calendario eventi  :: 




14/9/2005

Russia!

Guggenheim Museum, New York

More than 275 of the greatest masterworks of Russian Art, from the Thirteenth Century to the Present


comunicato stampa

The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum presents RUSSIA!, the most comprehensive exhibition of Russian art ever shown in the United States, from September 16, 2005 through January 11, 2006. With more than 275 objects, this innovative exhibition features the greatest masterworks of Russian art from the thirteenth century to the present, including icons; portraiture in both painting and sculpture from the eighteenth through the twentieth centuries; critical realism in the nineteenth century as well as socialist realism of the communist era; landscapes through the centuries; pioneering abstraction; and experimental contemporary art—many of these works will be seen for the first time outside of Russia. The exhibition also features a selection of first-class Western European paintings and sculptures from the imperial art collections assembled by Peter the Great, Catherine the Great, and Nicholas I in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and later in the early twentieth century by the Moscow merchants Sergei Shchukin and Ivan Morozov. These works testify simultaneously to the perspicacity and daring of Russian art collectors, the discernible influence of these outstanding collections on the development of Russian art, and the special relationship between Russia and the West.

This exhibition has been realized under the patronage of Vladimir Putin, President of the Russian Federation.

This exhibition has been organized by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation in collaboration with the Federal Agency for Culture and Cinematography of the Russian Federation, State Russian Museum, The State Tretyakov Gallery, State Hermitage Museum, and ROSIZO State Museum Exhibition Center.

This exhibition is made possible by The Vladimir Potanin Charity Fund.

Major exhibition sponsorship provided by the Alcoa Foundation and Sintezneftegaz Co.

This exhibition is further made possible by Lazare Kaplan International, Thaw Charitable Trust, International Foundation of Russian and Eastern European Art, Trust for Mutual Understanding, an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and Humanities, together with the generous support of the RUSSIA! Leadership Committee.

Transportation assistance provided by Aeroflot Russian Airlines.

Media support provided by Thirteen/WNET.

Special thanks to the Hermitage-Guggenheim Foundation for its assistance with this exhibition.

A significant number of the selected artworks have either rarely or never traveled abroad, notably: icons by the fifteenth-century painter Andrei Rublev and the sixteenth-century painter Dionysii; Ivan Aivazovsky’s epic seascape The Ninth Wave (1850); Vasilii Perov’s introspective portrait of Fyodor Dostoevsky (1872); Ilya Repin’s iconic Bargehaulers on the Volga (1870–73); Mikhail Vrubel’s haunting Symbolist masterpiece Lilacs (1900); and Kazimir Malevich’s Black Square (ca. 1930), from the Hermitage. The works will be on loan from Russia’s greatest museums—the State Russian Museum, the State Tretyakov Gallery, the State Hermitage Museum, and the Kremlin Museum—as well as regional museums, private collections, and a select number of museums and private collections outside of Russia.

According to Thomas Krens, Director, Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, "This exhibition will serve as a unique opportunity to introduce the international public to the most valued artistic treasures culled from Russia’s greatest museums. RUSSIA! is in keeping with the Guggenheim’s distinguished history of presenting groundbreaking exhibitions of Russian art, including Art of the Avant-Garde in Russia: Selections from the George Costakis Collection (1981), The Great Utopia: The Russian and Soviet Avant-Garde, 1915–1932 (1992), Amazons of the Avant-Garde (2000), and Kazimir Malevich: Suprematism (2003). Undoubtedly, an exhibition of this scope and reach will not be repeated in this generation."

RUSSIA! is curated by a team of Russian and American specialists, including Guggenheim Director Thomas Krens; Robert Rosenblum, Stephen and Nan Swid Curator of Twentieth-Century Art, and Valerie Hillings, Curatorial Assistant, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum; Evgenia Petrova, Deputy Director for Academic Research, State Russian Museum; Lidia Iovleva, First Deputy General Director for Scientific Work, State Tretyakov Gallery; Zelfira Tregulova, Deputy Director for Exhibitions and International Exchange, Moscow Kremlin State Historical-Cultural Museum-Preserve; Pavel Khoroshilov, Deputy Head, Department of Mass Communication, Culture, and Education Headquarters of the Government of the Russian Federation; Anna Kolupaeva, Director of the Cultural Heritage Department, Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation; and Georgii Vilinbakhov, Deputy Director, the State Hermitage Museum.

