It means that museums can receive stolen goods, something which is illegal for everyone else. |
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In recompense, though, they provide much more extensive information than the other museums about each work. |
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All of the museums offer stylish settings for events and can cater for up to 1500 guests. |
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But of course that is the same reason why his work hangs in museums round the world. |
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He stresses patience and scholarly preparation in collecting, which includes visits to museums and reputable galleries. |
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For history buffs, nearly every community in the province has its own collection of historical exhibits displayed in tiny museums. |
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The city council hopes that the new project will put Prague on a level with Vienna, with its many top museums and art galleries. |
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Developing the site enables people worldwide to access the collection and exhibits of the museums within the quadrangle. |
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Museum Print Editions is currently working on portfolios of reproductions from other museums. |
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His work is also exhibited in museums, galleries and private collections worldwide. |
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But what does that mean for the actual history of film within the setting of the repositories of visual culture, the museums? |
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Julien uses museums, often founded on colonialist exploitation, as sites of oppression, repression and desire. |
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Museums develop and the best museums develop dynamically, not just in response to topical agendas. |
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Keep in mind that everyone wants to be a docent at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, but plenty of smaller museums can use help. |
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They are unapologetic about regarding museums as part of the epiphenomena of cultural studies. |
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Yet, in order to remain solvent, many museums face cutbacks and, in some instances, the dispersal of part of their collections. |
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In an era of rogue terrorism, the wide dispersal of military museums curiously bodes well for survival of the nation's military heritage. |
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So by the time he took the Met directorship in 1966, museums were already moving in the direction of mass entertainment. |
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At a time when museums and heritage organisations feel somewhat outdated and directionless, global warming provides a quick-fix rallying point. |
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Riddled with pavement cafes and dotted with cosy bars, the city groans with museums and magical art galleries, cinemas and designer outlets. |
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She seems to accept the seductive power of merchandise, whether it is for sale at the dime store or installed in galleries and museums. |
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They built extravagant houses, opened grandiose museums and spent not just one, but several, fortunes on art. |
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Found in Staffordshire by a metal detectorist in 2003, it has been bought jointly by the three museums. |
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They've ruined our economy, apparently seized our oil and desecrated our sacred sites and our museums. |
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There are 19 State museums, 6 preserves and 1 dendrological park on its territory. |
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The pair's ambition is to make their living producing scenery, costumes and props for museums, theatres, themed bars, film and television. |
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Stroll Into Spring is a progressive dinner presented by several museums and businesses of the Old Northside neighborhood. |
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And it has a slightly ugly tendency to treat those who might actually enjoy going to museums as innocent dupes. |
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Tim Corum, head of collections with Leeds museums, said the home was a priceless treasure for the city. |
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These rapidly built, but artistically maligned buildings are now prettied up with decorative flourishes and used for museums and churches. |
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They seem to be alive and doing rather well in game preserves, zoos, theme parks, museums, books and television shows. |
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The focus of the biennial event was the history of natural history museums, mineralogy, gemology, crystal chemistry, and crystallogenesis. |
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Even museums were obliged to contribute to this effort by deaccessioning part of their icon collections. |
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Young didn't wait for his work to be exhibited in art galleries or museums, although that's where it is now. |
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In the final analysis, the national museums are the only custodians of these treasures. |
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This lag in attention has yet to be fully addressed by contemporary West Coast museums and curators. |
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There are several Frisian museums, libraries, archives and cultural centres in both countries. |
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On the other hand, art lovers can spend weeks visiting the 100 plus museums in the city with, of course, the Louvre being the crown jewel. |
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It features more than 1300 fly-in restaurants, as well as articles, aviation museums, resorts and airport information. |
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Voluntary contributors support museums, theaters, research centers, and even hospitals. |
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During his residence he collected a plenitude of ethnographica for the ethnographical museums in Berlin, Leipzig, and Stuttgart. |
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As with most museums, only a tiny proportion of the collection is on display. |
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In the last 10 years, over 30 posts for archaeological conservation in museums and other public bodies have been lost. |
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Other events will be organised together with other institutes, unions, universities, community culture centres, museums and galleries. |
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Three museums in Connecticut are concurrently mounting Childe Hassam shows. |
