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New
Orleans Museum of Art
#1 Collins Diboll Circle
(504)-488-2631
Admission:
Adults,
$6.00; Senior Citizens (65+),
$5.00;
Children
(3-17) $3.00
(Children under 3 are admitted
free of charge).
Members
are admitted free of charge.
NOTE:
Thursday mornings, from 10 a.m.
until 12 noon, any Louisiana
resident with proper
identification may enter the
Museum free of charge, courtesy of
The Helis Foundation.
On
occasion, there may be an
additional charge for major
international exhibitions
strollers, umbrellas, book bags,
and other packages may be checked
in the Coat Check Room near the
front entrance.
Hours:
Tuesday through Sunday
10
a.m. until 5 p.m.
At
the end of an oak tree lined
boulevard stands the majestic New
Orleans Museum of Art.
A
structure such as this could only
have been built at the turn of the
20th Century. Isaac Delgado, a
local businessman, gave the City
Park Commission $150,000 for the
purpose of "creating a temple
of art for rich and poor
alike." Delgado offered to
build the museum after concern
about the fate of the massive art
collection of his aunt, Virginia
McRae Delgado. Her collection was
displayed for years.
The Delgado
Museum opened in 1911. NOMA, as it
is now known, has become a
top-notch art museum. Marble
sculptures and marble stairs grace
the Grecian - Pillared entryway.
Upon entering the museum, a very
wide marble stairway leads you to
the upper floor and other
exhibits. A total of 130,850
square feet of display space gives
way to the visitor’s
imagination. 46 galleries house
over 40,000 permanent works of art
with a value in excess of $200
million.
African
Art, American Art, Asian Art,
Decorative Art, European Art,
Native American Art, Oceanic Art,
Pre-Columbian Art, Photography
collections, Prints and Drawings
make up the collections of the
museum. Needless to say the museum
has an enviable French 19th
century porcelain collection
featuring Vieux Paris, or
"old Paris" porcelains.
Through
the generous art collection
donations of the citizens of New
Orleans the museum has
increased the collections and
holdings of this prized jewel,
NOMA.
The
facility is fully accessible to
the handicapped. Specially
equipped restrooms are located on
the first floor near the Museum
Shop. Wheelchairs are available
upon request at the Front Desk.
- By Jim Vance
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