Immersive Van Gogh, a unique art exhibit that just opened in San Francisco on March 18, is a fanciful and remarkable escape from our world into a land of sunlit countrysides, endless flowers and star-filled nights. The distinctive, often dreamlike paintings of the famous Dutch painter are turned into huge, moving animations for this exhibition, which combine digital projections and music to create a truly immersive experience. It’s an eye-opening introduction into the growing field of immersive art, and is a fun new way for all ages to appreciate Van Gogh’s paintings. Here’s the scoop on what you’ll see when you check out this exhibit.

Immersive Van Gogh SF

Massimiliano Siccardi, the creative director of this exhibit, was inspired by Van Gogh’s quote, “I dream my painting and I paint my dream”, and the approximately 40-minute exhibition feels remarkably like stepping into a dream. In the darkness, images taken from Van Gogh’s paintings appear on the walls and floor of the empty space: pastoral landscapes, sunflowers and irises, streets filled with people, and the famous starry night.

Immersive Van Gogh SF

The images continually move and morph, so you can see brushstrokes forming an image, the sun moving across a yellow sky, and flowers blooming. One of the most effective sections of the piece makes viewers feel like they are slowly descending down from the night sky past tall towers, onto a busy street lined with cafes lit by candles. At that moment you feel truly immersed in Van Gogh’s vision. The accompanying original score by Luca Longobardi also creates a contemplative, dreamy mood as the exhibition progresses through Van Gogh’s various pieces, roughly tracing his life.

Immersive Van Gogh SF

The exhibition takes place in a single large gallery space at SVN West. Once you step inside, you see ceiling projectors projecting images on all four walls, and hear music filling the space—you’re instantly immersed in sights and sounds. Visitors are spaced out in social distancing circles on the floor, and there is an elevated viewing platform in the center. Definitely move around the entire space to experience the exhibit from all angles. Admissions are limited to comply with city capacity guidelines, and temperature checks are required upon arrival. All guests must wear a face covering at all times during their visit.

Immersive Van Gogh SF

Ticket prices start at $39.99 ($24.99 for children 16 or younger), with VIP, timed, and flexible ticket options available. The exhibition runs through Monday, September 6, 2021, and tickets are already selling out for the month of March. For kids, this exhibition can provide a new way to view art and understand the creative process.

Immersive Van Gogh SF

Very small children may be overwhelmed by the moments of darkness in the exhibition or the loudness of the music, but you can step outside to the adjoining gallery space for a break if needed. More often, older children seem entranced by the images slowly moving across the walls. Afterwards, when you get home you can look up some of Van Gogh’s paintings that were used for this exhibition. They might inspire your kids to create their own artwork or digital art experience: Immersive Van Gogh showcases some of the marvelous ways art may evolve in the future.

Immersive Van Gogh
SVN West, 10 S. Van Ness Ave.
San Francisco, CA

On view through September 6, 2021

Online: vangoghsf.com or call 844-307-4644

—Anita Chu

Photos by Cheshire Isaacs

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The Wizarding World is going on tour—in 2022! In a collab with Warner Bros. Consumer Products, Imagine Exhibitions is bringing a brand-new Harry Potter and Fantastic Beasts to fans around the globe.

Harry Potter: The Exhibition will include fan fave characters from the Harry Potter movie franchise, Fantastic Beasts and the rest of the Wizarding World. The traveling exhibit will feature an up-close behind the scenes look at authentic props, original costumes, and more.

photo courtesy of PR Newswire/Harry Potter: The Exhibition

Peter van Roden, Senior Vice President of Global Themed Entertainment at Warner Bros. Consumer Products, said in a press release, “We are thrilled to be partnering with the experts at Imagine Exhibitions, on this all-new Harry Potter exhibition.” Van Roden added, “Everyone involved with this project is committed to bringing a masterfully crafted newly innovative Wizarding World experience to fans around the world.”

Of the collab, Tom Zaller, CEO of Imagine Exhibitions, said, “We are honored to be entrusted with the iconic Harry Potter brand and excited to develop and share an exhibition experience that celebrates the magic of the Wizarding World.”

The touring exhibition will travel through North America, Latin America, Europe, the Middle-East, Africa, and the Asia-Pacific Region. While there’s no set start date yet, Imagine Exhibitions will announce the initial venue information in the coming months.

