<?xml version="1.0"?>
<Events>
 <Event xml:lang="en" id="2008/09AA" href="http://www.nyartbeat.com/event/2008/09AA">
  <Name>&quot;Folk Art Revealed&quot; Exhibition</Name>
  <Venue href="http://www.nyartbeat.com/venue/FC8AFCCD">
    <Name>American Folk Art Museum</Name>
    <Type>Museum</Type>
    <Address>45 W 53rd St., New York, NY 10019</Address>
    <Phone>212-977-7170</Phone>
    <Fax>212-977-8134</Fax>
    <Access>Between 5th and 6th Ave. Subway: E/V to 5th Avenue or B/D/F/V to 49th Street.</Access>
    <Area areaId="midtown">Midtown</Area>
    <OpeningHour>10:30:00</OpeningHour>
    <ClosingHour>17:30:00</ClosingHour>
    <DaysClosed mon="1" tue="0" wed="0" thu="0" fri="0" sat="0" sun="0" hol="0" />
    <ScheduleDetails>fridays closinghour 19:30</ScheduleDetails>
    <ScheduleNote></ScheduleNote>
  </Venue>
  <Media>2D: Painting</Media>
  <Media>3D: Sculpture</Media>
  <Media>3D: Furniture</Media>
  <Media>3D: Crafts</Media>
  <Description><![CDATA[&quot;Folk Art Revealed,&quot; opened on November 16, 2004. The exhibition explores the nature of folk art through four themes applied to a diverse range of artwork from the museum's rich and extensive holdings, many of which have never before been on view.  These four perspectives: symbolism, utility, individuality, and community-- infuse all of folk art and speak to essential aspects of both traditional and unconventional expressions. Spanning the 18th century to the present, the works selected by curators Stacy C. Hollander and Brooke Davis Anderson, invite a deeper understanding of folk art and its role in people's lives.

[Image: Unknown &quot;New York&quot; (1848) Oil on wood panel 34 x 57 x 1 3/8 in. Courtesy of American Folk Art Museum, promised gift of Ralph Esmerian]]]></Description>
  <Image src="http://www.nyartbeat.com/media/event/2008/09AA-30" width="30" />
  <Image src="http://www.nyartbeat.com/media/event/2008/09AA-80" width="80" />
  <Image src="http://www.nyartbeat.com/media/event/2008/09AA-170" width="170" />
  <Karma>0.54375</Karma>
  <Price free="0">Adults $9, Students and Seniors $7, Children under 12, Members, Friday after 5.30pm Free</Price>
  <DateStart>0000-00-00</DateStart>
  <DateEnd>0000-00-00</DateEnd>
  <ScheduleNote></ScheduleNote>
  <DaysBeforeEnd>0</DaysBeforeEnd>
  <PermanentEvent>1</PermanentEvent>
  <Distance>0</Distance>
  <Datum>wgs84</Datum>
  <Latitude>40.760953</Latitude>
  <Longitude>-73.97725</Longitude>
 </Event>