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Some commons are public institutions such as libraries, museums, schools and government agencies. |
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It was a weekend filled with art and music as they explored museums and any piano bar that would let them in. |
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The legacy of their wealth, can be seen on Salem's streets in the forms of incomparable architecture and unique museums. |
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They visited farms, museums and castle sites and had a very enjoyable time accompanied by their teachers. |
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There has been a flurry of school trips, including London Zoo, farms, museums and galleries and lots of visiting theatre groups. |
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New displays and dramatic programmes are set to make the museums more family-friendly by catering for the needs of children. |
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Without museums, the skills of the sculptor and the various dialects of tribes in the country would have been imperceptible now, he said. |
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Archives and libraries and museums have any amount of information and documents available for perusal. |
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If museums and established auction houses can mistake fakes for genuine articles, so can you. |
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All museums rely on the kindness of private and corporate donors, many of whom expect to be wooed with special perks or consideration. |
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He also intends to give illustrated talks to local groups and produce some documentary displays for museums in Argentina. |
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To remain competitive and to endure, museums are forced to continuously focus on the bottom line. |
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These studies and sketches were collected into various codices and manuscripts, which are now collected by museums and individuals. |
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In parallel with this I plan to visit museums where there are early keyboard instruments, either harpsichords or clavichords. |
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But hustling dollars is now a challenge faced by all museums, and patrons have always demanded a return on their investments. |
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It has 288 acres of magnificent plants and glorious trees, plus hothouses, laboratories, and four museums. |
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Since the entire Italy is swarming with museums and art, the city of Florence too grounds few wonderful ones. |
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It offends and horrifies us when we learn of decaying archaeological sites, looted museums and burning libraries. |
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Meanwhile, BAC transforms itself into a holiday resort, complete with beaches, museums and palaces. |
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That is not because the principle of museums selling off unwanted or superfluous objects from their collection is being questioned. |
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Since 16 February they have worked strictly to their agreed hours and banned unpaid overtime, which the museums depend on to keep functioning. |
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Quite properly, the city's galleries and museums put on a spread for the many overseas visitors. |
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Many of Italy's most famous museums and historic sites will in future be run by private companies. |
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Much of what he wrote was so outspoken that it was bequeathed to museums under a 50-year embargo. |
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Galleries line Ocean Avenue, the town's main strip, but area museums are also a good bet. |
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Specimen data in the museums are often maintained in a form of catalogs similar to bibliographic catalogues in the libraries. |
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Walking off all this stodge doesn't really involve a tour of Helsinki's historical sites, galleries or museums. |
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I plan to visit museums where there are early keyboard instruments, either harpsichords or clavichords. |
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American collectors and museums remained the most prominent buyers of Dutch old masters during the 20th century. |
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Many people do not go to museums because they have an image of them being boring, but in fact they have lots to offer. |
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She went on her way, her grass skirt swinging rhythmically, resembling one of those steatopygous statues in anthropological museums. |
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Ceaucescu, for example, lived in a forty-room palace where walls were hung with artwork taken from churches and museums. |
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As you hike up through the gracious park, dotted with palaces turned museums, crickets chirr in the plane trees and pines. |
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The function of not-for-profit entities like libraries, museums and archives is also changing. |
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There are huge pedestrian walk ways and squares with theatres, museums and places to eat and drink. |
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Community centers, museums, and places of worship also might be used for this purpose. |
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Like the shops in museums, commercialism had taken over the church with the same voracity as it had taken over the art world. |
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Hospitals, places of worship, museums, community centers and other organizations often need volunteers. |
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About a dozen baseball-themed museums beckon visitors to big-league cities and out-of-the-way burgs. |
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Keyboards are banned as harmful and can be found in museums, next to punch cards and spittoons. |
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He has worked for museums, building interactive exhibits and curating and designing exhibitions. |
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He studies, grinds and polishes Japanese swords and daggers for sale to museums and private collectors across the world. |
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Like all good things in military museums, if there weren't people souveniring items, we wouldn't have a museum would we? |
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These more recent museums often combine art with anthropology and sociology. |
