Collections: Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art

  • 1st Floor
    Arts of Africa, Steinberg Family Sculpture Garden
  • 2nd Floor
    Arts of Asia and the Islamic World
  • 3rd Floor
    Egyptian Art, European Paintings
  • 4th Floor
    Contemporary Art, Decorative Arts, Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art
  • 5th Floor
    Luce Center for American Art

On View: Mummy and Cartonnage of Hor

Cartonnage, linen covered with plaster and then painted, protected the mummy inside the coffin, while the symbols on it helped the deceased ...

Hiroshige's One Hundred Famous Views of Edo

Hiroshige's 118 woodblock landscape and genre scenes of mid-nineteenth-century Tokyo, is one of the greatest achievements of Japanese art.

    On View: Bocio

    Bochio are very powerful and very personal objects. An individual may make one for protection, to harm an enemy, or to ensure personal succe...

     

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    Red, Yellow, BrownThe Dinner PartyUntitled 2 (from Note to Self)Untitled [Guanaroca (First Woman)]What Its Like, What It Is #1Sing-Along American History: War and RaceThe Hard Place (For Mairead Farrell)DrivenThrough the Large GlassAnonymous was a WomanStatic DriftCelebrating the Next TwinklingDance, from the "Sixtysomething" seriesHeathers DegradéDiane DiMassaTestimony
     
    Elizabeth A. Sackler Center For Feminist Art –  Showing objects 1 - 16 of 145
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    Recent Comments

    "are you being cured universal woman - or are you still being held captive in the cells of the resourceful, patriarchal world? "
    By RajArumugam

    "This sounds hokey. Does the artist even know what the hell she's talking about or know what she is trying to say through her "art"... is the artist the one who actually created the art? It seems like her talk was written by someone else... or she sounds like she's reading someone else's description of _her_ works.. how bizzarre! "
    By Ghost of Artists Past

    "Painfull and meaningfull. "
    By E_Fretez

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