Video Games Art Smithsonian
Posted September 1, 2008
By admin

Smithsonian American Art Museum – Renwick Gallery – Student Orientation Video
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Topics Entertainment Presents: Museums of the World $9.89 Step behind the velvet rope to examine some of the most treasured collections of antiquities, art, and invention. TOPICS PresentsT Museums of the World spiritsyou across the globe in an exploration of the greatest museums of our time, from the Louvre in Paris to The Great Palace Museum in China. Discover African art, American history, and marvels of air, space and more within all 16 of the renowne… |
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Smithsonian Diggin’ Up Dinosaurs T-Rex $14.14 Conduct your own archeological dig with Smithsonian Diggin’ Up Dinosaurs. Plastic T-Rex dinosaur skeleton is buried deep within a sand block, waiting to be unearthed. Dig out using excavation tools which are included in the set (marsh pick and brush) and assemble them into a dinosaur skeleton. Set also includes safety goggles and instructions…. |
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Smithsonian Giant Volcano $7.00 Build and erupt a volcano with this kit. The dual mold system lets you make the most realistic and accurate volcanic simulations. The set includes volcano molds, eruption tablets, safety goggles, volcano-making compound and detailed instructions.Product Dimensions (inches): 11.9 (L) x 10.6 (W) x 3.8 (H)Age: 8 to 20 years… |
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The Art of Video Games: From Pac-Man to Mass Effect $25.00 In the forty years since the first Magnavox Odyssey pixel winked on in 1972, the home video game industry has undergone a mind-blowing evolution. Fueled by unprecedented advances in technology, boundless imaginations, and an insatiable addiction to fantastic new worlds of play, the video game has gone supernova, rocketing two generations of fans into an ever-expanding universe where art, culture, … |
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Ideals of Beauty: Asian and American Art in the Freer and Sackler Galleries (World of Art) $2.21 A curator-led tour through more than one hundred masterworks.The Freer Gallery of Art and the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery in Washington comprise the Smithsonian Institution’s national museums of Asian art. The Freer Gallery opened to the public in 1923, and the Sackler Gallery welcomed its first visitors in 1987. The two museums are physically connected by an underground passageway and ideological… |