How did one move through it and how did it engage audience participation?How did it succeed and where could it have been improved?
Virtual Art Exhibition Review
Chicago Manual Citation. consider the following. Choose a virtual exhibition from the past year from the list below and review it. Follow the writing guidelines for the review. reinforce what you saw and are describing. If circumstances prevent physical attendance, see the list of virtual exhibitions. What was the title and theme of the exhibition (e.g. what was it trying to communicate)? What were the material specifics: scope (number of works), media (painting, collage, photography, AR, etc.), and space utilization? How was the exhibition arranged? How did one move through it and how did it engage audience participation? Provide an analysis of the exhibition in whether or not you found it successful in what it set out to do. How did it succeed and where could it have been improved? · Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum: The works of Pablo Picasso, Piet Mondrian, Jeff Koons, and Franz Marc are just some of the 625 artists whose work are a part of the Guggenheim’s Collection Online (Links to an external site.) · Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History: Move at your own pace through the 360-degree room-by-room tour of every exhibit in the museum (Links to an external site.) · Van Gogh Museum: You can get up close and personal with the impressionist painter’s most famous work thanks to Google Arts & Culture (Links to an external site.) · Getty Museum: Los Angeles’s premiere gallery has two virtual tours, (Links to an external site.) including “Eat, Drink, and Be Merry,” which is a closer look at food in the Middle Ages and Renaissance. · The Vatican Museum: The Sistine Chapel, St. Peter’s Basilica, and Raphael’s Room, are just some of the sites you can see on the Vatican’s virtual tour (Links to an external site.) · Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum: Madrid’s must-see art museum has the works of some of the continent’s most celebrated artists like Rembrandt and Dali available online (Links to an external site.) · Georgia O’Keeffe Museum: Six virtual exhibits (Links to an external site.) are available online from this museum named for the “Mother of American modernism.” · National Museum of Anthropology, Mexico City: Dive into the pre-Hispanic history of Mexico with 23 exhibit rooms (Links to an external site.)full of Mayan artifacts. · British Museum, London: The Rosetta Stone and Egyptian mummies are just a couple of things that you’re able to see on a virtual tour o (Links to an external site.)f the museum.