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For now at least, art schools are up there with concert halls and museums as must-have projects for architects. |
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She claimed the plans were unfeasible and said they would undermine the Government's previous efforts in promoting national museums. |
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A museum beetle is a member of the dermestid beetle family that's used in museums to clean up bones that will be used in museum displays. |
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The records of our heritage are preserved in the museums and archives of the country. |
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Worst hit will be the big museums and galleries that have not benefited from the recent large rises in funding. |
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For those in search of culture, Milan has numerous museums with rich and varied collections. |
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When she took up her post in 1998, the city's museums and galleries were in poor shape. |
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However, some of Venice's best art isn't in its museums and galleries, but in the Scuole. |
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The software will be of interest to schools and museums, as well as town planners. |
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Than you can go to Shanghai museum, one of the best museums of ancient China in the world. |
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The vast majority went to historic buildings and other conservation schemes and to museums. |
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There are a number of museums and places of historic interest where old cipher machines are exhibited. |
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Yet public interest in visiting such museums and historical sites is not always so keen. |
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We know that more people go to museums and art galleries than go sporting events. |
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Often the museums are set in buildings that have as much interest as the things they contain. |
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That figure makes the lost art worth more than all the paintings now in American galleries and museums. |
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Allen, supposedly the fifth richest man in the world, is the tycoon who bankrolled both museums. |
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On Saturday 14 May museums across Europe remained open late into the evening with a series of special events held around twilight. |
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The great museums of the world bear witness to the extensive impact of monotheistic spirituality upon human civilization. |
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The new museum adds to a number of other museums that have been set up in Kerala on the history of the Church. |
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Millions of dollars go to house artwork in museums, but there are more Rembrandts in the world than there are Siberian tigers. |
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This now sounds embarrassingly quaint, but many modernists have sought such authority from museums. |
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It is considered by many to be one of the best modern art museums in the world. |
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Yet museums are also places where complex matters such as systematics, biomechanics, and crystallography are investigated. |
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The town's tramway was for a long time Britain's only working tramway outside of museums. |
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This is a wake-up call for all historians, libraries, museums and archives to protect and preserve their material by microfilming them. |
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With February's biting winds sweeping down the Manhattan avenues, she transfers the idea to the grande dame of New York's museums, the Met. |
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Many museums, including the Met, have returned artifacts stolen or looted to their rightful owners. |
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Some of these panels are now in the collections of other museums, like the Met in New York. |
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A number of museums that exhibit Moroccan paintings and sculptures are supported by the state. |
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The reason people come to museums, essentially, is to see the exhibits up close. |
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With post-war prosperity, the baby boom, and increased college attendance, the masses started coming, whether the museums sought them out or not. |
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We forget that many great works of art were not created for the mausoleums we call museums. |
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It is in Ravenna that the earliest mosaics are preserved, in temple after temple, in museums, presbyteries, baptistries and churches. |
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Monuments, public sculptures, commemorative sites and museums are being created at an accelerated pace. |
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Catalans enjoy going to opera houses, theaters, and museums in Barcelona and other cities. |
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This includes a scatter of lesser paintings throughout the museums, galleries, and private collections of the world. |
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It is easy to see why wrecks of this nature are attractive to aircraft restorers and aviation museums. |
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He wants to recover artefacts from the ship, which will be donated to museums or offered for sale. |
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Similar to audio guides in museums, each phone number connected to a unique recording that described a certain site in Baghdad. |
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The area was lousy with saloons, dime museums, oyster bars, minstrel theaters, and establishments promising women in varying states of undress. |
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That included the SS, who held trainloads of loot stolen from churches, banks, stately homes, museums and castles from around Europe. |
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There were no patrons, no public art museums or private collections of consequence, and no art schools. |
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You will also find several interesting museums and art galleries around the city. |
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In the cities, people visit museums, haggle over prices in the bazaars, or shop in large shopping complexes with their families and friends. |
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The best photo subjects in museums are usually sculptures, dioramas, and overall room views. |