—Erica Loop

 

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Harry Potter Fans Can Visit Diagon Alley with New Set from LEGO

Can you believe LEGO NINJAGO is 10 years old? To celebrate the popularity of the masters of Spinjitzu, LEGO is releasing new sets, collaborations and more throughout 2021.

First you can head to the LEGO website and take a journey through the last 10 years of NINJAGO history. LEGO is featuring fan created content including art, LEGO builds and toy photography, in addition to hosting an in-depth exhibition celebrating ten years of NINJAGO fandom.

Throughout this year, LEGO will release 11 Legacy sets, six of which will come with a limited edition collectible golden ninja minifigure. On Feb. 1, a LEGO retail exclusive three-level LEGO NINJAGO City Gardens will launch, which showcases some special moments of the TV series––plus a golden master Wu.

LEGO will also be releasing four sets linked to the TV series in March and another five sets in June, plus three LEGO NINJAGO sets for ages 4+ in March and June. You can already shop four of the Epic Battle sets and four of the Legacy sets that released earlier this month, including:

  • (71730) LEGO® NINJAGO® Epic Battle set – Kai vs. Skulkin
  • (71731) LEGO® NINJAGO® Epic Battle set – Zane vs. Nindroid
  • (71732) LEGO® NINJAGO® Epic Battle set – Jay vs. Serpentine
  • (71733) LEGO® NINJAGO® Epic Battle set – Cole vs. Ghost Warrior
  • (71735) LEGO® NINJAGO® Tournament of Elements
  • (71736) LEGO® NINJAGO® Boulder Blaster
  • (71737) LEGO® NINJAGO® X-1 Ninja Charger
  • (71738) LEGO® NINJAGO® Zane’s Titan Mech Battle

LEGO is also pairing up with tons of streetwear and clothing brands for several special anniversary merchandise collections. The first collaboration is LEGO NINJAGO x HYPE, a streetwear collab inspired by “the Prime Empire” from the 2020 LEGO NINJAGO TV series. You can shop the collection at justhype.co.uk.

Head to lego.com to keep up with all the new releases and the celebration of NINJAGO all year long.

––Karly Wood

All photos: Courtesy of LEGO

 

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Photo: Tam Gryn

Until recently, taking trips with the kids to museums was a regular weekend activity. Now that the museums are closed, and honestly we don’t feel comfortable venturing out, I began to think about how we can get our kids to engage with art.

It is important to keep kids interested in art even with less access. According to the Denver Art Museum, kids benefit from “experiencing the work of other artists—the importance of focus, experimentation, taking risks, and making mistakes.” It also fosters their creativity and they learn about cultures from around the world. Art helps kids express their emotions which is particularly important in today’s world with so much stress that might not have affected them before.

Taking inspiration and advice from Tam Gryn put me on the right track. She is a mom and an art curator who spent a lot of time traveling the world, living in NYC, and now calls Miami her home with her husband and two small children. Tam began her art career with the Artist Pension Trust and had several other impressive positions with different galleries and art fairs. She is currently the Head Curator at Showfields, a unique shopping and art experience retailer.

So, how to keep the kids interested in art and in making their own? Tam gave me great suggestions.

1. START THEM YOUNG—VERY YOUNG

Tam explained that when she was pregnant with her son, she was an independent art curator in NYC. With her pregnant belly, she knocked on gallery doors asking if there was availability on the calendar for a radical art exhibition. The Radiator Gallery picked up the show “Conceived Without Sin,” an ironic title given her pregnant state. When the opening day arrived, her then three-month-old son was in attendance. She explained, “My artist friends were supportive. We took turns to carry, feed, and play with my baby while the exhibition was being installed. I believe that exposing children to art when they are tiny gets them to believe that art is a part of everyday life and activities.”

2. TURN ART INTO A STORY

Online art tours at museums, public outdoor art installations, and many great books for adults and kids are engaging. Tam recommends that even if your children are young, a good way to introduce them to artists is through stories and anecdotes about the art, the artists, the space, and the context around them. Since kids love to run around and can sometimes be loud, public outdoor art exhibits are a safe and entertaining way to give children exposure without fighting with them to behave. Most museums offer family days or family programs online including kid-friendly arts and crafts, book readings, and other stimulating activities that are fun and educational.