The exhibition installation is designed by French designer Jacques Grange.

The show’s opening will coincide with the start the 60th session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York City.

Exhibition Overview
RUSSIA! is conceived as a series of key moments in the history of art in Russia. Added together, the various sections of the exhibition both tell the remarkable and interconnected history of Russian art of the last eight hundred years and Russian collections of Western art since the eighteenth century and demonstrate that Russia’s major contributions to the history of world art extend far beyond the already well-known and revered icons of the Russian Orthodox faith and the avant-garde of the early twentieth century.

The unique architecture of the Guggenheim’s Frank Lloyd Wright building will play a major role in this ambitious presentation. The spiral of the museum will be filled with eight-hundred years of Russian art, so that in a single view, looking up or across the ramps of the distinctive interior, visitors will both comprehend the remarkable span of Russian artistic production from the early thirteenth century to the present and be able to identify recurring themes through the centuries. The exhibition will unfold chronologically from the bottom to the top of the Guggenheim Museum: medieval Russia (the age of the icon, thirteenth–seventeenth centuries), the eighteenth century (the age of Peter the Great and Catherine the Great), the nineteenth century (academic art and Romanticism in the first half of the century and critical realism in the second half), the early twentieth century (Avant–Garde), ca. 1930–1980s (Soviet), and ca. 1990–present (post-Soviet). Among the more than one hundred Russian artists presented will be Andrei Rublev, Dionysii, Dmitrii Levitsky, Orest Kiprensky, Karl Briullov, Alexander Ivanov, Ilya Repin, Ivan Kramskoy, Nikolai Ge, Mikhail Vrubel, Valentin Serov, Natalia Goncharova, Alexander Rodchenko, Kazimir Malevich, Marc Chagall, Isaac Brodsky, Alexander Deineka, Alexander Laktionov, Gelii Korzhev, Ilya Kabakov, Vitaly Komar & Alexander Melamid, Erik Bulatov, Oleg Kulik, and Vadim Zakharov.

Two of the Annex galleries will present a selection of Western masterworks collected by the monarchs Peter the Great, Catherine the Great, and Nicolas I and the merchants Sergei Shchukin and Ivan Morozov, respectively, which testify to the foresight of Russian collectors and highlight the relationship between Russia and the West since the eighteenth century. These sections will feature Anthony Van Dyck, Peter Paul Rubens, Guido Reni, Bartolome Murillo, Jean-Antoine Watteau, Jean-Baptiste Chardin, Claude Monet, André Derain, Maurice Vlaminck, Henri Matisse, Paul Gauguin, and Pablo Picasso.

An additional section will be presented concurrently at the Guggenheim-Hermitage Museum in Las Vegas. This exhibition, RUSSIA! The Majesty of the Tsars: Treasures from the Kremlin, on view from September 1, 2005 through January 15, 2006, will feature objects from pre-Petrine Russia in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, when the Russian tsars still resided in Moscow. The show will present rare and beautiful clothing and jewelry worn by tsars, tsarinas, and patriarchs, elaborate adornments for horses, an impressive selection of arms and armor, an iconostasis from the Annunciation Cathedral, the remarkable and highest quality silver serving pieces given to the tsars by foreign dignitaries, and Russian golden tableware.

Exhibition Installation
In New York, the first section will be devoted to the thirteenth through the seventeenth centuries or the age of the icon. Uniquely, this exhibition will include multiple panels of the Deesis Tier from the famous iconostasis of the Kirillo-Belozersk Monastery, which has been dispersed among four Russian museums since nationalization. This impressive set of images will be brought to life through select decorative objects and a dramatic design that will transport the viewer to another time and place. This section will also present an outstanding selection of icons representing the most important subjects and schools from the thirteenth through the seventeenth centuries. It will bring to the Guggenheim one work by each of the most famous icon painters, Andrei Rublev and Dionysii, as well one of the most revered icons, the Virgin of Vladimir of 1514. These icons will demonstrate how Russian artists absorbed and relied upon the Byzantine model, even as they transformed it and created their own style and artistic language.