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I can't help but to think about how the great museums of Europe amassed their collections of cultural artefacts. |
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You could spend the day exploring its halls, museums, galleries, chapel and arsenal. |
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He frequently consults for museums and acts as an expert witness at trials. |
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Thanks to the Heritage Lottery Fund, museums and art galleries have been extended or altered or had their courtyards roofed over. |
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Instead, she would like to see ethnological museums acknowledge these objects' power to enchant, to inspire people to search for meanings. |
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Recipients range from preeminent national museums to small literary magazines that could not survive without subsidies. |
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Neither one had much appreciation for fine art, preferring museums of archeology, natural history and science. |
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This is what museums do best, and it serves as not only a useful but also a necessary antipode to recent research. |
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I think labels are less important than practical solutions to fund museums. |
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The survival of museums depends on a complete rethink of our exhibits and approaches to marketing them. |
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Distribution of finds from a single excavation can equally benefit local history, museums, and aircraft restorers. |
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The problem with such a resolutely intellectualising approach to the history of museums is that the history itself is extremely partial. |
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Our Richmond Valley abounds in dwellings, public buildings, monuments, museums, cemeteries that are worthy of more than just a casual glance. |
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A half-dozen museums and many elegant Victorian homes are within a few miles of the city's utterly walkable downtown. |
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It was in that sense comparable to the boards of museums, colleges, and philanthropic organizations. |
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Of the synagogues they built and rebuilt, four still nestle in this timeless Turkish warren, two as museums. |
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Only in the last four or five years has that idea been recognized and accepted by other museums, the architect pointed out. |
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He leads a tour for Friends of the Royal Academy to Picasso museums and sites in Barcelona, Madrid and Malaga. |
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Some people go to museums to enjoy temporary exhibits and permanent collections, while others go to meet people and museum staff. |
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Families can visit countless museums, galleries and exhibits, dine in the finest restaurants and explore life in space! |
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Who amongst you hasn't found those wax museums to be a bit ominous and repulsive? |
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The result is that numerous museums all over the country are making exciting new acquisitions. |
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Some of Europe's best art museums offer continuous virtual exhibits alongside very comprehensive visual databases of their art collections. |
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It comes highly recommended if you are into such museums and are curious about the history of passenger railroading in this part of the country. |
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There has been lots of looting and lawlessness, with government buildings, hospitals, schools, libraries and museums ransacked. |
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In addition to his work at the Museum of Modern Art, Barr served on the advisory boards of other museums and the juries of art competitions. |
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Visits took in her favorite galleries, museums, and, inevitably for a bibliophile of international repute, the British Library. |
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She had decided to go into the museums sector while reading English Literature at university in Sheffield, her home city. |
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He also serves as an advisor and consultant to museums that feature exhibits about baseball and other sports. |
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This is a nation of museums and patents, timeless holy sites and ground-breaking innovation. |
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Similar reinforced plinths were developed by the Getty museums in Los Angeles to absorb the seismic movements there. |
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Lost art offers a parallel universe, with riches to match those in all of our museums today, and then some. |
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The practice reached its peak in the Victorian Era, when naturalism became all the rage for museums and even household decoration. |
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The National Mall is awe-inspiring and filled with free museums and monuments. |
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Many museums do not charge for entry and really come up trumps in the school holidays with imaginative programmes of children's events that combine fun and learning. |
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Instead of exploring a cityscape, the project lets you take a virtual stroll through rooms in great museums. |
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Today, the street is a well-preserved strip of old villas and lane houses containing cafes, restaurants, bookstores and antique shops as well as curiosity museums. |
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Here, you can spend long, lazy days sampling the fruit of the vine, lolling over long lunches outside, playing golf, cycling or touring the historic sites and museums. |
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In most of the tapestries that we see in museums or country houses the dyes have faded badly and it is difficult to envisage the impact they had when first hung. |
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New museums open with regularity, attracting more audiences. |
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All the Smithsonian museums have pretty much the same hours, so this was my signal to head outdoors and check out some more monuments and landmarks. |
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There are performances by the Kirov Ballet, a symposium of 25 Nobel laureates, concerts and the opportunity to visit outstanding museums and galleries. |
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Some items have survived in zoological institutes and natural history museums in Saint Petersburg, Stockholm, and Amsterdam, as well as in the British Museum in London. |
