![]() ![]() Family Sundays are every Sunday 1 – 4 pm until April 28. Looking for more family-friendly fun? The Hands-On Centre is open from 10:30 am – 2 pm, Tuesday through Friday and 10:30 am – 4 pm, Saturday and Sunday. See this super-selfie on Level 1 in Richard Barry Fudger Memorial Gallery, Gallery 125. ![]() ![]() The Artist’s Painting Roomis Alabaster’s self-portrait in which she painted herself among some of art history’s male icons. But that didn’t stop her from pursuing her passion for painting. Shazam! English artist Mary Ann Alabaster developed an interest in drawing at a young age but was forbidden by her mother from pursuing a career as an artist. Visit these colourful cows on Level 1 in Fudger Rotunda, Gallery 126. She experimented with techniques and styles like post-impressionism, cubism and synchronism as seen in her work, Untitled (Cows on a Hillside), which transforms a classic scene of cows in a field into a patchwork of bright colours. Holy cows! Kathleen Munn was one of the first Canadian artists to practice abstract art, and her artistic career played an important part in the rise of modern art in Canada. See the sculpture on Level 1 in Maxine Granovsky & Ira Gluskin Hall, Gallery 105. Fami l yshowcases a small but seemingly close-knit clan emerging from an igloo. Tutsweetok even turned her art practice into a family affair, recruiting the help of her husband, three children and grandchildren. ![]() Tutsweetok’s sculptures often represent mothers and children from her extended family and community groups she held dear. It’s a fam jam! As a mother, grandmother and celebrated Inuit carver, Lucy Tasseor Tutsweetok is the essence of woman power. Here are just some of the many notable women artists you and your little ones can find in the AGO Collection: ![]()
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