Friday, April 26, 2024 (continued)
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Mattatuck Museum (est 1877); 1987 moved to the former Masonic Temple (1912, by W E Griggs with the limestone façade) and the former corner gas station was replaced by the new entrance and courtyard (1986, by César Pelli) |
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Mattatuck Museum is located on the Green across from the Soldiers and Sailors Monument (1884, by George E Bissell) |
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Part of the extensive button collection assembled by Warrren F Kaynor for the Waterbury Button Compnay; donated 1999 |
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The buttons were arranged by varying themes |
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A wall of buttons |
Connecticut's 5th District Congressional Art Competition 2024:
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After the Rain (by Emily M of Nonnewaug High School) |
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Outgrown (by Emily M); ha! two favorites by the same artist |
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Ripening (by Jolene O of Bethel High School); (I almost did not include this one) |
Elevator lobby:
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Mizan XII: Venetian Blue (2011, by Steven Naifeh) |
Suzanne Benton: Unmasked:
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Rachel (Biblical) (1998) |
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Anna Julia Cooper (2020) memorializes a woman born enslaved, yet went on the receive Bachelor's and Master's degrees from Oberlin College, and a PhD from Sorbonne (Paris) |
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A view down on the rooftop terrace |
ReWork It: Women Artists on Women's Labor:
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Fertilization Purse (2001, by Kate Kretz) |
Sea Change: See Change:
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Beluga Whale (2023, by Daniel Baxter) |
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Emperor Penguins (2023, by Daniel Baxter) |
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Vessel (20021, by Matthew Wood) |
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Chunks perhaps representing pieces from Arctic and Antarctic icebergs in Vessel |
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Bird Gone, Fish In (2017, by Zoe Matthiessen) |
Museum Collection:
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Icebergs (1863, by Frederic Edwin Church) |
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The Luxury of Exercise (2009, by Claudia Demonte) |
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Lone at Sea (Adrift) (2022 by Boramie Ann Sao) |
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Cattle on Elton Farm (1873, by James Beard) |
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Stabile (1957, by Alexander Calder) |
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Pumpkin (yellow and black) and Pumpkin (red and white) (2013, by Yayoi Kusama) |
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Mobile (1957, by Alexander Calder) |
Carolyn Marks Blackwood: The Story Series:
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#01 She stopped running. The beauty stopped her cold. (2014); the artist adds a line of story to her photographs and invites the viewer to supply his own narrative |
History Gallery:
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Owen-Illinois Glass Company Drink Cooler (c 1940) |
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Shop Sign: Rubber Boot (late 19C, by Goodyear Shoe) and Charles Goodyear Chair (undated, made with vulcanized rubber and mother of pearl inlay) |
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Charles Goodyear Desk (1850-1851) has a rubber table-top surface and was displayed at the London Crystal Palace to showcase the variety of uses of rubber |
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Nauga (c 1970) was a promotional creature of Uniroyal in Naugatuck, CT, using the synthetic rubber Naugahyde |
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Rendering of Fortune, a Black man enslaved by a bone surgeon, Dr Porter, who saved Fortune's skeleton at death in 1798 to study anatomy |
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In 1932, the skeleton was donated to the museum and displayed as "Larry the Slave," and then sent to storage; in the 1990s as part of the African American Oral History Project, the skeleton was remembered and efforts made to learn the history of the skeleton and to eventually have it laid to rest in 2013 |
Museum Lobby: More from
ReWork It: Women Artists on Women's Labor:
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Housecoat VI (2021 by Natalie Baxter) |
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Spick & Span (2022, by Robyn Tsinnajinnie, Diné/Navajo) |
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