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				|  | March 28, 2007 |  
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	|  | Family Activities |  |  
	|  | Family Art Stops Daily through April 8, 2007
 2 pm, 2:30 pm
 Museum Galleries, Getty Center
 
 
 Get up close and personal with a single work of art at this half-hour, hands-on gallery experience geared for families with children ages 5 and up. The 2:30 p.m. session is also offered in Spanish. Sign up at the Museum Information Desk beginning 30-minutes prior to the start of the program.
 
 
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	|  | Tours and Gallery Talks |  |  
	|  | Architecture Tour Tuesdays - Thursdays and Sundays through June 30, 2007
 10:15 am, 11 am, 1 pm, 2 pm, 3 pm
 Museum Entrance Hall, Getty Center
 
 
 This is a 45-minute tour of the architecture and Richard Meier's design of the Getty Center. Meet the docent outside at the bench under the sycamore trees near the front entrance of the Museum.
 
 
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	|  | Collection Highlights Tour Tuesdays - Thursdays and Sundays through April 8, 2007
 11 am
 Museum Galleries, Getty Center
 
 
 This one-hour tour provides an overview of major works from the Museum's collection. Offered in English and Spanish on weekends. Meet at the Museum Information Desk.
 
 
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	|  | Garden Tour Daily through June 30, 2007
 11:30 am, 12:30 pm, 2:30 pm, 3:30 pm
 Central Garden, Getty Center
 
 
 This is a 45-minute tour of the Getty gardens, including Robert Irwin's Central Garden. Meet the docent outside at the bench under the sycamore trees near the front entrance of the Museum.
 
 
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	|  | Curator's Gallery Talk Wednesday March 28, 2007
 1:30 pm
 Museum Galleries, Getty Center
 
 
 Christopher Bedford, curatorial assistant, department of sculpture and decorative arts, leads a gallery talk on the exhibition Zoopsia: New Works by Tim Hawkinson. Meet under the stairs in the Museum Entrance Hall.
 
 
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	|  | Focus Tour: Neoclassical Art Wednesdays through May 2, 2007
 3 pm
 Museum Galleries, Getty Center
 
 
 Enjoy a one-hour tour focusing on Neoclassical art made between 1750 and 1820, when Europeans on the Grand Tour encountered works from the ancient past that inspired a new artistic style. Meet at the Museum Information Desk.
 
 
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	|  | Exhibitions |  |  
	|  | A Renaissance Cabinet Rediscovered Daily through August 5, 2007
 
 South Pavilion, Plaza Level, Getty Center
 
 
 This exhibition traces the study of one Getty object to determine its date and place of manufacture. The cabinet, acquired in 1971, had since the 1980s been believed to be a pastiche if not an outright fake. However, documentary research and technical analysis undertaken by experts at the Getty revealed that the cabinet, rather than being a compromised object, is one of the most important pieces of French Renaissance furniture in the United States. This case study of the research into the authenticity of the cabinet presents the results of scientific and visual analyses of the object, studies of related materials, archival research, and other evidence. It is a story of how new information, careful research, and evolving analytic processes can alter our understanding of the art of the past.
 
 
  Learn more about this exhibition 
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	|  | Art, Anti-Art, Non-Art: Experimentations in the Public Sphere in Postwar Japan, 1950-1970 Daily through June 3, 2007
 
 Research Institute Exhibition Gallery, Getty Center
 
 
 At the end of World War II, Japan was left in ruins and in a relative cultural void. Numerous anti-establishment artistic collaboratives emerged during this period, notably Jikken Kōbō/Experimental Workshop, Gutai, Group Ongaku, Tokyo Fluxus, Neo Dada, Hi Red Center, Vivo, Provoke, and Bikyōtō. These collectives eschewed traditional commercial art practice in favor of radical work that provoked its audience conceptually, politically, and socially. In experimenting with new materials and processes of art making and disruption of conventional art forms, the work of these artists reflected the dramatic changes and disjunctive character of everyday life in Japan over the course of two decades following the war. Drawn exclusively from Research Library holdings, the works presented in Art, Anti-Art, Non-Art range from musical scores and photo essays to performance documentation and interactive art kits.
 
 
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	|  | Classical Connections: The Enduring Influence of Greek and Roman Art Daily through December 31, 2008
 
 North Pavilion, Plaza Level, Getty Center
 
 
 This installation of antiquities demonstrates the relationship of ancient art to later work, showing some of the themes, techniques, and motifs borrowed by later artists—from mythology to decorative design—and the approach to the human figure known today as the classical ideal. This permanent collection installation is on view in the North Pavilion.
 
 
  Learn more about this exhibition 
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	|  | French Manuscript Illumination of the Middle Ages Daily through April 15, 2007
 
 North Pavilion, Plaza Level, Getty Center
 
 
 Throughout the Middle Ages manuscript illumination was a major art form in France, a favorite of French kings and high-ranking nobles. This exhibition of 25 manuscripts and leaves from the Getty Museum's collection highlights the achievement of French painting in books from the 800s to the 1500s. The exhibition traces manuscript production from its origins in early monastic centers, through its expansion into cities (with the advent of universities), and finally explores the relationship between painting on panel and manuscript painting in the later Middle Ages and Renaissance. Book illumination is considered in the context of stained-glass paintings and panel paintings, also drawn from the Museum's collection.
 