The second and third sections will be devoted to the imperial art collections of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries and Russian art of the eighteenth century, respectively. In artistic terms, the eighteenth century marks the birth of secular Russian art; it is the period when Peter the Great (1672–1725; tsar from 1682 to 1725) founded his window on the West, St. Petersburg, and instigated a series of reforms that diminished the dominance of the Russian Orthodox Church and its traditions, including icon painting. A generation later, Peter the Great’s granddaughter-in-law Catherine the Great (1729–1796, tsarina from 1762 to 1796) assembled a first-rate collection of Western paintings in her Hermitage and supported the development of an academic system for art based on the Western European model, including stipends for the best students of the Academy of Art to study abroad in Italy. Exposed to the European tradition through various means, Russian artists including the painter Dmitrii Levitski and the sculptor Fedot Shubin produced stunning official portraiture of both the imperial family and the nobility, thereby capturing their time, the age of Catherine, as brilliantly and richly as their contemporaries in Western Europe such as Joshua Reynolds and Jean-Antoine Houdon. And on the cusp of the nineteenth century, artists such as Fedor Alekseev produced breathtaking landscape paintings of Moscow and St. Petersburg.

The fourth section will present the nineteenth century. The first half of the nineteenth century was marked by the high level and range of Russian art—from Romantic portraiture to timeless representations of peasant life, to philosophical representations of scenes from the life of Christ, to tumultuous, epic seascapes. These decades are represented by such accomplished artists as Orest Kiprensky, Alexei Venetsianov, Karl Briullov, Alexander Ivanov, and Ivan Aivazovsky, whose work not only paralleled their contemporaries abroad but also in several instances anticipated developments in the West; for example, Venetsianov’s idyllic peasant paintings of the mid-1820s preceded the more familiar work of the French artist Jean-François Millet by nearly thirty years.

In the second half of the nineteenth century, a group of artists that formed in the 1860s and was active through the 1890s—and known historically as the Wanderers—rejected the strictures of the academic system and chose to present their art to a wider public by organizing traveling exhibitions. They stressed the high social mission of art, that is, art as a tool for social commentary and criticism, especially of the brutal living conditions and political repression of their time. They shared with Edouard Manet and Impressionists such as Edgar Degas an interest in showing the uglier side of a society divided along class lines, but similar to many of their contemporaries in Germany, Belgium, and the United States, the Wanderers more strongly emphasized the narrative content of the artistic work rather than formal experimentation. Chief among this group of artists were Ilya Repin, Ivan Kramskoy, Nikolai Ge, and the landscape painters Isaac Levitan and Ivan Shishkin. It was the work of the Wanderers that constituted the foundation for the great collection of Pavel Tretyakov, now in the State Tretyakov Gallery. Moreover, these artists, in much the same way as the slightly earlier work of Gustave Courbet in France, provided a critical realist model against which the generation known as the historic avant-garde reacted.

The fifth and sixth sections will revisit a subject of several previous Guggenheim exhibitions, the historic Russian avant-garde. The fifth section will display select modern masterworks from the collections of the Moscow merchants Sergei Shchukin and Ivan Morozov, which included some of the most important examples of Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, Fauvism, and Cubism; among the artists presented will be Monet, Gauguin, Matisse, and Picasso. These collections exerted a strong influence on the generation of Russian artists that emerged in the early twentieth century. However, the Russian artists fused the diverse Western influences with national traditions, such as the icon and folk art, into a synthetic vision uniquely their own. The sixth section will commence with Russian art ca. 1900 through the presentation of works that could be termed Russian Symbolism. The most impressive representative of this trend is Mikhail Vrubel, who produced works on themes similar to that of his contemporaries across Europe, yet also marked by his local context manifest in his use of subjects from Russian folklore and literature. Such experimental art served as a precursor to the pioneering work of Russian avant-garde artists, many of whom will be featured in this exhibition, including Natalia Goncharova, Mikhail Larionov, Kazimir Malevich, and the lesser known Ilya Mashkov, Pyotr Konchalovsky, and Aristarkh Lentulov. As is well known, a succession of radical movements emerged out of this context in rapid succession over a very short period of time: Cubo-Futurism, Rayonism, Suprematism, Constructivism, and others. While in the past a great deal of emphasis has been placed on abstraction in early twentieth-century Russian art, this exhibition will equally stress the point that the tradition of figurative art continued to thrive at a time when Russian artists produced some of the most innovative artworks in the history of art.

