All the World’s a Stage: Celebrating Performance in the Visual Arts
Next date:
November 24
Start date: Sunday, August 30, 2009
Event is ongoing: Until Sunday, February 28, 2010
All the World’s a Stage: Celebrating Performance in the Visual Arts, the Dallas Museum of Art exhibition opening on August 30, 2009, will showcase a fresh look at the Museum’s collections in an interactive installation to commemorate the opening of Dallas’s new AT&T Performing Arts Center and the completion of the Dallas Arts District. Nearly 125 works spanning 2,600 years of human creativity, including paintings, sculptures, photography, and objects from around the world, will illustrate how dance, music, and theater performance is an essential human instinct.
All the World’s a Stage, on view through February 28, 2010, will use the breadth of the Museum’s collections to depict how performance, in all its varied forms, has been created, transformed, and documented by visual artists, working in concert with dancers, musicians, and actors to both shape and record their efforts.
Encompassing all time periods and cultures, and a broad range of media, the exhibition features such masterpieces as Pietro Paolini’s Bacchic Concert, Jean-Antoine-Théodore Giroust’s Oedipus at Colonus, Pablo Picasso’s The Guitarist, Romare Bearden’s Soul Three, and a group of Edward Degas’s pastels of ballet dancers, as well as masterworks from the Museum’s distinguished collections from Africa, Asia, and the Pacific. Organized across time and culture, thematic groupings of artworks in the exhibition include why we perform, how we perform, who is a performer, where performances take place, and what makes a performance.
The museum is closed Mondays, Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Day, and New Year’s Day. On Late Night Fridays (third Friday of the month, excluding December), the museum is open until midnight.
Event Schedule
- »Sundays from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
- »Tuesdays from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
- »Wednesdays from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
- »Thursdays from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.
- »Fridays from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
- »Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

