Yahoo Αναζήτηση Διαδυκτίου

Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης

  1. Many women played pivotal roles in the Arts and Crafts movement, and this highlights tour features a number of these female artists, designers, and craftspeople who were key figures in and were inspired by the movement.

  2. Responding to disproportionate racial and gender representation within Chicago’s modern and contemporary art scene in the 20th century, women seized the gap by forging their own spaces throughout the city. Learn about the history of placemaking in Chicago art spaces through selections from the Research Center’s Libraries and Archives.

  3. The collection encompasses prints, including etchings, engravings, and lithographs; photographs, including cabinet cards, cartes de visite, cased images, stereocards, paper prints, and negatives; broadsides; posters; postcards; greeting cards; and moving image film and video.

  4. Chicago Women's History Center documents, interprets, preserves, and shares Chicago women's history through scholarly research, education and public programs.

  5. A 1917 publication from the Artists' Guild in Chicago (see photo above of the salesrooms and galleries at 408 South Michigan Boulevard) contains several fascinating and valuable elements -- a brief history of The Artists' Guild, a story from the Fine Arts Journal about the formal opening of the Arts Club, and a "Who's Who" directory of members.

  6. Our online archive library hosts thousands of historical photos documenting the people, places, and landscape of Derby, Derbyshire and Nottingham. Browse images using our filters to the left to finds pictures of interest.

  7. The Art Institute of Chicago offers image file downloads for artworks in the public domain. These are accessible on the individual artwork pages. Adjacent to the image will be action buttons allowing you to zoom in, download the image file, or share the artwork on social media.