3. WATCH YOUR KIDS EXPERIENCE ART & YOU’LL LEARN TOO

Tam told me that observing her kids experience art inspired her to make one of her boldest career moves. She explained that because kids discover the world through their multiple senses, it’s counter-intuitive to tell them “Don’t touch!” That is when she realized that most art was exhibited in a way that felt unnatural. Exhibitions are usually restricting and intimidating and are meant to be seen with your hands behind your back. This understanding led Tam to start commissioning artists to create interactive art.

Interactive art is meant to stimulate the 16 additional human senses including: hearing, touch, taste, smell, pressure, itch temperature, pain, thirst, hunger, direction, time, muscle tension, proprioception, equilibrioception, and extrasensory perception. Interactive art is inclusive for children and offers adults the instinctive childhood experience of exploring beyond their visual senses. Experiencing art using your entire body leaves you no choice but to connect, especially in a world filled with technology and 2D imagery.

You probably have interactive art at home. One day, Tam’s kids were playing with Mister Potato Head and her 3-year-old said, “He is like Picasso!” Kids interpret what they experience to their everyday lives and it becomes a part of how they see the world.

4. ASK YOUR KIDS WHAT THEY THINK

When looking at art, let your children explore and seek out what they want to see first. Tam says that at home, she tries to steer them towards specific books that she knows will stimulate them more than others. If you are looking for a way to have your children express their emotions in a constructive way, which can often be extremely challenging, see what they are drawn to and ask them questions.

Once, Tam and her daughter encountered a piece that was made with broken glass and other found objects. Her daughter asked why the piece was broken. Tam explained that the artist was probably angry and had broken objects to create something beautiful, and that is art. Her daughter was happy to hear this, and it seemed like she identified with those feelings. That moment might not have happened had Tam not allowed her daughter to seek out the piece and then start talking about it.

5. APPRECIATING ART AT HOME

One of Tam’s favorite summertime activities with her kids is inspired by the established artist Carlos Cruz Diez and his color studies. A great activity to do outdoors is to use food coloring, water, and droppers in different bowls. Kids can learn about primary colors and by mixing them, they can find out which secondary colors are created. The kids entertain themselves for hours, playing with the water and their toys.

While we navigate the summer with our children, exploring new forms of art is a positive way to spend the day, will inspire your children to be creative, and may even offer them a way to express some of their frustrations and emotions and turn it into something beautiful.

 

I'm a mom of two children, wife, and love my fur baby, traveling and playing UNO.  My passion is discovering services and products by entrepreneurs, especially those that can cut down on some screen time and help our family create lasting memories together. 

Las Vegas is anything but boring and that is especially true when you are looking for a kids museum. These Las Vegas museums all kids to explore science, learn about Vegas history through neon artifacts, find out about atomic testing and even see some artifacts from the Titanic. Plan your exploration day today!

DISCOVERY Children’s Museum

DISCOVERY Children’s Museum

Three-stories tall in stature, the DISCOVERY Children’s Museum 58,000-square-foot building is home to nine-themed exhibition halls totaling 26,000 square feet of interactive hands-on core exhibits. You'll find special activities for toddlers, a unique makerspace for kids of all ages and a 70-foot climbing tower. 

360 Promenade Pl
Las VegasNV
Online: discoverykidslv.org

The Neon Museum

Kate Loweth

Start your visit to Las Vegas with a stop at The Neon Museum and you’ll get all caught up on the city’s history through its retired neon signs. Knowledgeable guides tour guests through this this neon boneyard that includes signs from old casinos and other Las Vegas businesses while providing interesting facts about the area’s development into the tourist destination that it is today. You can visit the museum and tour the signs on your own until 4 p.m. daily or opt for the full experience of a one-hour guided tour in the evening.

770 Las Vegas Boulevard North
Las Vegas, NV
Onlineneonmuseum.org

Clark County Museum

Caroline T. via yelp

Travel back in time at this museum that features a modern exhibit hall with a timeline exhibit about southern Nevada from pre-historic to modern times and a collection of restored historic buildings that depict daily life from different decades in Las Vegas, Boulder City, Henderson and Goldfield. 

