This year Glencairn Museum’s annual World Nativities exhibition is taking place online for all to enjoy. Every day, from December 1 through December 25, a new Nativity scene from Glencairn’s collection will appear in the online Advent calendar on our website.
Read More“American Nativity”: Finding Inspiration in Troubled Times
Karen Loccisano and R. Michael Palan, a husband-and-wife artist team from Bridgewater, New Jersey, create handmade, exquisitely detailed Nativity scenes. In American Nativity, they have reimagined what the Nativity miracle might have looked like if it had taken place during the Great Depression, with migrant American farmers traveling west from the drought-stricken plains to California during the Dust Bowl.
Read MoreDivine Mothers: Power and Protection
Dr. Jennifer Houser Wegner, Associate Curator in the Egyptian Section at the Penn Museum, explores the history and purpose of ancient Egyptian images of Isis and Horus in Glencairn’s collection.
Read MoreWinfred Sumner Hyatt: A Lifetime of Artistry
“Painter, craftsman, musician, student, teacher, husband, father and friend—Winfred Hyatt was all of these” (Charles Kintner, 1961). While Winfred S. Hyatt is remembered principally for his work at Bryn Athyn’s stained-glass studio—which produced windows for both Bryn Athyn Cathedral and Glencairn—he was a man of multiple talents who filled many roles in the life of the community. This essay is an overview of his artistic legacy.
Read MoreGlencairn’s 1796 Halfpenny Token: A 3D Video Rendering of the Earliest New Church Temple
An image on the obverse of a 1796 halfpenny token in the collection of Glencairn Museum depicts the New Jerusalem Temple in Birmingham, England. This is the only contemporary image of the first structure ever built exclusively for New Church (Swedenborgian Christian) worship. Rev. Joel Christian Glenn has created a 3D computer-rendered reproduction of this important church.
Read MoreGoogle Arts & Culture: Glencairn’s New Partnership
Google Arts & Culture is an immersive way to experience art, history, and culture from more than two thousand organizations worldwide. Glencairn Museum launched its official partnership with this innovative Google platform last spring, and since then over one hundred works of art from the Museum’s permanent collection have been published online.
Read More#MuseumFromHome: Staying Connected During COVID-19
Number 4, 2020
This spring Glencairn Museum, and other museums and historic sites around the world, have been facing a perplexing challenge. How can we stay relevant and connected with our audiences during the COVID-19 pandemic, when people are unable to visit museums in person?
Read MoreInterview with Dr. Charles T. Little: Reflections on the Early Days of Glencairn Museum
Number 3, 2020
Julia Perratore, Assistant Curator at The Met Cloisters, interviews Charles T. Little, Curator Emeritus of the Medieval Department at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, about the process of turning Glencairn into a museum in the late 1970s.
Read More“Sacred Adornment: Jewelry as Belief in Ancient Egypt”
Number 2, 2020
Sacred Adornment: Jewelry as Belief in Ancient Egypt, a stunning new exhibition at Glencairn Museum, explores religious beliefs as expressed in the Museum’s collection of ancient Egyptian jewelry. By examining the materials and symbols present in these ornaments, we can come away with a deeper understanding of the complex ideas that guided the artists, as well as the hopes and beliefs of those who first wore this jewelry in ancient times.
Read MoreGlencairn Museum’s World Nativities Exhibition
Number 1, 2020
Glencairn Museum’s eleventh annual World Nativities exhibition presents dozens of three-dimensional Nativity scenes collected from many different cultures and communities around the globe. The goal of the exhibition is to show the universal appeal of the Nativity story, and how individuals around the world seek to give it relevance by relating it to their own spiritual, intellectual, cultural, or regional environments.
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