Adults (Ages 18 and up) Tag

Debra Cole Hollie Ecker Tour the exhibition Kimono Style: The John C. Weber Collection. Then, create your own work of art in the studio. In ASL without voice interpretation. Free, though advance registration is required. Space is limited. Contact 212-650-2010 (voice) or access@metmuseum.org to register. For updates on upcoming programs, connect with us...

For adults who are blind or partially sighted. Get inspired by the Museum's collection and learn drawing techniques through in-person workshops that include experimentation with materials, verbal description, and creative responses to works of art. Free, though advance registration is required. Space is limited. Contact 212-650-2010 or access@metmuseum.org to register. Presented in...

Join us at the Renee & Chaim Gross Foundation for “Tactile Transmissions” in-person. Tactile Transmissions is a 90-minute free Access Program geared toward visitors who are blind or partially sighted. The program focuses on Chaim Gross’s work and the Foundation’s current exhibition, Artists and Immigrants,...

For adults who are blind or partially sighted. Get inspired by the Museum's collection and learn drawing techniques through virtual workshops that include experimentation with materials, verbal description, and creative responses to works of art. Free, though advance registration is required. Space is limited. Contact 212-650-2010 or access@metmuseum.org to register and...

Join BKBX for their latest pop-up show that remixes and riffs on the themes found in Mary Shelley’s gothic horror classic: technology, creation, and modern monsters. Stitching together a mix of favorite restaged repertoire with a new cast and fresh interstitials, A BKBX Frankenstein will...

Please join us for Interpreting MoMA, our free bimonthly program for individuals who are Deaf or hard of hearing, featuring a wine and cheese reception in the Sculpture Garden followed by a private gallery talk with sign-language interpretation of Christine Sun Kim’s The Sound of Temperature Rising and the exhibition Barbara Kruger: Thinking...

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