 
  Learn more about this exhibition 
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	|  | Made for Manufacture: Drawings for Sculpture and the Decorative Arts Daily through May 20, 2007
 
 East Pavilion, Plaza Level, Getty Center
 
 
 Many of the greatest draftsmen of the Renaissance and Baroque eras made drawings for sculpture and the decorative arts. This exhibition comprises drawings for objects to be executed in a range of media, including metal, wood, glass, ceramics, and stone. It explores how artists translated two-dimensional designs into three-dimensional objects. Spanning the 1400s to the 1700s, the exhibition includes drawings from the Italian, German, French, Spanish, Netherlandish, and Flemish schools, all from the collection of the Getty Museum and an anonymous lender. It also presents new acquisitions, such as Design for a Quatrefoil (about 1475–90) by an artist in the circle of the Housebook Master and the Design for an Ewer (1629) by Stefano della Bella.
 
 
  Learn more about this exhibition 
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	|  | The Old Order and the New: P.H. Emerson and Photography 1885-1895 Daily through July 8, 2007
 
 West Pavilion, Terrace Level, Getty Center
 
 
 Peter Henry Emerson (British, 1856–1936) photographed the isolated region of East Anglia in England during the late 19th century, a time when traditional life and work along the Norfolk Broads were increasingly threatened by advances in modern technology. This exhibition explores Emerson's passion for recording customs that were unaffected by the Industrial Revolution and places his photographs in the context of paintings and etchings of the period. Organized by the National Museum of Photography, Film, and Television in Bradford, England, the exhibition features more than 150 works of art, including a number of rare photographically illustrated books from the Getty Museum's collection. A new publication discussing Emerson's work accompanies the exhibition.
 
 
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	|  | From Caspar David Friedrich to Gerhard Richter: German Paintings from Dresden Daily through April 29, 2007
 
 West Pavilion, Plaza Level, Getty Center
 
 
 Emerging from a partnership between the Getty Museum and the Dresden State Museums, this exhibition presents a select group of paintings from the Galerie Neue Meister, one of the foremost collections of German art from 1800 to the present. Not a traditional survey, this exhibition instead presents 18 works by the two best-known painters from Dresden: Caspar David Friedrich (German, 1774-1840), the key voice of German Romanticism, and Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932), the most significant German artist working today. The works by Friedrich include his 1809 masterwork, Cross in the Mountains (The Tetschen Altarpiece), while Richter is represented by 12 Abstractions from 2005. Twelve other paintings by such artists as Carl Gustav Carus, Johann Christian Dahl, Otto Dix, and Karl Schmidt-Rotluff are interspersed throughout the Museum's permanent collection of paintings. These juxtapositions address diverse aspects of German art between 1800 and World War I, including Romanticism and the sublime and the interrelationships between Germany's artistic heritage and European culture at large. An illustrated catalogue, featuring an interview with Gerhard Richter, accompanies the exhibition.
 
 
  Learn more about this exhibition 
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	|  | Sigmar Polke: Photographs, 1968–1972 Daily through May 20, 2007
 
 West Pavilion, Plaza Level, Getty Center
 
 
 This presentation of 35 photographs by Sigmar Polke (German, b. 1941) includes still life compositions of objects that the artist has found in his studio or excerpted from popular culture, as well as multiple exposures and prints developed in a manner that emulates his predilection to layer unrelated subjects and techniques in his painting. Identified only by the name of the city in which they were made, these photographs demonstrate the range of Polke's early fascination with the photographic medium and his desire to explore its expressive potential. Acquired in 1984, this group of photographs constitutes an important component of the Getty Museum's holdings of work by painters who have turned to the camera.
 
 
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	|  | Zoopsia: New Works by Tim Hawkinson Daily through September 9, 2007
 
 West Pavilion, Terrace Level, Getty Center
 
 
 To inaugurate a series of artists' projects at the Getty Museum, internationally recognized Los Angeles-based artist Tim Hawkinson (American, b. 1960) has created four new works for first-time display. Zoopsia offers playful, alternative perspectives on the natural world. Concurrently, Überorgan, described by Hawkinson as a massive, self-playing, walk-in organ of balloons and horns, will be installed in the Museum Entrance Hall for its Los Angeles debut. Previously exhibited in Massachusetts and New York, Überorgan changes with each installation in response to the site. Typically incorporating household and industrial materials, and often mechanized to emit sound, evoke breath, or record the passage of time, Hawkinson's extraordinary art links form, process, and meaning to create unique and provocative viewing experiences.
 
 
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	|  | A Place in the Sun: Photographs of Los Angeles by John Humble Daily through July 8, 2007
 
 West Pavilion, Terrace Level, Getty Center
 
 
 John Humble (American, b. 1944) has lived and worked in the Los Angeles area for 30 years. During this time he has created a strong body of photographs inspired by architecture and its surrounding natural environment, often focusing on the incongruities and ironic juxtapositions of the Southern Californian landscape. This two-gallery exhibition features approximately 35 color photographs, many of which were acquired by the Getty Museum in January 2006, with the generous assistance of the Getty Museum Photographs Council, which also underwrote the accompanying publication. Both the exhibition and book celebrate Humble's distinct view of Los Angeles. From the concrete channels of the Los Angeles River to brightly colored commercial buildings, his photographs of the built environment capture that which is instantly recognizable yet very often overlooked.
 
 
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				|  | March 28, 2007 |  
				|  | The Getty Villa is closed to the general public on this date. 
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