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My New Orleans (Apr. 9): Louisiana Artists Can Submit Work for Louisiana Contemporary at the Ogden Museum
e-flux Criticism (Apr. 9): Tina Girouard’s “SIGN-IN”
My New Orleans (Apr. 1): Arts Calendar: April 2024 Events
My New Orleans (Mar. 24): Save the Date Ogden Museum’s O What a Night! Gala
OffBeat (Mar. 20): Weekly Picks (3/21 – 3/27)
Tulane Hullabaloo (Mar. 13): Spotlight on Ogden Museum: What is Southern art?
VactionIDea (Mar. 13): 25 Best Things to Do in the Southern USA
Fox8 (Mar. 11): Tina Girouard & NOCCA Exhibition at Ogden
ADORE (Mar. 2): Be Mine: 24 Gifts for Your Wedding Party
My New Orleans (Mar. 1): Ogden Museum of Southern Art O What A Night Gala
ADORE (Feb. 27): Something Blue: 31 Beautiful Items for the Home
New Orleans (Feb. 27): MUST-SEE MUSEUM EXHIBITS IN NEW ORLEANS THIS MARCH
K94.5 (Feb. 16): INTERESTING: These Are the Highest-Rated Museums in Louisiana, According to Tripadvisor
My New Orleans (Feb. 14): Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra Adds New Local Collaborations to 23-24 Season
OffBeat (Feb. 11): LPO Expands Season With Local Collaborations
Upgraded Points (Feb. 10): The 13 Best Museums in New Orleans, Louisiana [2024]
gambit (Feb. 9): Louisiana Philharmonic adds concerts with Big Freedia, ÌFÉ and Alfred Banks to season
NOLA.com (Feb. 9): LPO to perform with Big Freedia, Alfred Banks and ÌFÉ at newly announced concerts
My New Orleans (Feb. 1): Arts Calendar: February
My New Orleans (Jan. 31): Ogden Museum celebrates NOCCA’s 50th Anniversary in New Show
Artsty.net (Jan. 26): Prospect New Orleans announces artist list for its 2024 triennial
ArtNews (Jan. 25): New Orleans’s Prospect.6 Triennial Names 49 Artists for 2024 Edition Opening in November
ADORE (Jan. 25): Get Ready to Mambo at these 7 Weekend Events
NOLA.com (Jan. 25): An international art exhibit is headed to New Orleans in November
AXIOS New Orleans (Jan. 25): Krewe du Vieux, ‘tit Rex and more things to do in New Orleans this weekend
Healthy Framework (Jan. 11): 12 Best Museums For First Dates in New Orleans
My New Orleans (Jan. 17): Mardi Gras Market at the Ogden Museum
INSC Digital Magazine (Jan. 16): New Orleans Activities To Do in Family
My New Orleans (Jan. 16): Ogden Museum Summer Art Camp Registration Now Open
FOX8 (Jan. 14): Ogden Museum MLK Day
Where Y’at Magazine (Jan. 11): Where Y’at This Weekend: Jan. 12 – 15
WGNO (Jan. 11): Where Y’at MLK Weekend
ADORE (Jan. 11): Enjoy Art, Music and Mardi Gras Fun at these 5 Events
AXIOS New Orleans (Jan. 11): New Mardi Gras Parade, Theater and More Events in New Orleans this Weekend
Uptown Messenger (Jan. 9): City Offers a Slate of Activities for Martin Luther King Jr. Day
Lenscratch (Jan. 7): Richard McCabe: Perdido
My New Orleans (Jan. 7): “Unframed” Expands with its 10th Mural in Downtown New Orleans
My New Orleans (Jan. 5): Must-See Museum Exhibits in New Orleans this January
My New Orleans (Jan. 4): 10 Things To Do in January in New Orleans
My New Orleans (Jan. 2): WEEKEND PICKS: What to Do in New Orleans from January 5 – 7, 2024
My New Orleans (Jan. 2): Hey Y’all Art Talk Series at the Ogden Museum
2023 News and Press 2022 News and Press 2021 News and Press 2020 News and Press 2019 News and PressGeorge Rodrigue was a Louisiana painter known for his depictions of the landscape and people of Acadiana, as well as his later Pop Art paintings featuring the figure of a blue dog. This painting, Watchdog from 1983, was the first ever painting in what would become known as the Blue Dog series.
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New Orleans based artist Jacob Reptile spent three weeks working with second through fifth graders from Young Audiences Charter School at Lawrence D. Crocker Campus to create a forest of cypress trees made from recycled fabric and paper bags. For the residency, Reptile drew inspiration from the remarkable features of the Louisiana bald cypress tree. Students learned all about the tree: how its powerful roots help to hold together Louisiana’s shoreline and absorb water reducing city flooding; how the mighty cypress can not only survive hurricane winds but also acts as a windbreak for the city; and lastly, how its canopy helps to reduce high temperatures during the hot summers.
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Southern Contemporary is an exhibition that brings together thirteen works of art created in the past twenty years by artists working in the American South, encouraging a dynamic conversation between the excitement of recent acquisitions and the familiarity of permanent collection highlights. Emerging artistic expressions across a variety of mediums and techniques are included alongside artworks by mid-career and established artists.
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Ogden Museum of Southern Art first launched Louisiana Contemporary, presented by The Helis Foundation in 2012, to establish a vehicle that would bring to the fore the work of artists living in Louisiana and highlight the dynamism of art practice throughout the state. 2024 guest juror Lauren Haynes, Head Curator, Governors Island Arts and Vice President for Arts and Culture at the Trust for Governors Island, will curate a selection of the works submitted, and subsequently choose three award winners to receive further recognition.
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Baldwin Lee will feature a selection of over 40 gelatin silver prints culled from thousands of images Lee made across the South in the 1980s. Many of these photographs will be exhibited for the first time. The exhibition will include compelling portraits of Black Americans, as well as a collection of landscape and cityscape images that visually encapsulate the Reagan-era American South.
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On Tuesday, December 5, 2023 Ogden Museum of Southern Art Kohlmeyer Circle Members enjoyed a Holiday Party at Carlos Carmona and David Pine’s uptown home. Guests feasted their eyes on David and Carlos’ exquisite contemporary art collection while enjoying bites by Boucherie.
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Shirley Rabé Masinter was a hyperrealist painter that maintained an art practice for over 70 years. Depicting the gritty patina of the inner-city neighborhoods and cemeteries of New Orleans, her carefully constructed compositions find beauty in urban decay. Masinter described her work as being focused “on a city in transition with many controversial and dynamic social forces at play.”
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