The seventh historical period will examine the Soviet era, which is so strongly associated with the official doctrine for art known as socialist realism, established in 1934. Long seen as merely propaganda or historical curiosity, this style nonetheless produced highly talented artists, both official and unofficial. The main turning point away from the propagandistic approach that characterized Soviet art of the 1930s was the Great Patriotic War (World War II), when artists began to move beyond absolute idealism in art. This shift is echoed in the best canvases of Alexander Laktionov, Arkadii Plastov, Alexander Deineka, and Pavel Korin, which will also be included. This section of the exhibition will therefore present artists such as Isaac Brodsky, who painted many of the most iconic images of Vladimir Lenin and Joseph Stalin, alongside artists like Alexander Deineka, whose subjects remained true to Communism even as his style reflected not only an enduring modernist sensibility but also a discernibly singular artistic vision.

The eighth and final section will chart developments in Soviet art between Stalin’s death and the end of the Cold War. In the wake of Stalin’s death in 1953, many artists began to explore more personal approaches and subjects, such as Gelii Korzhev’s expressionist, forthright depiction of a soldier who lost his eye in World War II or Ilya Kabakov’s depiction in books and installations of the Soviet "Everyman" trying to escape the confines of the communal apartment and of Soviet society itself. RUSSIA! seeks to reveal the pluralism of Soviet art in order to call into question one of the most lasting mythologies of Russia in the West—namely that its art was either exclusively rooted in the mandates of the regime or against the state altogether during the period from ca. 1930 to 1980. This section will conclude with select works by contemporary Russian artists, thus highlighting the ongoing presence and strength of Russian art on the international scene.

Installation Design
The French designer Jacques Grange developed the exhibition’s installation design in collaboration with Hervé Aaron, Serge Barbosa, Béatrice Loubet, and Pierre Passebon. Working with a sophisticated palette and materials evocative of Russian palaces and museums, Grange’s installation emphasizes the chronological sweep of the exhibition, while still maintaining the integrity of the building and the artwork. Grange is well known for numerous residential projects in Europe and the United States and is a fervent collector of nineteenth and twentieth century art. His work often explores the relationship between art, design, and interiors. Previous exhibition projects include Yves Saint Laurent 1958–1985 at the Palais des Beaux Arts in Peking, and Schiapparelli at the Palais du Louvre in Paris.

Publication
The lavishly illustrated publication RUSSIA! Nine Hundred Years of Masterpieces and Master Collections will include fourteen essays by leading Russian and American scholars, including James Billington, Mikhail Shwydkoi, Gerald Vzdornov, Mikhail Allenov, Dmitrii Sarabianov, Robert Rosenblum, Evgenia Petrova, Lidia Iovleva, Albert Kostenevich, Sergei Androsov, Boris Groys, Ekaterina Degot, Valerie Hillings, and Alexander Borovsky. The publication’s scope will make it one of the most comprehensive sources on the history of Russian art and history published in English. The catalogue is 450 pages with 300 full-color plates as well as additional illustrations ($75 hardcover; $50 softcover). A companion volume RUSSIA! Catalogue of the Exhibition will document every work in the exhibition with full-color images and brief, authoritative texts. It will be approximately 80 pages and will include more than 250 images ($24.95). In addition, there will be an illustrated catalogue for RUSSIA! The Majesty of the Tsars: Treasures from the Kremlin Museum. The catalogue, approximately 144 pages, follows the exhibition and focuses on Russia in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, when the Russian tsars still resided in Moscow and before the founding of St. Petersburg in the eighteenth century. The catalogue includes an introductory essay by Kremlin curator Irina Bogronovnitskaya, an introduction to each theme, entries on groups of objects in the exhibition, and a chronology of the imperial lineage during the period ($45 hardcover). All three catalogues are published by the Guggenheim Museum and will be distributed in North America by D.A.P./Distributed Art Publishers.

PUBLIC PROGRAMS
In conjunction with the exhibition RUSSIA!, the Sackler Center for Arts Education presents a broad array of public programs ranging from a lecture series presenting leading scholars in the field of Russian art and culture; panel discussions featuring Soviet and international contemporary artists and collectors; collaborative program development with artists; performances of Russian music; and exhibition-related workshops and tours for elementary, middle school, and high school students. Programs are subject to change. For updated information regarding ticketed programs, contact the Box Office at (212) 423-3587.

