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Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art

Tag: Livestream

Livestream Presentation

Decorating Schools & Shaping the City: Women’s Clubs and School Art Collecting, 1900-1940
Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024, 5:30 PM Central Time
(US and Canada)
Livestream presentation by Sylvia Rhor Samaniego, director and curator, University Art Gallery (UAG), University of Pittsburgh. Free and open to the public.

Join the free program via Zoom. Click here to register. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email with information about how to join the program.

Offered in conjunction with the exhibition To the Stars Through Art: A History of Art Collecting in Kansas Public Schools, 1900-1950, currently on view at the Beach Museum of Art.

Sylvia Rhor SamaniegoSylvia Rhor Samaniego additionally serves as a senior lecturer in the department of history of art and architecture. Before joining the UAG, Rhor Samaniego was a professor of art history at Carlow University. At Carlow, she served as founding director of the university’s first academic art gallery. Rhor Samaniego earned a master’s degree and doctorate in art history from the University of Pittsburgh and bachelor’s degree in studio art and art history from New York University, where she was a Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Minority Scholar. Her research interests include 20th-century US mural painting, political cartoons and comics, and the intersection of modern art and politics.

"To the Stars Through Art" exhibition at the Beach Museum of Art

This virtual event is part of the Beach Museum of Art’s “Art in Motion” annual program series.

 

Livestream Conversation

Logo of "Let's Talk Art," Beach museum's series of monthly discussions with artists and creative thinkers about work in the museum's collection.

Let’s Talk Art: Livestream Conversation with Fidencio Fifield-Perez on Maps, Borders, and Migration
Thursday, Oct 6, 2022, 5:30 p.m. Central Time (US and Canada)

Join the free program via Zoom. Click here to register.
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email with information about how to join the program.

 Fidencio Fifield-Perez Photo by Ryan BachFidencio Fifield-Perez, born in Mexico and raised in the U.S., uses his art to tell stories about his experience as a child immigrant and the systems of border control that affect human lives. He and Curator Aileen June Wang will discuss his work Fishers of Men in the museum’s collection, which is currently on display to express the museum’s solidarity with Ukrainians displaced by the war between their country and Russia. 

Photo by Ryan Bach

Mixed media artwork "Fishers of Men" by Fidencio Fifield-Perez in the Beach Museum of Art collection
Fidencio Fifield-Perez, Fishers of Men, 2016, acrylic and ink on cut maps, 96 x 108 in., 2018.340

This event is part of the Beach Museum of Art’s ‘Art in Motion’ annual program series.

Let’s Talk Art: Indigenous Aesthetics

Logo of "Let's Talk Art," Beach museum's series of monthly discussions with artists and creative thinkers about work in the museum's collection.

Let’s Talk Art: Indigenous Aesthetics
Livestream Conversation
Thursday, March 3, 2022, 5:30 p.m. Central Time (US and Canada)

Join the free program via Zoom. Click here to register.
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email with information about how to join the program.

Beach Museum of Art Director Linda Duke moderates the livestream conversation as artists Neal Ambrose-Smith (Salish-Kootenai, Métis-Cree, Sho-Ban) and Norman Akers (Osage Nation) reflect on use of space and representation in their work. Ambrose Smith is the creator of the 2021-2022 K-State Common Work of ArtFrom Upstream I Caught a Fish.

Let's Talk Art with guests Neal Ambrose Smith and Norman Akers

This event is part of the Beach Museum of Art’s ‘Art in Motion’ annual program series.

Let’s Talk Art: Considering the Dance Film ”Martin” by Gordon Parks

Logo of "Let's Talk Art," Beach museum's series of monthly discussions with artists and creative thinkers about work in the museum's collection.

Livestream conversation:
Considering the Dance Film Martin by Gordon Parks

Thursday, January 27, 2022, 5:30 p.m. Central Time (US and Canada)

Theresa Ruth HowardJoin the free program via Zoom. Click here to register.
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email with information about how to join the program.

Curator Aileen June Wang discusses Parks’ 1990 ballet film honoring Martin Luther King, Jr., with guest Theresa Ruth Howard, ballet dancer and founder-curator of MoBBallet.org (Memoirs of Blacks in Ballet).

 

Theresa Ruth Howard. Photo by Eva Harris

A still from the dance film "Martin" by Gordon Parks.

Preview different acts of the ballet film through the link below: 

1/27/19 O&A NYC DANCE: Martin: A Ballet By Gordon Parks Act V- Mourning Place

Top image: A still from the dance film Martin by Gordon Parks.

This event is part of the Beach Museum of Art’s ‘Art in Motion’ annual program series.

 

Considering Techniques: Jim Richardson on Gordon Parks

Jim RichardsonThursday, February 24, 2022, 5:30 p.m. Central Time (US and Canada)
Livestream gallery conversation with National Geographic photojournalist Jim Richardson.

Join the free program via Zoom. Click here to register.
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email with information about how to join the program.

Offered in conjunction with the exhibition Gordon Parks: Homeward to the Prairie I come,” open through May 28, 2022 at the Beach Museum of Art. View the virtual exhibition here.

Gordon Parks, Mrs. Jefferson, 1950, printed in 2017, gelatin silver print, gift of Gordon Parks and Gordon Parks Foundation, 2017.373

Let’s Talk Art

Livestream conversation with artist China Marks
Thursday, November 19, 2020, 5:30 p.m.
Join the free program via ZOOM. To register in advance, go to: https://ksu.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_6sveGvVBTd-nSTBgTPy12Q
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email with information about how to join the program.

 

Join artist China Marks for an informal discussion of her work, Monkey Boy and the Magic Beans, in the museum’s current Inspirations: Art of Storytelling exhibition. Marks is a native of Kansas City, Missouri. She lives and works in Long Island City, New York.

This program is part of the Art in Motion Program series.

China Marks, Monkey Boy and the Magic Beans, 2007, machine embroidery and appliqué on various fabrics, lace, thread, fusible adhesive, and Beva, 2007 Friends of the Beach Museum of Art annual acquisition, 2007.50