Upcoming Events at

TOUR: ReOrienting the Gaze
on Friday, 30 Apr, 11:00 AM
at Cornell Fine Arts Museum
at Cornell Fine Arts Museum
TOUR: ReOrienting the Gaze

ARTE Y CAFÉ CON LA CURADORA (Art and Coffee with the Curator)
on Tuesday, 4 May, 6:00 PM
at Cornell Fine Arts Museum
at Cornell Fine Arts Museum
ARTE Y CAFÉ CON LA CURADORA (Art and Coffee with the Curator) - The Place as Metaphor: Collection Conversations

TOUR: The Place as Metaphor: Collection Conversations
on Friday, 14 May, 11:00 AM
at Cornell Fine Arts Museum
at Cornell Fine Arts Museum
TOUR: The Place as Metaphor: Collection Conversations

From Gilbert Stuart to Jean-Michel Basquiat: American Art at CFAM
on Tuesday, 8 Jun, 6:00 PM
at Cornell Fine Arts Museum
at Cornell Fine Arts Museum
Join us as we learn more about American art at CFAM! Streamed live via: https://www.facebook.com/CFAMrollins/

Special Lecture Series: Yinka Shonibare’s Athena (After Myron)
on Thursday, 17 Jun, 5:00 PM
at Cornell Fine Arts Museum
at Cornell Fine Arts Museum
A World of Art in One Work: A partnership between the Winter Park Public Library and the Cornell Fine Arts Museum at Rollins College.
Fri Mar 12, 11:00 AM - Fri Mar 12, 12:00 PM
Online Event
Online Event
1000 Holt Ave, Winter Park, FL 32789
Community: Winter Park
Description
TOUR: Pushing the Envelope: Mail Art from the Archives of American Art
Event Details
Virtual event via Facebook live: www.facebook.com/CFAMrollins
Join CFAM Curator Gisela Carbonell on a tour of this exhibition, drawn entirely from the Archives of American Art. We will explore how 20th century artists used non-traditional media and looked to the postal system as an alternative means of producing, distributing, and receiving art.
Image: Ry Nikonova, Mail art to John Held Jr., 1988, John Held papers relating to Mail Art, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution
Join CFAM Curator Gisela Carbonell on a tour of this exhibition, drawn entirely from the Archives of American Art. We will explore how 20th century artists used non-traditional media and looked to the postal system as an alternative means of producing, distributing, and receiving art.
Image: Ry Nikonova, Mail art to John Held Jr., 1988, John Held papers relating to Mail Art, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution