Lions and Tigers and Museums, Oh My!

TAME YOUR CURIOSITY!

Asking questions, investigating objects, and making discoveries can be an exciting and wonderful experience. Sometimes, a single work of art can spark curiosity in many ways.

In the 1600s, Peter Paul Rubens, a painter from Flanders (now Belgium), painted a dramatic picture of a big cat hunt. The painting, Lion and Tiger Hunting, is now in an art museum in Rennes, France, where visitors admire the artist's ability, learn about the painting's history, and maybe get curious about it too.

But if the painting belonged to a museum of science, natural history, or living history, it might raise different questions: Is a man strong enough to wrestle with a lion? Do lions and tigers live in the same places? Did people really hunt big cats this way hundreds of years ago?

This exhibition looks at the same work of art from the perspective of four kids of museums: an art museum, a living history museum, a science museum, and a natural history museum.

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Time:

10:00am to 5:00pm Sat, Nov 17, 2012 - Sun, Sep 8, 2013

Venue:

The Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute

225 South Street, Williamstown, MA 01267

Contact:

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