In this virtual program from August, fly tyer and designer Selene of Maine shares a few artifacts related to historic fly tyer Carrie Stevens and demonstrates how to tie a Grey Ghost fly in her hands!
Read MoreWhen I joined the Portland Museum of Art earlier this year, I never imagined that 2020 would be a year of such change—one in which we would all be asked to rapidly adjust to a new world shaped by a global pandemic and calls for social justice.
Read MoreJessica May discusses Clifford Ross’ photograph: Hurricane LXVIII and how this artwork formed the backbone for an exhibition around Ross’ practice.
Read MoreThis September, Deputy Director and Robert and Elizabeth Nanovic Chief Curator Jessica May leaves the PMA after eight remarkable years. In this letter, Jessica reflects on her tenure and bids a fond “until we meet again” to PMA members and the museum community.
Read MoreThere is no way to encompass all the stories of what is now known as Maine. Stories of Maine: An Incomplete History represents one effort to gather stories that have shaped this state through the eyes of its peoples. Have a Maine experience, object, or anecdote to share? We want to know. Visit the digital iteration of our Workshop installation and record it at portlandmuseum.org/recorder
Museum audiences across the country know Will Barnet for his graphic print work and his haunting canvases…For generations of artists, however, Barnet is better known as a dedicated instructor and loyal mentor. Read this article by Diana Greenwold with contributions from Will Porta and Brett Bigbee.
Read MoreChristian Adame and Shalini Le Gall discuss how Juan Genoves's prints function as works of political protest. His artwork, created during Franco's regime, is just as relevant 50 years later.
Read MoreIn this video, 2020 Barnet Scholar Judith Walsh discusses the innovative changes Winslow Homer made to his artistic practice during the summer of 1878.
Read More"Our responsibility to the artists and community didn’t pause at all. In fact, our efforts multiplied. I suddenly found myself reliving the exhibition planning process. Carrie and Sheila were on speed dial and ready to participate at every turn...I now liken everyone’s efforts to raising a virtual barn: not one part possible without the next, each new strategy supporting and hoisting the next into position." -- Curator of Contemporary Art, Jaime DeSimone, shares her thoughts on Tabernacles for Trying Times as the exhibition comes to a close.
Read More"The big social occasions of the summer are all either very small or happening on a computer screen. There’s a sadness to that but I have to hope that for many artists who return to Maine annually, this is a summer with a quieter footprint, maybe a little more time to paint, read, reflect, or take walks." -- Chief Curator Jessica May, shares her thoughts on Maine's summer artist community and why it doesn't feel quite the same in 2020.
Read MoreOn July 16, 2020 the PMA was notified that Blackbaud experienced a global security incident that Blackbaud discovered in May of 2020 that has affected a large number of organizations worldwide, ranging from large colleges and universities to small nonprofits.
Read MoreIn this video, Diana Greenwold, Curator of American Art, and Dana Byrd, Assistant Professor of Art History, Bowdoin College, come together on Zoom to discuss Winslow Homer’s vexing 1875 painting, Uncle Ned at Home.
Read MoreIn this video, Alison Beyea, Executive Director of the ACLU of Maine and Zach Heiden, Chief Counsel, ACLU of Maine, and Brigitte Amiri from The Fight discuss the the organization's legacy of protecting individual rights and liberties and how issues in the film intersect with efforts in Maine.
Read More“All museums are putting a spotlight on their collecting practices and making sure they are being equitable across the board,” DeSimone said. “This is a concentrated effort to bring works of art by women into the collection.”
Read MoreFor almost 30 years, the PMA has collaborated with MAEA to put together Youth Art Month – an exhibition focused on artwork by K-12 students across the state. Check out this interview with MAEA art educator Elise Pelletier and visit the exhibition before it closes at the end of July.
Read MoreDescribing his greatest professional ambition, Gustave Le Gray wrote, “I wish that photography, instead of falling within the domain of industry, of commerce, will be included among the arts. That is its only, true place.” Read more about early photography andThe Brig by Gustave Le Gray.
Read MoreKirk Hoffman, Lead Preparator, shares why Migration by Christopher Patch is his favorite work in the PMA Collection.
Read MoreThe $300,000 grant is one of the 224 humanities projects across the country funded under NEH’s “A More Perfect Union” initiative, which supports efforts that promote a deeper understanding of U.S. history and culture and that advance civics education in preparation for the nation’s 250th anniversary in 2026.
Read MorePope.L is renowned for using his own body to make art that expands traditional boundaries of medium and subject matter, and brings gender, class and racial stereotypes uncomfortably close to the artist and his audiences. Pope.L’s work explores the fraught connection between prosperity and what he calls “have-not-ness.”
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