 <Event xml:lang="en" id="2008/BB6B" href="http://www.nyartbeat.com/event/2008/BB6B">
  <Name>Gallery Workshops for Families</Name>
  <Venue href="http://www.nyartbeat.com/venue/0472F082">
    <Name>The Cloisters</Name>
    <Type>Museum</Type>
    <Address>99 Margaret Corbin Drive, New York, NY 10040</Address>
    <Phone>212-923-3700</Phone>
    <Fax></Fax>
    <Access>Subway: A train to 190th Street and exit the station by elevator. Walk north along Margaret Corbin Drive for approximately ten minutes or transfer to the M4 bus and ride north one stop. If you are coming from the Museum's Main Building, you may also take</Access>
    <Area areaId="harlem_bronx">Harlem, Bronx</Area>
    <OpeningHour>09:30:00</OpeningHour>
    <ClosingHour>17:15:00</ClosingHour>
    <DaysClosed mon="1" tue="0" wed="0" thu="0" fri="0" sat="0" sun="0" hol="1" />
    <ScheduleDetails></ScheduleDetails>
    <ScheduleNote>November–February closing 4:45pm</ScheduleNote>
  </Venue>
  <Media>Misc.: Art Talk</Media>
  <Description><![CDATA[Children ages 4 through 12 and their families are invited for an hour-long program at The Cloisters, the branch of the Museum devoted to the art and architecture of medieval Europe, located in upper Manhattan. ]]></Description>
  <Image src="http://www.nyartbeat.com/resources/images/nopic" width="30" />
  <Image src="http://www.nyartbeat.com/resources/images/nopic_80" width="80" />
  <Image src="http://www.nyartbeat.com/resources/images/nopic_170" width="170" />
  <Karma>0</Karma>
  <Price free="0">Suggested Donations: Adults $20, Seniors $15, Students $10, Members and Childeren under 12 Free</Price>
  <DateStart>0000-00-00</DateStart>
  <DateEnd>0000-00-00</DateEnd>
  <ScheduleNote>At 1pm, 1st and 3rd Saturdays and 1st Sunday of each month.</ScheduleNote>
  <DaysBeforeEnd>0</DaysBeforeEnd>
  <PermanentEvent>1</PermanentEvent>
  <Distance>0</Distance>
  <Datum>wgs84</Datum>
  <Latitude>40.864675</Latitude>
  <Longitude>-73.930981</Longitude>
 </Event>

 <Event xml:lang="en" id="2008/D453" href="http://www.nyartbeat.com/event/2008/D453">
  <Name>&quot;The Adventures of the Real Winnie-the-Pooh&quot; Exhibition</Name>
  <Venue href="http://www.nyartbeat.com/venue/03120B68">
    <Name>Humanities and Social Sciences Library</Name>
    <Type>Other</Type>
    <Address>476 5th Ave., New York, NY 10018</Address>
    <Phone>212-930-0757</Phone>
    <Fax>212-930-9218</Fax>
    <Access>Corner of 41st St.  Subway: 7 to 5th Avenue, D/B/F/V to 42nd Street</Access>
    <Area areaId="midtown">Midtown</Area>
    <OpeningHour>11:00:00</OpeningHour>
    <ClosingHour>18:00:00</ClosingHour>
    <DaysClosed mon="0" tue="0" wed="0" thu="0" fri="0" sat="0" sun="0" hol="1" />
    <ScheduleDetails>tuesdays closinghour 19:30, wednesdays closinghour 19:30, sundays openinghour 13:00, sundays closinghour 17:00</ScheduleDetails>
    <ScheduleNote></ScheduleNote>
  </Venue>
  <Media>3D: Other</Media>
  <Description><![CDATA[The REAL Winnie-the-Pooh won't be found on a video, in a movie, on a T-shirt or a lunchbox. Since 1987, the REAL Pooh and four of his best friends--Eeyore, Piglet, Kanga, and Tigger--have been living at The New York Public Library. Long before Walt Disney turned Pooh and his pals into movie stars, Christopher Robin Milne, a very real little boy living in England, received a small stuffed bear on his first birthday. He named him Edward Bear (later renamed Winnie-the-Pooh). Following Edward came the rest of the stuffed animals, which Christopher loved and played with throughout his childhood. One day, Christopher's father, A.A. Milne, and an artist named Ernest H. Shepard, decided that these animals, and two other imaginary friends, Owl and Rabbit, would make fine characters in a bedtime story. From that day on, Pooh and his friends have had many fanciful adventures, from Piglet's encounter with a Heffalump to Eeyore's loss of his tail. These stories have been embraced by millions of children and adult readers for more than 70 years.]]></Description>
  <Image src="http://www.nyartbeat.com/media/event/2008/D453-30" width="30" />
  <Image src="http://www.nyartbeat.com/media/event/2008/D453-80" width="80" />
  <Image src="http://www.nyartbeat.com/media/event/2008/D453-170" width="170" />
  <Karma>0.440729</Karma>
  <Price free="1">Free</Price>
  <DateStart>0000-00-00</DateStart>
  <DateEnd>0000-00-00</DateEnd>
  <ScheduleNote></ScheduleNote>
  <DaysBeforeEnd>0</DaysBeforeEnd>
  <PermanentEvent>1</PermanentEvent>
  <Distance>0</Distance>
  <Datum>wgs84</Datum>
  <Latitude>40.752772</Latitude>
  <Longitude>-73.981531</Longitude>
 </Event>