1830 S Boulder Hwy
HendersonNV
Online: clarkcountynv.gov

Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition

Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition

Your little history buffs are in for a treat when you visit the Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition at the Luxor Hotel. This fully-immersive exhibit starts out by assigning you with the identity of one of the Titanic passengers. You can read about your person’s history and when they were sailing aboard this massive ship.

The exhibit takes you through all the different classes on the ship with information about how the first class dined and how those on third class had to share a communal bathtub. Actual artifacts including “The Big Piece” are on display with videos showing how they were removed from the ocean floor. Opt for the audio tour to get the full experience. Bonus, kids three and under are free.

The Luxor Hotel
3900 S. Las Vegas Blvd.
Las Vegas, NV
Onlinepremierexhibitions.com

National Atomic Testing Museum

Jim B. via yelp

The National Atomic Testing Museum is a national science, history and educational institution that tells the story of America’s nuclear weapons testing program at the Nevada Test Site. The Museum uses lessons of the past and present to better understand the extent and effect of nuclear testing on worldwide nuclear deterrence and geo-political history. 

755 E. Flamingo Rd.
Las Vegas, NV
Online: nationalatomictestingmuseum.org

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Fall is here and local museums around the Bay Area have started rolling out their lineup of exciting exhibits for the whole family. Immerse yourself in the world of Burning Man, take a trip to Japan and then learn all about your cells at these exhibits that kids will love. Scroll through our picks, then open up your calendars to block out some time to check them out!

Wild Child — Junior Center of Art & Science

Erin Lem

For an experience especially tailored to the littles (crawling through five years old), head to the Wild Child pop up exhibit at Junior Center of Art & Science in Oakland. This interactive exhibit encourages young minds to touch, climb, tinker and create.

The outdoor area features an immersive sculpture full of sensory surprises, while indoors you'll find two play rooms. One boasts a sweet portal tunnel (mom and dad, be prepared to crouch to enter!), ball pit, sticker wall and Hygge nook. Next door find a creative space (toward the back there's a separate shoe-free area just for babies and crawlers) with sensory, creative art projects led by staff, "artifacts" like typewriters and calculators, and a huge wire cage our own toddler was especially fond of exploring. Beyond free play, Wild Child also features baby and toddler classes on their calendar here

Good to know:

  • Depending on your child's attention span (and how crowded the place is) expect to spend anywhere from 2-3 hours exploring. 
  • Beyond the pop up, you can check out the other rooms in the Junior Center of Art & Science like the play house room, replete with a play kitchen, stuffed animals and trains, and the reptile room where your kiddo can peek at snakes and other creepy crawlies. 
  • Ample parking is available. The Center is located in the same area as Children's Fairyland. Sat & Sun. parking costs $5/day and Mon.-Fri. parking costs $2/first two hours or $10/day. 

Junior Center of Art & Science
Now through Feb, 23, 2020
558 Bellevue Avenue
Oakland, CA 94610
Online: wildchildplay.com

No Spectators: The Art of Burning Man – Oakland Museum of California

FoldHaus, Shrumen Lumen, 2016. Photo by Ron B

The Oakland Museum of California (OMCA) will bring cutting-edge artwork, sculpture, and interactive installations from Burning Man, one of the most widely-celebrated and influential cultural events, to its galleries this fall. No Spectators: The Art of Burning Man will illuminate the event’s origins and its culture of experimentation, collaboration and creativity, which draws over 70,000 people to Nevada’s Black Rock Desert each year.

An adaptation of the original exhibition organized by the Smithsonian American Art Museum’s Renwick Gallery in collaboration with Burning Man Project, No Spectators will take over OMCA’s Great Hall and beyond, going outside of the walls of the gallery with outdoor sculpture throughout the Museum’s public spaces, including an OMCA-commissioned 40-foot-tall outdoor temple by internationally-acclaimed sculptor David Best. A companion exhibition within the gallery, City of Dust: The Evolution of Burning Man, organized by the Nevada Museum of Art in Reno, will trace Burning Man's origins from its countercultural roots in the San Francisco Bay Area to the world-famous city in the desert it is today.

