“A great building must begin with the unmeasurable, must go through measurable means when it is being designed and in the end must be unmeasurable.” – Louis I. Kahn
It's always free to explore the Kimbell's collection and buildings ... Masterpieces of European art from Michelangelo to Matisse; Egyptian and classical antiquities; ...
“The Lure of Dresden” also includes this breathtaking work from Augustus III’s fabled porcelain collection—an extraordinarily rare and ambitious Meissen vase, nearly three feet tall, with tiny individually molded snowball blossoms and a portrait of the monarch in triumph. pic.twitter.com/KncpZmp…
1 day ago
Wonderfully dramatic capture in the Louis I. Kahn Building galleries with works by Houdon and Boucher. Photograph by Andrew Weaver (Instagram: drewmaniac) pic.twitter.com/eB4kzLC…
5 days ago
After his portraits of Dresden, Bellotto painted the nearby town of Pirna. His enchanting views of this strategic site on the Elbe River, teeming with idyllic vignettes of everyday life, present Saxony as a peaceful and productive state. www.kimbellart.org/exhi…pic.twitter.com/UxN6L9U…
6 days ago
Review: The last quarter century of Monet’s life was spent painting many of the most astonishing and often just plain gorgeous works of his long career www.wsj.com/articles/mo…via @WSJ
The Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, Texas, hosts an art collection as well as traveling art exhibitions, educational programs and an extensive research library.
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