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15-513: This Place may refer to: This Place (art project) , a global art project that explores the complexity of Israel and the West Bank This Place (agency) , a user experience agency based in London, Seattle and Tokyo "This Place", a song by Joni Mitchell from her 2007 album Shine This Place (film) , a Canadian film Topics referred to by

30-646: A clear, unified message." The completed work was organized into an exhibition, curated by Charlotte Cotton, who stated that “Each artist has created a profound and personal narration of Israel and the West Bank, that, collectively, act a series of guides, leading the viewer into a deeper identification with the complexities and conflicts of the Holy Land." The exhibition was scheduled to open at DOX Centre for Contemporary Art in Prague on October 24, 2014, thereafter traveling to

45-404: Is closed on Tuesday. It is open Friday from 10 am to 10 pm and Sunday from 11 am to 5 pm. Art after Dark occurs on Friday nights. The ground-level galleries showcase contemporary and 20th-century American and European art and a comprehensive collection of Chinese works. On the top floor of the museum, there are noteworthy paintings by late Medieval Italian painter Jacopo Da Firenze, Lucas Cranach

60-792: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages This Place (art project) This Place was a global art project that explored the complexity of Israel and the West Bank through the eyes of twelve photographers: Frédéric Brenner , Gilles Peress (France); Wendy Ewald , Fazal Sheikh , Stephen Shore , Rosalind Solomon (USA); Martin Kollar (Slovakia); Josef Koudelka (Czech Republic); Jungjin Lee (South Korea); Thomas Struth (Germany); Jeff Wall (Canada); and Nick Waplington (Britain). Each photographer created works in response to his or her own experience in

75-708: The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art , in Sarasota , to become the largest museum in Florida. The Norton Museum of Art was founded in 1941 by Ralph Hubbard Norton (1875–1953) and his first wife, Elizabeth Calhoun Norton (1881–1947). Norton, the former head of the Chicago -based Acme Steel Co., moved to West Palm Beach upon retirement and decided to share his collection of paintings and sculptures. The late Art Deco / Neoclassical building designed by Marion Sims Wyeth opened its doors to

90-828: The Tel Aviv Museum of Art , the Brooklyn Museum , the Norton Museum of Art , and other museums in Europe, the United States, and Asia. Norton Museum of Art The Norton Museum of Art is an art museum in West Palm Beach, Florida . The museum has a collection that includes over 8,200 works, with a concentration in European , American , and Chinese art as well as in contemporary art and photography . In 2003, it overtook

105-624: The Artist in Residence Program. 2012 The inaugural Rudin Prize was awarded to Analia Saban , nominated by John Baldessari . The other nominees were: 2014 The second Rudin Prize was awarded to Rami Maymon , nominated by Adi Nes . The other nominees were: 2016 The third Rudin Prize was awarded to Elizabeth Bick, nominated by Shirin Neshat . The other nominees were: 2020 The Rudin Prize

120-498: The British architect Norman Foster that would nearly double its gallery space and add an education center, auditorium and restaurant. The new West Wing added a 43-foot-high Great Hall. A parking lot next to the museum was converted into a 9,000-square-foot sculpture garden. A new entrance and forecourt along the main thoroughfare, South Dixie Highway, re-established the axial layout of Norton's original 1941 Art Deco building. As planned,

135-745: The Elder , Joos Van Cleve and Studio, Marcantonio Franceshini , Nicolas Largilliere , Peter Paul Rubens , Anton Van Dyck , David Teniers and Studio, Jan Thomas Yperen, Joshua Reynolds , Thomas Gainsborough , and Giovanni Panini. There also are examples of Chinese Export porcelain. In 2018, the Norton Museum of Art received a gift of more than 100 works from the collection of Howard and Judie Ganek, including artworks by Damien Hirst , Anselm Kiefer , Sigmar Polke , Ed Ruscha , Kara Walker , Donald Judd , Matthew Barney , Nan Goldin , Cindy Sherman , Lorna Simpson , and Pipilotti Rist , among others. In 2012,

150-553: The Norton Museum of Art launched the Rudin Prize for Emerging Photographers with a $ 20,000 prize. It was initiated by Beth Rudin DeWoody and is given biennially to an emerging photographer who has never had a museum show. Programs The Norton Museum of Art hosts several special programs. They are Lectures & Conversations, Art After Dark, Special Performances, Art Classes and Workshops, Families & Teens, Students & Teachers, and

165-558: The area; a total of over 500 images were exhibited internationally and published in a series of monographs. Initiated by Frédéric Brenner , the project followed in the tradition of endeavors such as the Missions Héliographiques in nineteenth-century France and the Farm Security Administration in the United States, which gathered artists who used photography to ask essential questions about culture, society and

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180-421: The inner lives of individuals. Each artist spent about six months in residence, traveling throughout Israel and the West Bank , following his or her own line of investigation. Brenner offered the photographers initial exploratory visits, so they could decide if, and how, they wanted to be involved with the project. According to Time : "This Place is not an act of photojournalism, nor does it contain — or send –

195-646: The museum broke ground in 2016. The museum closed in July 2018 for renovations. It reopened on February 9, 2019, adding 12,000 square feet (1,100 m ) of gallery space, new classrooms, a restaurant, a 210-seat auditorium, and the sculpture garden. Norton Museum closed for eight months in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic and reopened in November 2020 with new exhibits and safety precautions. Its current hours are Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Saturday from 10 am to 5 pm. It

210-472: The public on Feb. 8, 1941. Its mission statement is "to preserve for the future the beautiful things of the past." In 2001, the Norton Museum of Art underwent a significant expansion when the 45,000-square-foot (4,200 m ) Gail and Melvin Nessel Wing was built and increased the size of the museum to 122,500 square feet (11,380 m ). In 2013, the museum unveiled a $ 60 million master plan designed by

225-417: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title This Place . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=This_Place&oldid=1105471667 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

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