Oakland Museum of California 
On exhibit October 12, 2019-February 16, 2020
Onlinemuseumca.org

Cells to Self - The Exploratorium

© Exploratorium, http://www.exploratorium.edu

The Exploratorium has just opened a new permanent exhibit collection entitled Cells to Self: Exploring the Life Inside You. Through more than 20 new experiences, this collection reveals the wondrous variety of human cells and the amazing things they’re doing in your body. See live heart cells beating in time with your own pulse, or find out which bacteria are living on your skin. Through living tissues, microscopes and digital models, you’ll discover how cells move and communicate. 

The Exploratorium
Opens October 3 (part of the permanent collection)
Online: exploratorium.edu

Hello from Japan! – Children’s Discovery Museum of San Jose

Children's Museum of San Jose

Come visit Tokyo right here in San Jose and get an authentic peek into Japanese culture. Featuring a bustling modern city street inspired by Tokyo’s Harajuku district that bridges to a tranquil Shinto shrine, you’ll see the incredible contrast between modern kawaii aesthetics and traditional motifs and customs. The transition between the two show how the Japanese culture values history, a society where the past, present and future harmoniously coexist.

Children’s Discovery Museum of San Jose 
On exhibit through Feb. 5, 2020
Onlinecdm.org

Science + You - Bay Area Discovery Museum

Science You

All children are scientists and at the Bay Area Discovery Museum (BADM) they can look and act the part! In BADM's new traveling exhibit, Science + You, visitors get hands-on with the machinery, processes and technology used in real laboratories every day. Upon entering the exhibit, children wash their hands, wipe their feet and even walk through a pretend shower before donning their white lab coat, 

Bay Area Discovery Museum 
When: On exhibit through January 5
Onlinebayareadiscoverymuseum.org

Abracadabra! Magic in Peanuts - Charles Schulz Museum

Charles Schulz Museum

Charles Schulz loved sleight of hand and stage magic of all kinds. Learn firsthand how the cartoonist dabbled in magic and, like all things in his life, brought magic into the panels of Peanuts. See original comic strip art, animation cels, and a selection of the magic items that belonged to Schulz—no hocus pocus required.

Charles Schulz Museum
On exhibit through Jan. 19, 2020
Online: schulzmuseum.org

SOFT POWER – SFMOMA

Tanya Lukin Linklater with Liz Lott, The treaty is in the body, 2017; courtesy the artist and Winnipeg Art Gallery; © Tanya Lukin Linklater

The exhibition SOFT POWER is about the ways in which artists deploy art to explore their roles as citizens and social actors. Appropriated from the Reagan-era term used to describe how a country’s “soft” assets such as culture, political values, and foreign policies can be more influential than coercive or violent expressions of power, the title contemplates the potential of art and offers a provocation to the public to exert their own influence on the world. Presented on two floors of the museum, the exhibition features new commissions and recent works by twenty international artists. 

SFMOMA
On exhibit Oct. 26, 2019-Feb. 17, 2020
Onlinesfmoma.org

Survival Architecture and the Art of Resilience - Museum of Craft and Design

Museum of Craft and Design

This winter, the Museum of Craft and Design (MCD) will present two new, dynamic exhibitions exploring the ways that creative individuals are addressing issues of climate change. Survival Architecture and the Art of Resilience is a timely exhibition showcasing visionary architects and artists who have created artistically interpretive solutions and prototypes for emergency shelters in a climate-constrained world. Concurrently, the exhibition Linda Gass: and then this happened… will examine the human-made and natural water infrastructure affecting the greater Bay Area, considering present and future challenges with respect to climate change.

Museum of Craft and Design
Both exhibits will be available Dec. 19, 2019-May 3, 2020
Online: sfmcd.org

A Powerful Force: Working to End Homelessness Through Art - Walt Disney Family Museum

Untitled Pastel, Marker and Pencil on Newsprint Courtesy of Youth Spirit Artworks

The Walt Disney Family Museum's 2019 community access exhibition will be A Powerful Force: Working to End Homelessness Through Art. Featuring original artwork created by young people experiencing homelessness, the exhibition’s title was inspired by Walt Disney himself: “There is great comfort and inspiration in this feeling of close human relationships and its bearing on our mutual fortunes—a powerful force to overcome the tough breaks which are certain to come for most of us from time to time.”

A Powerful Force will feature artworks created by homeless youth with three greater San Francisco Bay Area partner organizations: Raphael House, Larkin Street Youth Services, and Youth Spirit Artworks. These nonprofit organizations help at-risk youth and their families achieve independence by providing career-building skills, educational programs and safe housing.