 <Event xml:lang="en" id="2012/BF75" href="http://www.nyartbeat.com/event/2012/BF75">
  <Name>&quot;Print Studio&quot; Exhibition</Name>
  <Venue href="http://www.nyartbeat.com/venue/AE192502">
    <Name>The Museum of Modern Art</Name>
    <Type>Museum</Type>
    <Address>11 W 53rd St., New York, NY 10019</Address>
    <Phone>212-708-9400</Phone>
    <Fax></Fax>
    <Access>Between 5th Ave. and 6th Ave.  Subway: V/E to 53rd Street</Access>
    <Area areaId="midtown">Midtown</Area>
    <OpeningHour>10:30:00</OpeningHour>
    <ClosingHour>17:30:00</ClosingHour>
    <DaysClosed mon="0" tue="1" wed="0" thu="0" fri="0" sat="0" sun="0" hol="0" />
    <ScheduleDetails>fridays closinghour 20:00</ScheduleDetails>
    <ScheduleNote>Summer Hours through Sept. 3: Sunday through Wednesday, 10:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m. Thursday through Saturday, 10:30 a.m.–8:30 p.m.</ScheduleNote>
  </Venue>
  <Media>2D: Prints</Media>
  <Media>Misc.: Art Talk</Media>
  <Description><![CDATA[Organized in conjunction with the exhibition &quot;Print/Out,&quot; Print Studio is an interactive space that explores the evolution of artistic practices relating to the medium of print. The studio offers a series of drop-in workshops, lectures, and events that emphasize accessible and sustainable models for the production and dissemination of ideas. Drawing from resources such as the Reanimation Library (based in the Gowanus area of Brooklyn)—a collection of discarded books acquired for their visual content—and a variety of print techniques, participants are invited to experiment with and manipulate images and text. Artist- and educator-led activities highlight the ways in which new digital technologies incorporate traditional printing practices, reimagining the role of print in contemporary visual culture.
Programs are free unless otherwise noted. Participation is on a first-come, first-served basis. Open to all ages. Children must be accompanied by an adult.

[Image: &quot;Based in Gowanus, Brooklyn, the Reanimation Library, a collection of discarded books acquired primarily for their visual content, will be temporarily located at Print Studio to serve as a resource for its ongoing workshops and projects.&quot; Courtesy Reanimation Library, Brooklyn. Photo Credit: David Lang]]]></Description>
  <Image src="http://www.nyartbeat.com/media/event/2012/BF75-30" width="30" />
  <Image src="http://www.nyartbeat.com/media/event/2012/BF75-80" width="80" />
  <Image src="http://www.nyartbeat.com/media/event/2012/BF75-170" width="170" />
  <Karma>0</Karma>
  <Price free="0">Adults $25, Seniors $18, Students $14, Children and Members and on Friday 4pm–8pm Free. Film Admission as of September 1, 2011: $12 adults; $10 seniors, 65 years and over with I.D.; $8 full-time students with current I.D. (for admittance to film program</Price>
  <DateStart>2012-01-23</DateStart>
  <DateEnd>2012-03-09</DateEnd>
  <ScheduleNote></ScheduleNote>
  <DaysBeforeEnd>29</DaysBeforeEnd>
  <PermanentEvent>0</PermanentEvent>
  <Distance>0</Distance>
  <Datum>wgs84</Datum>
  <Latitude>40.761072</Latitude>
  <Longitude>-73.977008</Longitude>
 </Event>

</Events>