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Why don't we create a foundation to be a lending library for museums? |
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Those tired of modern, antiseptic museums with a very strong flow of tourists will discover a rare pleasure in visiting the Foundation's private universe. |
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They don't need the lily-white walls of galleries and museums, nor would their visual impact be significantly diminished by less chastely hospitable settings. |
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Designed for specific, often ritualistic uses in a traditional culture, these objects are prized as fine works of art by Western collectors, galleries and museums. |
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The archdiocese has opened a string of museums, including one last week, in a bid to preserve for posterity the history and tradition of the church in India. |
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The earliest military museums were arsenals, but since many of these have since become famous military museums it is expedient to regard them as the forerunners of the genre. |
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In the academic confines of museums, such talk of marketing and the bottom line qualifies as gauche. |
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As an expression of gratitude, Paul donated thirty-three of these paintings to major French museums, including the Louvre. |
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They line the shelves of museums, hotels, design stores and fashion retailers. |
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Academics and professionals may be satisfied with technical drawings but a lay public, on which museums depend, need models, virtual reality tours, or, at least, photography. |
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The Hollywood Walk of Fame is a succession of schlock and gore museums. |
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Today, the iconic name shepherds the masses to galleries and museums the world over. |
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Shops on the King's Road and Sloane Street are hard to beat, and can be reached in 15 minutes, while London's museums, galleries and theatreland are also within easy access. |
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Consequently, the masterpieces of sculpture and painting were bought in and around their time and many, if not most, are permanently lodged in museums. |
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As museums have taken notice of picture book art, so have collectors. |
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Some of the best Mexican art in the world is in storage in museums. |
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Today, both sides of the river are lined with inspired bastions of culture including over 50 local museums and 100 galleries. |
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Through our museums and galleries we have an obligation to conserve and restore the great works of art handed down to us by previous generations of benefactors. |
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Where museums have truly been able to harness the power of the web is with the microsite, a stand-alone website that accompanies a specific exhibition. |
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His work found immediate and continued international success in prestigious festivals, symposia, broadcasts, biennials, museums and gallery exhibitions. |
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There are also stately homes, farm parks, zoos, museums, craft centres, pixie centre, shire horse centre, vineyards, castles, wildlife parks and other attractions. |
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Son of an artist, Ward was raised with the smell of oil paints and turpentine and spent much of his childhood going in the back doors of museums and galleries. |
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The new galleries and studios are not Old-World museums which can be described as architectural wonders, or as monolithic buildings that have a story behind them. |
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A number of museums and galleries have suffered similarly in recent years. |
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Most predatory dinosaurs such as tyrannosaurs and velociraptors have usually been depicted in museums, films and books as covered in a thick hide of dull brown or green skin. |
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The fact that the Prime Minister himself is said to have strong-armed London's museums into mounting the festival does not make it inevitable that it will be lousy. |
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He said the painting was an unframed watercolour on paper, and that these kind of fragile paintings were kept in boxes, as a matter of course, by galleries and museums. |
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Cities, islands, waterfalls, lakes, rivers, universities, museums, and architecture, just to name a few, are all named for the Queen who gave her name to an era. |
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There can be few museums in the world whose range of exhibits includes a stuffed, 5ft-long, prehistoric fish and a pair of unworn, extremely expensive, blue cowboy-boots. |
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We don't know if they visited le Palais or lost their sous at the tables, but we can see how they saw the city and its Baie des Anges by visiting Nice's museums. |
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Though museums that have acquired Nok material recently might not have done anything technically illegal, their moral rectitude remains open to question. |
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It was a junk-heap of twisted stumps of palaces and cathedrals, grand hotels and museums that had made up one of the most splendorous cities ever to stand. |
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Visitors to museums disregard cautionary boards and touch objects. |
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German museums are not alone in hanging on to what they have got. |
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He returned to interests that had captured his attention when he was a teenager, had visited museums to gaze at statues, and had tried carving wood. |
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The Royal Museum that houses the first cloned sheep named Dolly, the National Gallery of Scotland along with quite a few national museums are paradigmatic cases in point. |
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According to McKean, museums around the world are shying away from trying to encapsulate the last century, with many feeling it is still too early for a summing-up. |
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Referring patriotically to our national heritage and history, he suggested that the seized items be surrendered to the state and placed in museums. |
