Georgia Southern Museum Georgia Southern University 2142 Southern Drive, Rosenwald Building Statesboro, GA 30458
Tuesday through Friday, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays, 2 p.m. – 5 p.m. Closed Mondays and University holidays
Contact: (912) 478-5444
Contact: ,
143
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The United States Navy Memorial is proud to recognize the long and storied contributions of the United States Navy Reserve Centennial with a year-long celebration. Get involved and become a supporter of the National Exhibit!
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6
,
The most comprehensive collection of Australian war art ever seen outside of Australia consists of artworks from the Australian War Memorial depicting Australian military experience from the First World War to Afghanistan. The exhibition features Australia
Contact:
5
,
Political cartoons, newly printed in vivid color during the war era, were widespread and quickly consumed by popular culture across national borders and language barriers. As with today, caricatures allowed artists and audiences to laugh, reflect and inform opinions of current events. Dutch artist Louis Raemaekers, described as the “supreme cartoonist of the war,” used his pencils as a weapon to create powerful impressions characterizing and criticizing the nature and legacy of war.
Born in the Netherlands in 1869, Raemaekers’ first wartime political cartoon was published in the Amsterdam newspaper De Telegraaf on Aug. 1, 1914, following the German declarations of ...
Contact:
5
,
The year 1915 was pivotal in terms of the world-wide involvement in the war. World War I was the first truly global war starting in Europe, then spreading to Africa, Asia and the Near East. The European powers mobilized their colonies and commonwealths around the world. Soldiers and laborers from Southeast Asia, India, Africa and the Caribbean were sent to Europe and the Near East to fight. Particularly, the British Commonwealth nations of Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa made a decisive impact.Sand to Snow: Global War 1915 illustrates the convergence of diverse military, political, economic and social forces ...
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5
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Artists and political cartoonists responded to the horrors of World War I with grief, fury and dismay. While some served at the Front, others used their art to mock the insanity of war, pillory its instigators and mourn the death and destruction it wrought. Dr. Jan Schall, Sanders Sosland Curator, Modern Art at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, explores political cartoonists Louis Raemaekers and Gustave Wendt and artists Hugo Ball, Otto Dix, Marsden Hartley, Käthe Kollwitz, Andre Masson and Georges Rouault in an engaging presentation in the Edward Jones Research Center.
For more information, please visit the Museum's Upcoming Events webpage.
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5
,
Georgia Southern Museum Georgia Southern University 2142 Southern Drive, Rosenwald Building Statesboro, GA 30458
Tuesday through Friday, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays, 2 p.m. – 5 p.m. Closed Mondays and University holidays
Contact: (912) 478-5444
Contact: ,
143
,
The United States Navy Memorial is proud to recognize the long and storied contributions of the United States Navy Reserve Centennial with a year-long celebration. Get involved and become a supporter of the National Exhibit!
Contact:
6
,
The most comprehensive collection of Australian war art ever seen outside of Australia consists of artworks from the Australian War Memorial depicting Australian military experience from the First World War to Afghanistan. The exhibition features Australia
Contact:
5
,
Political cartoons, newly printed in vivid color during the war era, were widespread and quickly consumed by popular culture across national borders and language barriers. As with today, caricatures allowed artists and audiences to laugh, reflect and inform opinions of current events. Dutch artist Louis Raemaekers, described as the “supreme cartoonist of the war,” used his pencils as a weapon to create powerful impressions characterizing and criticizing the nature and legacy of war.
Born in the Netherlands in 1869, Raemaekers’ first wartime political cartoon was published in the Amsterdam newspaper De Telegraaf on Aug. 1, 1914, following the German declarations of ...
Contact:
5
,
The year 1915 was pivotal in terms of the world-wide involvement in the war. World War I was the first truly global war starting in Europe, then spreading to Africa, Asia and the Near East. The European powers mobilized their colonies and commonwealths around the world. Soldiers and laborers from Southeast Asia, India, Africa and the Caribbean were sent to Europe and the Near East to fight. Particularly, the British Commonwealth nations of Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa made a decisive impact.Sand to Snow: Global War 1915 illustrates the convergence of diverse military, political, economic and social forces ...
Contact:
5
,
Georgia Southern Museum Georgia Southern University 2142 Southern Drive, Rosenwald Building Statesboro, GA 30458
Tuesday through Friday, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays, 2 p.m. – 5 p.m. Closed Mondays and University holidays
Contact: (912) 478-5444
Contact: ,
143
,
The United States Navy Memorial is proud to recognize the long and storied contributions of the United States Navy Reserve Centennial with a year-long celebration. Get involved and become a supporter of the National Exhibit!
Contact:
6
,
The most comprehensive collection of Australian war art ever seen outside of Australia consists of artworks from the Australian War Memorial depicting Australian military experience from the First World War to Afghanistan. The exhibition features Australia
Contact:
5
,
Political cartoons, newly printed in vivid color during the war era, were widespread and quickly consumed by popular culture across national borders and language barriers. As with today, caricatures allowed artists and audiences to laugh, reflect and inform opinions of current events. Dutch artist Louis Raemaekers, described as the “supreme cartoonist of the war,” used his pencils as a weapon to create powerful impressions characterizing and criticizing the nature and legacy of war.
Born in the Netherlands in 1869, Raemaekers’ first wartime political cartoon was published in the Amsterdam newspaper De Telegraaf on Aug. 1, 1914, following the German declarations of ...
