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Art Tasting with Julián – Art in 3D

Nelson-Atkins Director Julián Zugazagoitia and Curator Jan Schall discuss how we experience 3D art and why the museum’s sculpture collection is world renowned.

Figurative or abstract, organic or geometric, miniature or massive— sculpture has the power to move us in unexpected ways. Curator Jan Schall and Julián discuss how we experience 3D art and why the museum’s sculpture collection is world renowned.

Thursday, October 11, 2012, 6 pm.

Free event reservation.

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Meet the Past – Thomas Jefferson

Meet the Past with Crosby Kemper III returns for a conversation with Thomas Jefferson at The Central Library on Thursday, September 20. 2012 at 6:30pm.

Meet the Past with Crosby Kemper III returns for a conversation with Thomas Jefferson, as portrayed by Patrick Lee. Join us at The Central Library on Thursday, September 20, 2012 at 6:30pm. The Central Library is located at 14 W. 10th Street in downtown Kansas City, Missouri.

Jefferson, America’s third president and author of the Declaration of Independence, was also a big supporter of the humanities.

The event will be taped by KCPT for later broadcast.

Update: Meet the Past with Crosby Kemper III airs Thursday, November 15, 2012 at 8pm on KCPT.

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A Grrrerrific Welcome to the Neighborhood!

KCPT Family Members welcomed Daniel Tiger to our neighborhood on Friday, August 24, 2012.

KCPT Family Members welcomed Daniel Tiger to our neighborhood on Friday, August 24, 2012. To celebrate the new series based on the legacy of Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood, parents and kids created their own paper trolleys, wore Daniel Tiger masks, shared snacks, watched the first ever episode of Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood and took a tour of KCPT.

KCPT’s own beloved friend P.T. the owl also made a special visit and gave each child their very own P.T. book house, with a book inside.

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Meet the Past to Portray Painter George Caleb Bingham

Join KCPT & Kansas City Public Library for Meet the Past: George Caleb Bingham on Tuesday, August 7, 2012 at 6:30pm, Truman Memorial Building, Independence.

In the mid-1800s Missouri was evolving from a rude frontier environment to a modern state. And capturing on canvas both the wilderness and advancing civilization was painter George Caleb Bingham.

Bingham (1811-1879) – portrayed by actor Robert Gibby Brand - returns for the Library’s popular Meet the Past series on Tuesday, August 7, 2012, at 6:30 p.m. at the Truman Memorial Building, 416 Maple St., Independence.  There  may even be a few of his original paintings on display!

Former Independence, MO resident George Caleb Bingham gained national fame with paintings like “Fur Traders Descending the Mississippi,” “The Jolly Boatmen,” and the controversial “General Order No. 11,” which criticized federal depredations during the Civil War.

The self-taught artist came to Missouri as a child, settling with his family in Franklin. When he was nine Bingham met famed portraitist Chester Harding, an encounter that left a powerful impression.

Initially young Bingham considered careers in cabinet making, the ministry, and law. But by age 19 he was painting portraits for $20 apiece, and thereafter he devoted himself to art and becoming one of the great American genre painters of the 19th century.

Bingham operated a studio in St. Louis. Among his early major paintings were the iconic “Fur Traders Descending the Missouri” depicting two frontiersmen in a canoe, “The Jolly Boatmen,” and “Stump Speaking,” one of many works depicting rural politics.

His large canvas “General Order No. 11″ depicted the depredations inflicted by federal troops on civilians in Western Missouri, who in 1863 were forced to abandon their homes as part of the army’s war with Confederate guerillas. Bingham, a Kansas City resident and a supporter of the Union cause, called the order “an act of imbecility” and purportedly warned Union Gen. Thomas Ewing: “If you execute this order, I shall make you infamous with pen and brush.”

Bingham enjoyed a political career, being elected to the Missouri General Assembly in 1848. He was appointed Missouri State Treasurer during the Civil War. Later he became president of the Kansas City Board of Police Commissioners and Adjutant-General of Missouri. He also was the first professor of art at the University of Missouri.

Metropolitan Ensemble Theatre veteran Robert Gibby Brand, who portrays Bingham, played Edgar Snow at a previous Meet the Past event. This spring Brand portrayed Henry Higgins in the Library’s Script-in-Hand production of My Fair Lady.

RSVP on the library’s website.

Major funding provided by the Courtney S. Turner Charitable TrustKen and Cindy McClain, and the J.B. Reynolds Foundation.

 

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