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In addition, there are other sources of business history recorded in corporate museums, at corporate websites, and in occasional periodical articles. |
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Quite a few of the artists at the top today began their careers as illustrators for books, magazines and museums and their attention to detail is evident. |
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Each side also had permission to destroy 15 missiles and launchers by disabling, then permanently exhibiting them in museums and similar facilities. |
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German collections of Indian art have been built around private collections since the 17th Century, and traditionally housed in ethnological museums. |
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Today, the public considers the Impressionists to be traditional painters and flocks in record numbers to view their works on display in museums around the world. |
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The fight for independence during the past century is commemorated throughout the land by war memorials and museums displaying what are now known as the remnants of war. |
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The ring's low height and shiny blackness suggest an experimental apparatus, but also evoke old-style fireplace fenders or circular railings in museums. |
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Plans for building museums in the complex have also been made. |
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Trust members have the advantage of concessions on the entrance price at the following museums, houses and gardens on presentation of a current membership card. |
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Whether he is celebrating museums or apples and oranges, silver and gold or light and water, poem after poem explores the inseparability of art and life. |
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Sites include National Parks, National Forests, higher education organizations, museums, conservancies, nature preserves, and government agencies. |
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Liverpool is a perfect example of a group of museums and galleries that now have enough curators and enough conservators, which they didn't have before. |
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Overtime, the Bedford's florals and chintz fell out of favor with the artists, art dealers and museum curators who frequented neighborhood theaters, galleries and museums. |
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Indeed, the town's official website, while extolling all manner of museums and crumbling cultural artifacts, doesn't mention the nightlife at all. |
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Of the two museums, this one has the more challenging curatorial agenda. |
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Business, local galleries and art museums brought home the bacon as well. |
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Unlike most museums and art galleries, the National Trust's responsibilities extend beyond works of art to buildings, gardens, and natural and designed landscape. |
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Professional guidelines set forth by the Association of Art Museum Directors state that museums should use deaccession proceeds solely for acquisitions, not operations. |
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Some prickly problems of racial and economic accessibility that one senses when visiting the country's galleries and museums were nowhere in evidence. |
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The real wild animals hunted by Roosevelt and others had to be killed before they could be reconstructed through taxidermy and exhibited in the dioramas of America's museums. |
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As a result of these preservation techniques, there are several museums of human anatomy today containing permanent displays of beautifully dissected specimens. |
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The paintings will not be sold, but will remain part of his personal collection and loaned to museums which frequently invite him to exhibit, the artist said. |
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Schoolchildren will learn more about historical collections and exhibits at Bradford's Council-owned museums if a national recruitment drive pays off. |
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The surplus streetcars were sold or donated to museums around the country. |
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This is a brand new work by Lucy Hogg, from a series documenting how people use art museums. |
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There are many museums in England, but perhaps the most notable is London's British Museum. |
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Go ice skating on Boston's beautiful Common Frog Pond, or opt for some indoor fun at one of the nearby museums just minutes from the hotel. |
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This property was used for the advantage of the inhabitants of the burgh, funding such facilities as public parks, museums and civic events. |
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Perth Museum and Art Gallery at the top end of George Street is recognised as one of the oldest provincial museums in Scotland. |
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The Scientific Center is one of the largest science museums in the Middle East. |
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Tate Modern is one of the largest museums of modern and contemporary art in the world. |
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Both the making of art, the academic history of art, and the history of art museums are closely intertwined with the rise of nationalism. |
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The Courtauld is especially well known for its many graduates who have become directors of art museums around the world. |
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Especially appealing to older children and adolescents are science museums or exploratoriums. |
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Other tourist attractions include moorland, country gardens, museums, historic and prehistoric sites, and wooded valleys. |
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He supported her career by buying several pictures that he gave to museums. |
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A large number of artefacts from the Protopalatial can be seen today in Cretan museums. |
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During the eighties, a number of major museums, including the Modern, had expanded, hoping to cash in on a boom in museumgoing. |
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The university also operates eight cultural and scientific museums, including the Fitzwilliam Museum, as well as a botanic garden. |
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Others museums tell the story of its working history, such as the Cape Breton Miners' Museum, and the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic. |
