Loading streams...
Now Playing
Podcasts & RSS Feeds
| All Content |
| RSS |
| View all podcasts & RSS feeds | ||
Connect with Us
Most Active Stories
- Dr. Paul Booth, DePaul University – Cultural Meaning of Doctor Who
- Where Did That Fried Chicken Stereotype Come From?
- Dr. Frank Elgar, McGill University – Psychological Health and Family Meals
- NY AG Breaks Cigarette Trafficking Ring, Hints Terror Ties
- Dr. Claudia Buchmann, Ohio State University – Higher Education Gender Gap
Arts & Culture
11:35 am
Wed September 5, 2012
Unearthed at The Clark - Ancient China in Williamstown
By Sarah LaDuke
Credit www.clarkart.edu
Ox, Northern Qi dynasty (550–577 CE), tomb dated 570 CE, painted earthenware, unearthed 1979, tomb of Lou Rui (d. 570 CE), Wangguo Village, Taiyuan, Shanxi Province, Shanxi Museum, Taiyuan
Over the last several decades, archaeological discoveries across northern China have brought to light unexpected works of historical significance and extraordinary beauty.
The exhibition Unearthed: Recent Archaeological Discoveries from Northern China will be on view at The Clark in Williamstown, MA through October 21.
Richard Rand – the Robert and Martha Berman Senior Curator and Curator of Paintings and Sculpture at The Clark Art Institute – takes us on an audio tour of the exhibition.
Tags:
Related Content:
-
The Roundtable
-
The Roundtable
-
The Roundtable
-
Arts & Culture


