Today’s post comes from Polly Ellman, Arlington Highschool 18′ and Art Center Student Docent.
A main focus of the modern and contemporary galleries at the Loeb is the tension between abstract and representational or figurative artwork
Searching for Sherman
Today’s post comes from Julian Ireland, Oberlin class of 2019 and Art Center Student Docent.
It is hard to pinpoint what makes Cindy Sherman’s 1994 photograph Untitled #304 so unsettling – whether it’s the two figures who draw an ambiguous line between human and doll, or the eerie red carpeted space that they lie in
Caro in the Garden
Today’s post comes from Claudia Ashworth, Class of 2019, and Art Center Student Docent.
After a brief period of conservation, Anthony Caro’s work Slap (1976) returned to the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center’s sculpture garden last week
Winogrand’s Beautiful Women
Today’s post comes from Julian Ireland, Oberlin Class of 2019 and Art Center Docent.
A recent exhibition that visitors to the Loeb often miss (yes, there is a gallery on the second floor) is Garry Winogrand’s Beautiful Women
Fading from Memory: Mesoamerica to New York City
Today’s blog post comes from Curtis Eckley, Class of 2019 and Art Center Student Docent.
Last week’s Late Night at the Loeb saw the surfacing of some of the Loeb’s more elusive yet fascinating works from the collection through a faculty talk given by Professor of Anthropology and Latin American & Latinx Studies David Tavárez on Mesoamerican artifacts, and a following Art Talk given by Zoe Lemelson ’17 on contemporary photographer, Doug Rickard