Boccioni Drawings and Etchings from the Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Winston

Summary information

Date

Tue May 30 1961 until Mon Aug 07 1961

Location
  • MoMA type:exhibition building spaces
  • 11 West 53rd St. type:thoroughfare names
Carried out by

The Museum of Modern Art

  1. vocab.getty.edu
  2. www.wikidata.org

Concurrent exhibitions

Exhibitions that overlap with this exhibition, in this dataset. Double-click an item in the timeline to view the corresponding exhibition page.

1961
March 1961
April 1961
May 1961
June 1961
July 1961
August 1961
September 1961
October 1961
Selected Exhibition
MoMA
Tanager Gallery
Green Gallery
Boccioni Drawings and Etchings from the Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Winston
Towards the "New" Museum of Modern Art: A Bid for Space, Part II
Steichen the Photographer
America Seen: Between The Wars
Futurism
Richards Medical Research Building, Louis I. Kahn, Architect
The Mrs. Adele R. Levy Collection: A Memorial Exhibition
Fifteen Polish Painters
Paintings by Cajori, De Groot, Dodd, Fine, Groell, Hazelet, Ippolito, Isquith, F. Mitchell, Pearlstein, Ortman; Sculpture by King, Rocklin
Work by Bloom, Button, R. Drexler, Lucks, Kilstrom, McLean, Raleigh, Sirugo, Wesselmann
Gallery Group Show


Artists

There were 1 persons who influenced this exhibition.

Persons are ordered alphabetically by surname. Select a letter in the concertina to continue. Click on the person's name to view further information.

Umberto Boccioni

Biographical statement Italian, 1882–1916

Born 1882 (click to view other people born in this year)

Died 1916

Nationality Italian

Gender Male

External information resources for Umberto Boccioni

  1. vocab.getty.edu
  2. www.wikidata.org
  3. viaf.org

Exhibitions

In this dataset, Umberto Boccioni was involved in 69 exhibitions across 9 decades.

  • Decade(s) with the most number of exhibitions was the 1990s with 13 exhibitions.
  • Decade with the least number of exhibitions was the 1930s with 1 exhibitions.

#StartEndLocationTitle
11936-031936-04MoMACubism and Abstract Art