RUSSIA! Lecture Series
The lecture series held in conjunction with RUSSIA! brings leading scholars in the field of Russian art and culture to the Guggenheim Museum. Unless otherwise noted, tickets for lectures are $10 ($7 for members, students, and seniors). For more information, call the Box Office at (212) 423-3587.

Yevgeny Yevtushenko
TUE OCT 25 @ 6:30 PM
"A poet in Russia is more than a poet." Yevgeny Yevtushenko was speaking of poetry’s unique role in Russia, but the words apply equally to Yevtushenko himself. Russia's most famous living poet reads his works in Russian and English.

James Billington: Seeing the Soul of Russia through the Body of its Art
WED NOV 2 @ 6:30 PM
Librarian of Congress Dr. James Billington speaks on the role of art in Russia and why Russia does not fit neatly into the conventional narrative of Western art and history.

Albert Kostenevich
TUE NOV 29 @ 6:30 PM
Dr. Kostenevich, an internationally renowned State Hermitage curator, lectures on the famed collections of Impressionism and Post-Impressionism purchased in the twentieth century by the Moscow merchants Sergei Shchukin and Ivan Morozov.

RUSSIA! Panel Discussions
Tickets are $10 ($7 for members, students, and seniors).

Different Generations, Intersecting Histories: Nonconformist Art in the Soviet Union
SAT SEPT 24 @ 2 PM
This panel explores the history of nonconformist art through the recollections of artists who participated in the movement. Participants include Grisha Bruskin, Vitaly Komar, Ernst Neizvestny, Vladimir Yankilevsky, and Vadim Zakharov.

American Collectors of Russian Art
WED OCT 5 @ 6:30 PM
This panel discusses tales of American collectors who have actively acquired Russian Art. Collectors Norton T. Dodge and Raymond Johnson, and curator Karen Kettering share compelling tales of outstanding collections.

Russian Art, International Artists
TUE NOV 15 @ 6:30 PM
This panel brings together four American artists, each with a distinctive style and different connections to Russian art and culture. Eleanor Antin, Barbara Bloom, Frank Stella, and David Wilson discuss how Russian art influences their individual practices.

Public & Artist Interactions
This initiative engages artists as collaborative partners in developing educational offerings. Tickets are $10 ($7 for members, students, and seniors).

Cory Arcangel: Icons From the 13th to the 21st Century and Back Again
SAT OCT 22, 1–4 PM
Artist Cory Arcangel leads a hands-on workshop in the Sackler Center. Participants explore the visual language of 13th–16th century icons in the exhibition RUSSIA!, then create personal desktop icons.

Vitaly Komar: Paradoxes of Collaboration in Art
TUE DEC 6 @ 6:30 PM
Artist Vitaly Komar speaks about his collaborations with American and Russian artists and his creation of SOTS Art, an unique version of Soviet Pop and Conceptual art.

For Families

RUSSIA! Family Days
SUNS OCT 9, NOV 6, 13, AND DEC 11
Reduced admission on RUSSIA! family days is $18 for families with children under 18 and up to two adults. Informative, family-oriented audio guides are available at an additional $4 per family.

Russian Portraits
SAT OCT 22, 1–4 PM
Discover Russian culture and history through portraiture. Gallery observations and activities are followed by a portrait-making workshop in the Studio Art Lab. Instructor: Maria Doubrovskaia, Sackler Educator. Open to children ages 7–13 with an adult companion. $20 for one child, plus one free adult ($15 for members' children); $15 per additional adult or child. To register, call (212) 423-3587.

What Makes Your Family Unique? Family Festival
SUN NOV 6, 1–4 PM
Through art-making, writing, and drama activities in the galleries, we invite you to share what is important and special in your family. Talk with museum educators, enjoy great art, and listen to music. Free with museum admission.

Photoshop Portraiture!
SAT NOV 12, 1–4 PM
Explore how portraiture evolves over several centuries in the exhibition RUSSIA!, then use digital photography and the latest version of Adobe Photoshop to construct personal family portraits inspired by works on view. Instructor: Rosanna Flouty, Manager for New Media. Open to children ages 7–13 with an adult companion. $20 for one child, plus one free adult ($15 for members’ children); $15 per additional adult or child. To register, please call (212) 423-3587.

