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This intimate survey of the artist’s work over the course of five decades complements and celebrates the McNay’s recent commission of a major sculpture by the artist. The exhibition includes all ten studies for one of Aycock’s earliest and most influential sculptures from 1972, Maze.
Alice Aycock: Moving through Time is organized for the McNay Art Museum by Lyle W. Williams, Curator of Prints and Drawings, Curator of Modern Art.
Funding is most generously provided by The Jane and Arthur Stieren Fund for Exhibitions, the Elizabeth Huth Coates Charitable Foundation of 1992, the Ewing Halsell Foundation, and the Louis A. and Francis B. Wagner Endowment.
Image: Alice Aycock, Darkness Visible 2019: #7 Texas Twister, 2019. Inkjet print and hand-painted watercolor on paper. Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Thomas Schulte, Berlin.
Beyond Reality presents artwork by four Texas-based artists, Carlos Donjuan, Angela Fox, Ernesto Ibañez, and Dan Lam, whose work features imagined realities.
Since 2011, Spotlight has celebrated the remarkable achievements of student artists reflecting on one work in the McNay collection. This year, over…
Big Little Stage shows how designers present creative visions for stage productions through small-scale and large-scale models called maquettes.
A collection of Art Nouveau and Art Deco glass by Jeanne and Irving Mathews from Paris flea markets in the 1960s.
The Art of Color presents a cross section of works in the McNay's Collection based on color.
the Studio is a multiuse, interactive space where visitors can relax, recharge, and engage with a variety of artwork and activities while…
Be our ghoul of honor at an exhibition hosted by creatures lured from the depths of the McNay Art Museum’s collection.
Brothers Einar and Jamex de la Torre combine trompe l’oeil wallpaper with lenticular images, transforming the AT&T Lobby wall.