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Fresh perspectives on art, life, and current events. From deep dives to quick takes to insightful interviews, it’s the museum in conversation. Beyond the walls. Outside the frame. Around the world.

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Once at MIA: A man and his mountain

It’s now one of the MIA’s most beloved artworks: Jade Mountain Illustrating the Gathering of Scholars at the Lanting Pavilion, carved in 1784. But a hundred years ago the 640-pound sculpture was used as a table centerpiece. You could do this if you were T.B. Walker, this was your table, and you owned the jade mountain. Bon  ...

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Surprise sculptures: The artist behind "Microsafari" explains the tiny new creatures in the galleries

Mercedes Knapp arrives at the MIA with a serving tray bearing a miniature menagerie. Some of the creatures are identifiable: koi fish, a lion, a sleeping deer. Others are more nebulous, with the rounded, fantastical features of anime. She calls them Puds, colorful little blobs that resemble nothing so much as gumdrops. She’s been making the cuddly creatures  ...

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Surprise sculptures: The artist behind “Microsafari” explains the tiny new creatures in the galleries

Mercedes Knapp arrives at the MIA with a serving tray bearing a miniature menagerie. Some of the creatures are identifiable: koi fish, a lion, a sleeping deer. Others are more nebulous, with the rounded, fantastical features of anime. She calls them Puds, colorful little blobs that resemble nothing so much as gumdrops. She’s been making the cuddly creatures  ...

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Once at MIA: The "Mad Men" museum

Somewhere in these renderings, surely, is a pod chair with speakers piping atonal music. This is how architect Kenzo Tange’s 1974 minimalist addition to the MIA was expected to play out: the museum as mod social hub. Tange was a starchitect before anyone had thought of the term. He blended Le Corbusier’s modernism with traditional  ...

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Once at MIA: The “Mad Men” museum

Somewhere in these renderings, surely, is a pod chair with speakers piping atonal music. This is how architect Kenzo Tange’s 1974 minimalist addition to the MIA was expected to play out: the museum as mod social hub. Tange was a starchitect before anyone had thought of the term. He blended Le Corbusier’s modernism with traditional  ...

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Maxed out: Subduing an arch rival for the Habsburgs show

Anyone entering Phil Barber’s studio in the belly of the MIA recently might think they had stumbled upon a Habsburgian Montessori class. On the floor were 190 pieces of paper that Barber had cut from the pages of a battered, leather-bound portfolio. Somehow the shapes would fit together to become the Triumphal Arch of Maximilian  ...

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Once at MIA: Spring of ’69

Paul Wunderlich had some groupies. Though it’s more likely that these art-loving young ladies scaling the MIA in 1969 were on the prowl for fellow Wunderlich fans, not the artist himself. It’s not hard to understand why: The German surrealist painter, printmaker, and sculptor, whose name literally means “strange” in his native tongue, was known for  ...

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Once at MIA: The Collectors

They stand close, but not too close, pillars of the museum with plenty of ideological daylight between them. This was January 12, 1955, amid a host of new acquisitions. Russell Plimpton (seated) had led the MIA as its director for 34 years. His soon-to-be successor, Richard Davis (on the right), was then the senior curator, already  ...

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The Hairy Family and the Habsburgs

By Tim Gihring

Of all the memorable images on view at the MIA in “The Habsburgs: Rarely Seen Masterpieces from Europe’s Greatest Dynasty,” the one that may haunt you—may send you scurrying to Google to assuage your curiosity—is a small portrait of a girl named Antonietta Gonzales. She is about 8 or 9 years old,  ...

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ISIS has declared war on cultural heritage. Is there anything we can do?

In the past few weeks, the media has been flooded with reports of the Islamic State, or ISIS/ISIL, destroying Iraq’s ancient heritage. They’ve smashed Mesopotamian treasures at the Mosul Museum, burned thousands of rare books and manuscripts in the Mosul Library, and bulldozed entire preserved Assyrian cities, including UNESCO World Heritage sites at Nimrud and  ...

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