Walt Disney Family Museum 
On exhibit through Jan. 6, 2020
Onlinewaltdisney.org

Cointraptions: Classic Coin-Operated Machines - Museum of American Heritage

Dominic Alves via flickr

Travel back in time to the early 1900s to the 1950s when pennies, nickels and dimes were dropped into slots across the nation. Coin-operated machines were widely used in places of businesses such as general stores, toy stores, parlors, restaurants, bars, casinos and gas stops. See how businesses across America operated before the era of the credit card.

Museum of American Heritage
On exhibit through Feb. 16, 2020
Online: moah.org

—Kate Loweth

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Your chocolate-covered daydreams are about to come true. In a sweet, sweet partnership between the Eurochocolate International Chocolate Exhibition and Costa Cruises, you can go on a chocolate-themed cruise in 2020!

So what can you expect from this cruise? The European tour includes stops in ports such as Genoa, Barcelona, Palma de Mallorca, Malta and Catania. Along with day trips to attractions such as the Chocolate Museum of Barcelona, there’s also plenty to do on board the ship.

Enjoy chocolate-themed workshops, cooking lessons, tastings and more. Costa Cruises’ Italy Country manager, Carlo Schiavon, told Lonely Planet, “[It] will allow us to have for the first time aboard a cruise ship the vibe, the fun and the tastes of the greatest international festival dedicated to chocolate”.

The chocolatey tour starts on Apr. 16, 2020. Visit Costa’s website here for more information or to book your cruise.

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Alexander Stein via Pixabay

 

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It’s not every day you meet a T. rex named Victoria, but later this year American dino fans will get their first chance to meet this famous and very rare dinosaur.

Discovered outside of Faith, South Dakota in 2013, Victoria is the second most complete Tyrannosaurus rex discovery on record. Now for the first time, this special dinosaur is going on display to the public. Featuring 199 bones, Victoria’s 66-million-year-old, fossilized remains are going on a globe-trotting tour.

The first stop on the five-year tour for Victoria the T. rex is the Arizona Science Center in Phoenix, Arizona. Museum visitors will be able to get an up close look at the 40-foot long, 12-foot tall dinosaur beginning Nov. 17, 2019.

photo: Courtesy of IMG

“The T. rex is the most iconic dinosaur known to man and the focal point of countless books, television shows and films. The discovery of Victoria is truly remarkable and really changes our understanding of the species,” said John Norman, Managing Director of Exhibitions, IMG. “Through Victoria the T. rex, we’re providing visitors with an in-depth look at the lives of the Tyrannosaurus rex and expanding upon existing knowledge to create the most exciting, engaging and holistic dinosaur exhibition to-date.”

The exhibition will run at Arizona Science Center until May 25, 2020 and then Victoria will make her way to other museums across the world. No word yet on where she will land next.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

 

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Iconic “wizarding world” author J.K. Rowling is giving Harry Potter fans a summer-time gift! Pottermore recently announced the release of four all-new eBook shorts, based on the audiobook Harry Potter: A History of Magic.

The eBooks, which are themed by Hogwarts lessons, will bring the magical world to readers starting this June. Each mini-edition will explore the origins of magic and feature notes, manuscript pages and sketches.

Not only is the new series, titled Harry Potter: A Journey Through…, based on the now-beloved audiobook, but it’s also inspired by the Harry Potter: A History of Magic British Library exhibition.

The first two eBooks, Harry Potter: A Journey Through Charms and Defence Against the Dark Arts and Harry Potter: A Journey Through Potions and Herbology, will launch Jun. 27. The other two, Harry Potter: A Journey Through Divination and Astronomy and Harry Potter: A Journey Through Care of Magical Creatures, will follow on a yet-to-be-announced date.

Even though the eBooks don’t debut for almost a month, you can pre-order the books on Amazon right now!

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Harry Potter via YouTube

 

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Living in the DMV is truly a one-of-a-kind experience. We live in a cosmopolitan city speckled with political flare and we have so many museums to choose from. Many of them are even free! The best thing you can do is introduce your kid, from a very young age to the best museums our country has to offer. From an homage to Egyption queens at Nat Geo to a celebration of the Apollo 11 moon landing at the National Gallery of Art, here are D.C.’s hottest upcoming exhibits that kids of all ages will love.

