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Women in Motion: 150 Years of Women's Artist Networks at PAFA charts the untold stories of women artists' networking, innovating and collaborating. Joan Semmel: Skin in the Game is the first retrospective of the iconic artist, bringing together 60 years of groundbreaking paintings.
- Upcoming
The Historic Landmark Building (HLB) at PAFA will be...
- Past
Women in Motion: 150 Years of Women's Artistic Networks at...
- Tour of Women in Motion
Dig into some of the untold stories of women artists'...
- 6Abc
Karen Rogers reports on two major exhibitions at PAFA...
- Member Tour
Join us for an exclusive curator-led tour that explores the...
- After Hours Access
Join PAFA’s Vice President of Museum Research and...
- Creativity, Collectives, and Pafa
Join PAFA alums Clarity Haynes, Elena Peteva, and Suzanne...
- Upcoming
The art is coming to you, in ultra-high resolution, gigapixel images from Google Cultural Institute. See extraordinary levels of detail in famous works of art like Vermeer’s Girl with the Pearl Earring and Van Gogh’s Starry Night.
11 cze 2022 · Uninvited: Canadian Women Artists in the Modern Moment is a major exhibition gathering more than 200 works of art by a generation of extraordinary painters, photographers, weavers, bead workers and sculptors.
31 paź 2022 · The famous painting of “Two Maidens and a Little Boy” by Vietnamese painter To Ngoc Van is on display at Vietnam National Fine Arts Museum in Hanoi. Photo courtesy of the museum. The “Two Maidens and a Little Boys” was recognized as a national treasure in 2013 thanks to its historical, aesthetic, and cultural value.
VMFA has a growing collection of works by women artists, including those listed here, from across time and place.
This portrait was painted by Sir Anthony Van Dyck, a Flemish Baroque artist who became a leading court painter in England. One can conclude the portrait was painted by Van Dyck due to the...
This exhibition explores the artistic networks of women artists exhibiting, studying, and teaching at PAFA from its founding in 1805 to the end of World War II. PAFA has the remarkable distinction of actively promoting women artists since its first annual exhibition in 1811.