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As with other historic vehicles, many preserved buses either in a working or static state form part of the collections of transport museums. |
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The ways in which art museums consecrate artists and art movements are ever more complicated. |
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Museumplein hosts various museums, including the Rijksmuseum, Van Gogh Museum, and Stedelijk Museum. |
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He identifies numerous woven antependia and tapestries, now scattered among several museums, which formerly adorned these altars. |
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It's a straightforward list of yoyo clubs, yo-yo museums, official confess rules, and upcoming yo-yo events. |
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According to museum records a team of archaeologists led by Sir Leonard Woolley from the Penn and British museums had unearthed the skeleton. |
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Puppets like Andy Pandy and the Woodentops are holed up in museums so they'll never be owned privately. |
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Superb Roman remains, Georgian architecture and countless museums justify Bath's position as a tourist honeypot. |
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The town of Niagara Falls offers many activities, from wax museums to the Maid of the Mist boat ride to the base of the cataract. |
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The bloated result is vaguely surreal but consistent with a vernacular familiar from the contents of wax museums and Disneyland. |
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Many other heritage railways and museums also have GWR locomotives or rolling stock in use or on display. |
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His face was reconstructed with a lifelike silicone mask of the type used in wax museums because it was apparently too decomposed to show. |
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Greenhalgh would turn up in his wheelchair at art houses and museums claiming to have found or inherited the objects. |
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Guernsey loophole towers and a large collection of German fortifications with a number of museums. |
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Many of the city's former defences are now museums, or venues for hosting events. |
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Some of the most spectacular beasts in East Coast museums happen to be Tyrannosaurus rexes from Montana. |
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It is home to the main campuses of the University of Cumbria and a variety of museums and heritage centres. |
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Manchester United, Manchester City, and Lancashire CCC all have dedicated museums illustrating their histories. |
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The award encourages museums to commission new work and pounds 60,000 is donated to the winner by the Sfumato Foundation. |
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Greater Manchester's museums showcase the county's industrial and social heritage. |
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Taking sections is necessarily destructive of part of the artefact, and thus discouraged by many museums. |
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Moscow is the heart of the Russian performing arts, including ballet and film, with 68 museums 103 theaters, 132 cinemas and 24 concert halls. |
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The city's history is also celebrated at a number of museums, monuments, and archives. |
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Boasting a vast array of historic and cultural sites, natural attractions and museums, Tallahassee has lots to see. |
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But pass up the sci-fi stuff for now, like for instance the holovision technology that's put TV and radio in museums. |
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The central business district, as well as the State Capitol, Old State House and a number of museums and shops are located Downtown. |
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George Station project, which includes the new Staten Island Yankees minor league ballpark and two new museums. |
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By strengthening ties in this way, the SMD aims to sign agreements with major tourism companies to attract Chinese tourists to the museums. |
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With more than 50 museums, Ruhr has one of the largest variety of museums in Europe. |
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Most of the museums and galleries in Glasgow are publicly owned and free to enter. |
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The relaunch comes after a backbench revolt over his refusal to build new grammar schools and a cave-in on axeing free admission to museums. |
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National Museums Northern Ireland has four museums in Northern Ireland including the Ulster Museum. |
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These include the main archaeological site of Palaepafos, the Chalcolithic site of Lempa, a number of museums, nature sites and trails. |
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A small number have been preserved or restored as museums where the public can see the mill in operation. |
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Sheffield Industrial Museums Trust manages the museums dedicated to Sheffield's industrial heritage of which there are three. |
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There are several museums located in Hangzhou with regional and national importance. |
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Further, 43 percent of Poland's educational and research institutions and 14 percent of its museums had been destroyed. |
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Goa also has a few museums, the two important ones being Goa State Museum and the Naval Aviation Museum. |
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Over the past two years he has shown individual works in five major New York art museums, including a star turn in the 2004 Whitney Biennial. |
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Wright Museum of African American History, museums in the Cranbrook Educational Community, and the Arab American National Museum. |
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The Australian Museum in Sydney and the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne are the oldest and largest museums in Oceania. |
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Described by organizers as a night of culture, museums ranged from the children's variety to steam punk to historical. |
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Florence contains numerous museums and art galleries where some of the world's most important works of art are held. |
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Today it is the head office of the Metropolitan City of Florence and hosts museums and the Riccardiana Library. |
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