Weisman Art Museum

http://www.weisman.umn.edu/
333 East River Road
Minneapolis, MN 55455
612-625-9494

Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday: 10am-5pm
Thursday: 10am-8pm
Saturday, Sunday: 11am-5pm

You can't miss the distinctive stainless steel and brick building designed by architect Frank Gehry. Step inside to take in the museum's incredible collection featuring early 20th-century American artists such as Georgia O'Keeffe and Marsden Hartley, as well as a diverse selection of contemporary art. With our exciting array of programs and special exhibitions, there is always something interesting to see and do at the Weisman. The Weisman Art Museum is no longer able to offer free parking to MAP visitors. Instead, pass users will receive a free gift.

Exclusive Museum Adventure Pass Offer

10% off a single purchase in the museum store

Passes are limited to general exhibit admission only. Passes may not be applied towards educational and group tours. Special exhibitions and other attractions may not be covered, and other restrictions may apply.

Please visit http://www.weisman.umn.edu/ for specific exhibition information.

Learn more about it at your metro public library

All Ages

The Building: Weisman Art Museum, Frank Gehry Designs
University of Minnesota, and the Frederick R. Weisman Art Museum, 2003
Georgia O'Keeffe Museum online
website: www.okeeffemuseum.org
Mimbres Pottery at the National Museum of Natural History
website: www.nmnh.si.edu/anthro/cm/mimbres.htm
Weisman Art Museum: The Collection, The Museum
Distributed by University of Minnesota Press, 2004
Charles Biederman on-line
website: www.charlesbiederman.net
Modern Art: Painting, Sculpture, Architecture, Photography
Sam Hunter, John Jacobus, and Daniel Wheeler, Prentice Hall, 2004
Guggenheim Museum - Frank Gehry Exhibition
website: http://pastexhibitions.guggenheim.org/gehry/exhibition.html
Roy Lichtenstein Foundation
website: http://www.lichtensteinfoundation.org
The Accidental Masterpiece: On the Art of Life and Vice Versa
Michael Kimmelman, Penguin Press, 2005
Art in the Modern Era: A Guide to Styles, Schools and Movements 1860 to the Present
Amy Dempsey, Harry N. Abrams, 2002
Everything that Rises: A Book of Convergences
Lawrence Weschler, McSweeney's Books, 2006
How to Read a Modern Painting: Understanding and Enjoying the Modern Masters
Jon Thompson, Abrams, 2006
Makers of Modern Architecture
Martin Filler, New York Review Books, 2007
Pop
edited by Mark Francis, Phaidon, 2005
Portraits: Talking with Artists at the Met, the Modern, the Louvre, and Elsewhere
Michael Kimmelman, Random House, 1998
Writers on Artists
In association with Modern Painters, Dorling Kindersley, 2001

Kids

Faces, Places, and Inner Spaces: A Guide to Looking at Art
Jean Sousa, Abrams Books for Young Readers/Published in Association with The Art Institute of Chicago, 2006
More Than Meets the Eye: Seeing Art with All Five Senses
Bob Raczka, Millbrook Press, 2003
Seen Art?
Jon Scieszka and Lane Smith, Viking, 2005
There Goes the Neighborhood: Ten Buildings People Loved to Hate
Susan Goldman Rubin, Holiday House, 2001
Frank O. Gehry: Outside In
Jan Greenberg, DK Ink, 2000
Express Yourself: Activities and Adventures in Expressionism
Joyce Raimondo, Watson-Guptill Publications, 2005
How Artists Use… (series)
Paul Flux, Heinemann Library, 2001
Make it Pop!: Activities and Adventures in Pop Art
Joyce Raimondo, Watson-Guptil Publications, 2006
My Name is Georgia: A Portrait
Jeannette Winter, Silver Whistle/Harcourt Brace, 1998
The Shape Game
Anthony Browne, Farra, Straus and Giroux, 2003
What Is a Sculpture?
Anne Civardi, Sea-To-Sea Publications, 2006

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Upcoming Events

Weisman Art Museum 2009-2010 Exhibition Season

Reflects "Art and the Everyday"

Home videos posted on YouTube. Personal photos shared with the world on Flickr. The widespread appeal of the Do-It-Yourself cable channel. These popular social and cultural trends indicate a pervasive interest in "everyday" life in America. Beginning in fall 2009, the Weisman Art Museum launches a yearlong exploration of the idea of the everyday in art and culture.

Artists' focus on the everyday isn't unique to today-a focus on the relationship between art and everyday life has long been a hallmark of American art. For example, in the early 20th century, American painters founded the Ashcan School and depicted the street life of New York City. Later, in the 1960s and 1970s, artists like Robert Rauschenberg and Joseph Beuys questioned the distinctions between art objects and everyday objects.

"The status of the art object has, since classical times, been understood as transcendental and separate from common experience," curator Diane Mullin explained. "The moment seems ripe to think about what our definition of everyday life is. Because of a new global culture, our shifting economic situation, our new political realities-how do those forces shape our collective notion of the everyday? WAM as an art museum can look at how artists have thought about this problem. WAM's strength in modern American art makes us uniquely qualified to explore this tangle of the everyday."

The trend has resurfaced in recent times. In the 1990s, many artists (among them Pierre Huyghe, Nina Katchadourian, Claude Closky, Tom Friedman, and Sue Webster) emerged with work that indicated a clear interest in the ordinary and quotidian. This interest has spurred critical and historical studies reflecting a fascination with the mundane across the modern era, resulting in recent a spate of scholarly publications such as Johnstone's The Everyday/Documents of Contemporary Art and Casarino and Negri's In Praise of the Common.

Recent interest in and reexamination of the largely overlooked aspects of our everyday experience has only been strengthened by the current economic turmoil, with people turning to common pleasures rather than luxury pursuits. Because of the contemporary relevance of this issue, the Weisman has chosen the topic of the everyday as the focus of its 2009-2010 exhibition season.

Major Exhibitions 2009-2010:

Ordinarily Here
June 19-September 30, 2010

To close the year-long series, the Weisman will present an exhibition of Minnesota artists whose work addresses the issue of art and everyday life. Artists will include Diane Willow, Vince Leo, and Max Schollette, among others. Programs will include artist tours in the galleries and a WAM Chatter with selected artists moderated by curator Diane Mullin.

Membership

For membership information, please visit www.weisman.umn.edu/involved/membership.html.


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