Harn Magazine
Our educators and curators are dedicated to offering programs and resources that will encourage visitors of all ages to interact and be more engaged with Harn exhibitions.
Harn Magazine
Watch + Listen
Artist José A. Toirac discusses his work on view in the exhibition “Under the Spell of the Palm Tree: The Rice Collection of Cuban Art.” José A. Toirac’s ambivalent conceptual works blur the boundaries of advertising and classical mythology, mass media and fine art, academia and pop culture, and religion,...
Watch + Listen
Artist Inti Hernández discusses his work on view in the exhibition “Under the Spell of the Palm Tree: The Rice Collection of Cuban Art.” Inti Hernández’s work encompasses sculptures, public space installations, and the design and construction of objects and structures.
Watch + Listen
Artist Eduardo Ponjuán discusses his work on view in the exhibition Under the Spell of the Palm Tree: The Rice Collection of Cuban Art. Eduardo Ponjuán’s essential contribution to Cuban contemporary art is three-fold: as a prominent painter, draftsman, installation and conceptual artist.
General
Hometown: Tampa, Florida Major: Art History; Minor: Geology; Certificate: Graphic Design What does a day in your internship look like? Recently I have been working on deinstalling past exhibitions and installing new exhibits, including Jerry Uelsmann: A Celebration of His Life and Art and Under the Spell of the Palm...
Harn Magazine
Harn Magazine
General
Hometown: Born in New York City, raised in South Florida Major: Double Major in Art History and Political Science What’s something memorable for you that has taken place at the Harn? In February, I attended a very insightful HESCAH lecture by Professor of Art History at Dartmouth College, Mary Coffey,...
Coffee with the Curators
All Harn-goers know of El Anatsui’s Old Man’s Cloth, the glittering metal relief sculpture that has hung in our Pavilion and other galleries almost constantly since it was acquired in 2006. The Harn Museum of Art was the first host of GAWU, the exhibition of this body of metal works by Anatsui,...
Coffee with the Curators
[This essay on Henry Clay Anderson’s photography is short for the sake of this post. Yet it points to the power of photographs to help us see history and make connections. It waits further post-COVID-19 research.] Henry Clay Anderson lived and worked in Greenville, Mississippi, as the town’s most...