz, geleceğe taşınmasını arzu ettiğiniz, İstanbul’u temsil eden ne var ise en doğru adres, İBB olacaktır. Bu iki eseri ve alacağımız yeni eserleri halkımızla buluşturacağımız yer Haliç Tersanesi’nde uygulaması devam edem Sanat Müzesi; bu eserleri orada sergileyeceğimizi İstanbul halkına ve bütün sanat severlere duyurmak isterim” dedi. Tersanenin 566
UI Museum of Art makes progress toward completion Follow Us
Question of the Day By VANESSA MILLER - Associated Press - Sunday, January 31, 2021
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) - Some 70 to 80 years ago - in the days of Nile Kinnick, Tennessee Williams and Virgil Hancher - the University of Iowa’s School of Art and Art History began hosting exhibitions and collecting contemporary works, including Max Beckmann’s “Karneval” and the swirling abstraction that is Jackson Pollock’s “Mural.”
The UI opened its first Museum of Art in 1969, expanded it in 1976 and for decades featured and grew its collections until torrential flooding devastated the campus and its exhibition space in 2008.
2022 opening will return Jackson Pollock s Mural to Iowa City
Construction continues Jan. 14 on the new University of Iowa’s Stanley Museum of Art in Iowa City. The facility, when it opens to the public likely in 2022, will mark a new home for the UI’s art collection after it was driven from campus in 2008 because of historic flooding. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)
Construction continues Jan. 14 on the new University of Iowa’s Stanley Museum of Art in Iowa City. The facility, when it opens to the public likely in 2022, will mark a new home for the UI’s art collection after it was driven from campus in 2008 because of historic flooding. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)