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Current
Exhibitions |
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A
list of all the changing and permanent exhibitions at the museum.
Press:
please visit our Press Section
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In
Our Own Backyard: A Celebration of East Bay Regional Parks
March 15–October
12, 2008
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| Bob
Walker, Dougherty Hills, Contra Costa County, n.d. |
More than 40
photographs from the museum’s Bob Walker Archive. Take a
virtual tour through the East Bay parks’ varied habitats,
following the flow of creeks from snow-capped Mt. Diablo to the
protected park lands along the San Francisco Bay shoreline. |
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The
Art and History of Early California
December
1, 2007– Ongoing
Exhibition of the museum's collection explores the story of California from the
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| Grace
Carpenter Hudson, To-Tole, 1894. Oil on canvas.
Oakland Museum of California. |
First Peoples through the Gold Rush. Through a display of art
and artifacts, experience the rich history, diverse beginnings,
and artistic and cultural heritage
of early California. |
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TOLD FROM A
TOTEM
Sixty students (grades 9-12) from
Oakland High School’s Visual Arts Academy created contemporary
totem poles, using recycled materials,
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| Daisy
Velasco (grade 11), “The Real Me,” 2007. Mixed
media. |
during sessions led by Oakland
High teachers
and Oakland Museum of California staff. The students personalized
their work with symbols,
plaster, paint, and ornaments. The totems differ wildly one from
another.
The Oakland High School Partnership Program is in its eighth
year. The 2007 collaboration between the museum and Oakland High’s
Visual Arts Academy was led by Christine Lashaw, artist and museum
preparator, and Carol Squicci, assistant project coordinator. Student
participants came from Keith (K-Dub) Williams’s and Jack
Begrin’s art classes. Ongoing.
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Permanent
Galleries Gallery
of California Art
-Art
Transformation underway – reopens in 2009
California:
A Place, A People, A Dream-History
Transformation underway – reopens in 2009
Walk
Across California-Natural
Sciences
The Natural Sciences Gallery takes the visitor on a simulated
journey through California's diverse ecosystems, observing plants
and animals found from the Pacific coastline to the High Sierra
and the inland desert. Exhibits contain approximately 2,500 natural
specimens organized around basic ecological principles highlighting
relationships among plants, animals, geology and climate. The Aquatic
California Gallery presents an overview of our aquatic environments,
including the oceans, rivers and streams and estuaries. Natural
Sciences Department, first level. |
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