“Everything in Existence” at ARTECHOUSE
Concepts of eternity and infinity are put on display at this cool museum’s newest digital light exhibition. The exhibit is presented by celebrated Italian artist studio fuse*. Kids will love this show which presents new outlooks from which to observe and consider our reality. It’s super fun!

When: Through Mar. 10
1238 Maryland Ave., SW (L’enfant Plaza)
Online: dc.artechouse.com

“Hollywood Leathernecks: Movie Posters Inspired by Marines” at The National Museum of the Marine Corps
Hollywood and the Marines?…heck yeah! The National Museum of the Marine Corps new exhibit, “Hollywood Leathernecks: Movie Posters Inspired by Marines,” provides a glimpse into how Marines have been portrayed in American movies from the 1920s to today. From 1918’s “The Unbeliever” to “Guadalcanal Diary” to “Heartbreak Ridge” and “A Few Good Men,” visitors can trace Hollywood’s version of Marine Corps history through this colorful and fun show featuring more than 30 posters. A fun exhibit for all!

When: Ongoing
18900 Jefferson Davis Highway Triangle (VA)
Online: usmcmuseum.com

“HOOPS” at the National Building Museum
Got a basketball lover? The NBM does is again with this exhibition that features hoops, backboards, and sometimes blacktops, showcasing the importance of basketball across the globe. Bill Bamberger’s photography exhibit, HOOPS presents a selection of large-format photographs taken across the country and in more than half-a-dozen countries, from the deserts of Arizona and Mexico to the hills of Appalachia, and from the streets of the Northeast to the playgrounds of South Africa. HOOPS opens just in time for “March Madness” and the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball East Regional games that will take place at nearby Capital One Arena.

When: Mar. 9, 2019-Jan. 15, 2020
401 F Street NW (Mt. Vernon)
Online: nbm.org

“Queens of Egypt” at the National Geographic Museum
 Starting March 1, you can walk like an Egyptian…for reals! This multisensory exhibition will bring you back in time some 3,500 years, to the 18th and 19th dynasties of ancient Egypt. Get to know such legendary queens as Nefertari, Nefertiti, Hatshepsut, and Cleopatra VII; see more than 300 prestigious objects, including monumental statues, sparkling jewelry, and impressive sarcophagi; and take a 3-D tour of one of the most well-preserved tombs in the Valley of the Queens.

When: March 1-Sep. 2
1145 17th Street NW (Downtown)
Online: nationalgeographic.org

“The Plane of Tomorrow, Today!” at College Park Aviation Museum
If you haven’t been to the College Park Aviation Museum, you’re missing out! Learn about the history of flight at the museum located on the grounds of the world’s oldest continuously operating airport. And check out their current exhibit, “The Plane of Tomorrow, Today!” Within months of the end of WWII, the Engineering and Research Corporation (ERCO) began marketing it’s spin-proof, stall-resistant, anyone-can-fly Ercoupe. The airplane was the work of the brilliant designer, Fred Weick, and was marketed as the epitome of a new era of modern living. This exhibit draws on the museum’s vast ERCO collection to illuminate the design, marketing and worldwide success of the Ercoupe. It features an Ercoupe suspended in flight and a cutaway section, so visitors can see what makes the plane so unique.

When: Ongoing
1985 Corporal Frank Scott Dr. (College Park, MD)
Online: collegeparkaviationmuseum.com

“By the Light of the Silvery Moon: A Century of Lunar Photographs from the 1850s to Apollo 11” at the National Gallery of Art
The exhibit marks the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing on July 20, 1969. Photography played a significant role both in preparing for the mission and in shaping the cultural consciousness of the event. This exhibition will present 50 works including a selection of photographs from the unmanned Ranger, Surveyor, and Lunar Orbiter missions that led up to Apollo 11. The ground-breaking event will be represented by glass stereographs, taken on the moon by Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, showing close-up views of three-centimeter-square areas of the lunar surface, as well as iconic NASA and press photographs of the astronauts that were disseminated widely in the wake of the mission’s success. A must see!

When: April 28-Oct. 14
6th and Constitution Ave., NW (National Mall)
Online: nga.gov

—Guiomar Ochoa