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JENNIFER SWOPE: I think of the color wheel as a model or a diagram of all the colors we can see. The color wheel is really well designed for teaching about color, because it breaks things down into primary and secondary colors, and really shows you how colors combine, or the basic colors, what we call the primary colors, which are red, yellow, and blue, are combined to make the secondary colors, which are green, orange, and purple.
GERALD ROY: A very important quilt in the exhibit is the Yellow and White Baskets. Through my years of teaching color, yellow has always been probably the most difficult, not the most important, but the most difficult color to use. And it’s because the light refractive quality of yellow is greater than any of the other colors in the color wheel. Yellow green, yellow orange, orange, have strong, strong refractive qualities. But yellow has the greatest.
The Museum would like to thank the following donors for their contribution toward our goal of increasing the net impact of the MFA’s endowment: Gifts…
The MFA would like to thank the following donors for their gifts to support gallery renewal projects: The Museum's planned Daily Life in Ancient…
The Museum and the School would like to thank the following donors for their gifts to support the SMFA: Gifts to Support Key Priorities at the School…
The MFA received generous gifts from the following donors toward new investments in support of the current strategic planning initiative : Trustee…
The Museum would like to thank the following donors for their significant and sustained annual support in the form of multi-year commitments to the…
Final Campaign Update It is our great pleasure to share the news that the MFA’s The Future Is Now Campaign has successfully concluded, meeting its…
Conservation of an Egyptian minbar door, Mamluk period, 1382–98: December 2013
Conservation of an Egyptian minbar door, Mamluk period, 1382–98: February 2014