Michelangelo Pistoletto’s 1976 sculpture “The Etruscan (L’etrusco)“—a life size bronze figure that reaches towards a large mirror—at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth.
Abstract architectural detail of the Oklahoma Contemporary Arts Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
Launched in 1917 as a tourist boat for the lakes of Canada’s Southern Lakes region, the SS Tutshi was laid up in the 1950s and later converted into an interpretive center. Though nearly destroyed by a fire in 1990, it now welcomes visitors to the town of Carcross in the Yukon Territory.
The USS Stewart, a former US Navy destroyer escort, proudly displays its hull as a museum ship at Seawolf Park on Pelican Island in Galveston, Texas.
An abstract detail of the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, designed by architect Tadao Ando, showcases his signature use of concrete and glass to create a serene yet powerful space that respects its cultural context and interacts with the surrounding environment.
One of the six 14-ft. diameter wheels (or sheaves) that pull the cable haulage for San Francisco’s three cable car lines spin non-stop at the cable car powerhouse and museum in the historic Nob Hill neighborhood.