Egg Yolks and Gold
SAT DEC 3, 1–4 PM
Following an interactive gallery tour of RUSSIA!, families create a small painting on wood by mixing natural pigments with egg yolk and applying real 22k gold leaf using their breath and fish glue. Instructors: Patricia Miranda, Guest Educator and Jessica Wright, Education Manager, School Programs. Open to children ages 7–13 with an adult companion. $20 for one child, plus one free adult ($15 for members’ children); $15 per additional adult or child. To register, call (212) 423-3587.

Works & Process
Works & Process at the Guggenheim, produced by Mary Sharp Cronson, explores the creative process through extraordinary music, dance, opera, and literary and theatrical performances. Performances are presented in the Peter B. Lewis Theater in the museum’s Sackler Center for Arts Education and are accompanied by discussions among artistic collaborators. Following each performance there is a unique opportunity to meet the artists at a reception hosted in the Frank Lloyd Wright–designed rotunda. Tickets are $24 ($18 for members, students, and seniors). Supporting Associates and Patrons Circle members free with reservations.

Faces of Russia
SUN AND MON, DEC 11 AND 12 @ 8 PM
The world renowned Dmitri Pokrovsky Ensemble draws from a variety of sources ranging from medieval Russian village songs to the very latest in music by the country’s contemporary composers. Wearing traditional costumes and performing on authentic instruments, the Ensemble performs a selection of these works and brings Russian culture – past and present – to life.

On View in the Sackler Center

Reflections: Socialist Realism and Russian Art
OCT 5, 2005–JAN 22, 2006, SAT–WED, 10 AM–5:45 PM, FRI, 10 AM–8 PM
As a complement to RUSSIA!, the Sackler Center for Arts Education at the Guggenheim Museum concurrently presents an exhibition of Socialist Realist paintings from the renowned collection of Raymond and Susan Johnson and The Museum of Russian Art in Minneapolis. The exhibition provides a unique insight into Russian life and culture by highlighting key themes and issues, as well as addressing the myths and misconceptions that are frequently associated with Russian paintings from this period.

From Gulag to Glasnost: The Art of Resistance
Video film by Nina Zaretskaya, 2001. (39 min.)
SEPT 16, 2005–JAN 11, 2006, FRI–WED, ONGOING, 10 AM–4:30 PM
This film presents a rich picture of the so-called "second Russian avant-garde" that formed after Stalin's death in 1953. Based on a series of interviews with nonconformist artists from the former USSR — including Grisha Bruskin, Eric Bulatov, Ilya Kabakov, Ernst Neizvestny, and Komar and Melamid — this documentary provides a broad spectrum of Soviet unofficial art by highlighting the diverse backgrounds and multiple styles of these artists and using footage of key works, many of them from the Dodge Collection at the Zimmerli Museum, and official Soviet period newsreels.

Screenings are held in the New Media Theater located in the Sackler Center for Arts Education. Free with museum admission. Produced by Art Media Center TV Gallery, Moscow with the support of the Soros Foundation; premiered on the National Russian TV Channel Kultura.

Curriculum Guide for Educators
Printed and Web-based versions Curriculum Guides for Educators are designed to assist teachers in using museum exhibitions both in their classrooms and to support museum visits. Curriculum materials for RUSSIA! focus on Russian civilization from historical, social, and art historical perspectives. These materials are available in both printed and web-based formats.

Professional Development for Educators
The Sackler Center for Arts Education at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum offers year-round opportunities for educators in core curriculum areas including, the arts, English language arts, social studies, the humanities, and math, to learn creative strategies for incorporating the arts into classroom activities. These programs introduce works of art, explore interdisciplinary curriculum applications, and introduce methods for teaching with objects. For maximum flexibility, workshops are offered as both full-day and after school options.

Information:
Betsy Ennis/Leily Soleimani - Public Affairs Department 212-423-3840

Press Preview: September 15, 2005, 10 AM–2 PM

Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
1071 Fifth Avenue New York

During RUSSIA! special admission prices apply:
Admission only: $18 for adults ($15 for students and seniors).
Admission with audio tour: $24 for adults ($21 for students and seniors).

IN ARCHIVIO [119]
Alberto Burri
dal 7/10/2015 al 5/1/2016

Attiva la tua LINEA DIRETTA con questa sede