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What's Up

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  • By Arcynta Ali Childs
  • Smithsonian magazine, May 2011, Subscribe
View More Photos »
Raven Steals the Sun
See artist Preston Singletary's Raven Steals the Sun, 2008, at the American Indian's Heye Center in New York City until September 5. (Russell Johnson / NMAI, SI)

Photo Gallery (1/5)

Rythme Colore

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Related Links

  • Artists in Dialogue 2
  • "Color Moves: Art & Fashion by Sonia Delauney" exhibition
  • "George Ault and 1940s America," Alexander Nemerov, The Magazine Antiques, January/February 2011
  • "To Make a World: George Ault and 1940s America" exhibition

Related Books

Preston Singletary: Echoes, Fire and Shadows exhibition catalog

by Melissa G. Post (Editor)
The Museum of Glass in association with University of Washington Press, 2009

Color Moves: Art & Fashion by Sonia Delauney exhibition catalog

by Petra Timmer et al. (Editor)
Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum, 2011

To Make a World: George Ault and 1940s America exhibition catalog

by Alexander Nemerov (Editor)
Smithsonian American Art Museum and Yale University Press, 2011

More from Smithsonian.com

  • What's Up
  • What's Up

Making Legends
The myths and tales of the Tlingit—an indigenous people of the Pacific Northwest—are portrayed in a new light by glass artist Preston Singletary. See his vases, bowls and sculptures at the American Indian’s Heye Center in New York City until September 5.

Artistic Exchange
A dialogue is underway at African Art, where selected artists respond to each other’s work. Henrique Oliveira’s Xilonoma Chamusquius was inspired by the works of Sandile Zulu. Join the conversation through December 4.

Rhythm and Hues
Sonia Delaunay, best known for her colorful abstract paintings, also designed a groundbreaking array of clothing and textiles between the 1920s and 1940s. Experience the interplay of art and fashion through June 5 in “Color Moves,” at New York City’s Cooper-Hewitt.

Spring Thaw
The Freer Gallery continues its series of exhibitions inspired by the seasons. See how the start of spring is reflected in Chinese landscape paintings until June 12.

Life at Home
George Ault’s paintings of Woodstock, New York, captured the quiet anxiety that beset communities on the home front during World War II. View his work through September 5, as part of the American Art Museum’s homage to small-town life.


Making Legends
The myths and tales of the Tlingit—an indigenous people of the Pacific Northwest—are portrayed in a new light by glass artist Preston Singletary. See his vases, bowls and sculptures at the American Indian’s Heye Center in New York City until September 5.

Artistic Exchange
A dialogue is underway at African Art, where selected artists respond to each other’s work. Henrique Oliveira’s Xilonoma Chamusquius was inspired by the works of Sandile Zulu. Join the conversation through December 4.

Rhythm and Hues
Sonia Delaunay, best known for her colorful abstract paintings, also designed a groundbreaking array of clothing and textiles between the 1920s and 1940s. Experience the interplay of art and fashion through June 5 in “Color Moves,” at New York City’s Cooper-Hewitt.

Spring Thaw
The Freer Gallery continues its series of exhibitions inspired by the seasons. See how the start of spring is reflected in Chinese landscape paintings until June 12.

Life at Home
George Ault’s paintings of Woodstock, New York, captured the quiet anxiety that beset communities on the home front during World War II. View his work through September 5, as part of the American Art Museum’s homage to small-town life.

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