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Sunday, April 5, 2026 |
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| Through American Eyes: Two Centuries of American Art |
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Robert Henri (1865-1929), Kathleen, 1924, oil on canvas. Gift of Ruth Woods Dayton.
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MUSKEGON, MICHIGAN.- The Muskegon Museum of Art presents Through American Eyes: Two Centuries of American Art from the Huntington Museum of Art, through April 10, 2005. Through American Eyes is an exhibition drawn from the Permanent Collection of the Huntington Museum of Art representing a broad range of artistic styles that make up the last two centuries of American Art. This exhibit offers the opportunity to compare how artists from different backgrounds and time periods portray their world, drawing from academic painting and sculpture, self-taught artists, pioneers in the studio glass movement, and 20th Century American printmaking. The exhibit also includes crafts and textiles. Numerous well-known artists are included in this show of approximately 73 works, including George Inness, John Frederick Peto, Ralph Blakelock, John Singer Sargent, John Henry Twachtman, William Glackens, Arthur B. Davies, Willard Leroy Metcalf, Emil Carlsen, Charles Webster Hawthorne, Frank W. Benson, Gari Melchers, Robert Henri, Robert Motherwell, Chuck Close, John Steuart Curry, Jim Dine, Helen Frankenthaler, Jasper Johns, Roy Lichtenstein, Edward Hopper, Andy Warhol, Harvey Littleton, Mary Ann Toots Zynsky, and Louis Comfort Tiffany. With names such as these, this exhibit is an exciting event for the Museum, offering viewers and educators a highly inclusive look into the history of American Art through the works of some of its most famous and influential artists.
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