Event Title
In this see that. Octavio Paz and Art
Name The San Diego Museum of Art
Address 1450 El Prado, Balboa Park
City San Diego
State CA
Zip 92101
Opening Hours
Location 0
Telephone 619 232-7931
Email info@sdmart.org
Web Site http://www.sdmart.org/calendar/see-octavio-paz-and-art
   
Contact Admissions Desk  
Fee Free
Reception Date N/A
Dates Starts On 12-2-2014   Ends On 12-2-2014
Opening Days
Event Description Hear perspectives by Héctor Tajonar, curator of In this see that. Octavio Paz and Art at the Museo del Palacio de Bellas Artes, Mexico City, during this program presented by The Consulate General of Mexico in San Diego. Commemorating the 100th birthday of Octavio Paz, Mexico's first Nobel Prize winner for literature, In this see that explores the relationship between poetry and art, and between Paz and the artists he dedicated his writings to. Featuring 200+ works from almost 100 significant international collections, the exhibition includes works by Henry Moore, Joan Miró, and Yves Tanguy from The San Diego Museum of Art's Permanent Collection.


Event Title
Heritage Luncheon and Silent Auction
Name The San Diego Museum of Art
Address 1549 El Prado #12
City San Diego
State CA
Zip 92101
Opening Hours
Location 0
Telephone 619 232-7931
Email info@sdmart.org
Web Site http://www.sdmart.org/calendar/heritage-luncheon-and-silent-auction-0
   
Contact Admissions Desk  
Fee $60
Reception Date N/A
Dates Starts On 12-2-2014   Ends On 12-2-2014
Opening Days
Event Description The Prado Ballroom Featuring a lecture, silent auction, including objects of Asian interest, and lunch with fine wine, the annual Heritage Luncheon is the major fundraising event for the Museum's Asian Arts Council. About the lecture: Stephen Little, Ph.D., Curator of Chinese and Korean Art at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, will lecture on the role of guai shi, or “strange stones”, in Chinese culture and art. According to legend, stones have been revered in China since remote antiquity, when they were presented as tribute to Emperor Yu, a mythical sage–ruler. Stones were prized and collected for display in gardens and probably interiors from the Han dynasty onward, and by the Tang dynasty (618–906) a true literature of stones had appeared. The tradition of stone collecting, which was to find its ultimate expression during the late Ming dynasty (1368–1644), focused on stones as representations of the universe in miniature.






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