Contact:
5
,
The year 1915 was pivotal in terms of the world-wide involvement in the war. World War I was the first truly global war starting in Europe, then spreading to Africa, Asia and the Near East. The European powers mobilized their colonies and commonwealths around the world. Soldiers and laborers from Southeast Asia, India, Africa and the Caribbean were sent to Europe and the Near East to fight. Particularly, the British Commonwealth nations of Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa made a decisive impact.Sand to Snow: Global War 1915 illustrates the convergence of diverse military, political, economic and social forces ...
Contact:
5
,
More than 9 million combatants from the belligerent nations died in World War I, the largest number of any conflict in world history to that time. The World Remembers is an international education project whose purpose is to remember and honor these combatants who perished, for each year of the war, by displaying their names in more than 100 locations throughout Europe and North America, for a period of weeks ending with the Western Front Armistice Day of Nov. 11. For 1915, names from 12 nations are represented. Accompanying the names are images of soldiers and civilians caught up in ...
Contact:
5
,
Flanders Remembrance Ceremony.
State Capitol North Wing
Contact:
,
Georgia Southern Museum Georgia Southern University 2142 Southern Drive, Rosenwald Building Statesboro, GA 30458
Tuesday through Friday, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays, 2 p.m. – 5 p.m. Closed Mondays and University holidays
Contact: (912) 478-5444
Contact: ,
143
,
The United States Navy Memorial is proud to recognize the long and storied contributions of the United States Navy Reserve Centennial with a year-long celebration. Get involved and become a supporter of the National Exhibit!
Contact:
6
,
The most comprehensive collection of Australian war art ever seen outside of Australia consists of artworks from the Australian War Memorial depicting Australian military experience from the First World War to Afghanistan. The exhibition features Australia
Contact:
5
,
Political cartoons, newly printed in vivid color during the war era, were widespread and quickly consumed by popular culture across national borders and language barriers. As with today, caricatures allowed artists and audiences to laugh, reflect and inform opinions of current events. Dutch artist Louis Raemaekers, described as the “supreme cartoonist of the war,” used his pencils as a weapon to create powerful impressions characterizing and criticizing the nature and legacy of war.
Born in the Netherlands in 1869, Raemaekers’ first wartime political cartoon was published in the Amsterdam newspaper De Telegraaf on Aug. 1, 1914, following the German declarations of ...
Contact:
5
,
The year 1915 was pivotal in terms of the world-wide involvement in the war. World War I was the first truly global war starting in Europe, then spreading to Africa, Asia and the Near East. The European powers mobilized their colonies and commonwealths around the world. Soldiers and laborers from Southeast Asia, India, Africa and the Caribbean were sent to Europe and the Near East to fight. Particularly, the British Commonwealth nations of Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa made a decisive impact.Sand to Snow: Global War 1915 illustrates the convergence of diverse military, political, economic and social forces ...
Contact:
5
,
More than 9 million combatants from the belligerent nations died in World War I, the largest number of any conflict in world history to that time. The World Remembers is an international education project whose purpose is to remember and honor these combatants who perished, for each year of the war, by displaying their names in more than 100 locations throughout Europe and North America, for a period of weeks ending with the Western Front Armistice Day of Nov. 11. For 1915, names from 12 nations are represented. Accompanying the names are images of soldiers and civilians caught up in ...
Contact:
5
,
Georgia Southern Museum Georgia Southern University 2142 Southern Drive, Rosenwald Building Statesboro, GA 30458
Tuesday through Friday, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays, 2 p.m. – 5 p.m. Closed Mondays and University holidays
Contact: (912) 478-5444
Contact: ,
143
,
The United States Navy Memorial is proud to recognize the long and storied contributions of the United States Navy Reserve Centennial with a year-long celebration. Get involved and become a supporter of the National Exhibit!
Contact:
6
,
The most comprehensive collection of Australian war art ever seen outside of Australia consists of artworks from the Australian War Memorial depicting Australian military experience from the First World War to Afghanistan. The exhibition features Australia
Contact:
5
,
Political cartoons, newly printed in vivid color during the war era, were widespread and quickly consumed by popular culture across national borders and language barriers. As with today, caricatures allowed artists and audiences to laugh, reflect and inform opinions of current events. Dutch artist Louis Raemaekers, described as the “supreme cartoonist of the war,” used his pencils as a weapon to create powerful impressions characterizing and criticizing the nature and legacy of war.
Born in the Netherlands in 1869, Raemaekers’ first wartime political cartoon was published in the Amsterdam newspaper De Telegraaf on Aug. 1, 1914, following the German declarations of ...
Contact:
5
,
The year 1915 was pivotal in terms of the world-wide involvement in the war. World War I was the first truly global war starting in Europe, then spreading to Africa, Asia and the Near East. The European powers mobilized their colonies and commonwealths around the world. Soldiers and laborers from Southeast Asia, India, Africa and the Caribbean were sent to Europe and the Near East to fight. Particularly, the British Commonwealth nations of Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa made a decisive impact.Sand to Snow: Global War 1915 illustrates the convergence of diverse military, political, economic and social forces ...
Contact:
5
,
More than 9 million combatants from the belligerent nations died in World War I, the largest number of any conflict in world history to that time. The World Remembers is an international education project whose purpose is to remember and honor these combatants who perished, for each year of the war, by displaying their names in more than 100 locations throughout Europe and North America, for a period of weeks ending with the Western Front Armistice Day of Nov. 11. For 1915, names from 12 nations are represented. Accompanying the names are images of soldiers and civilians caught up in ...
Contact:
5
,
Georgia Southern Museum Georgia Southern University 2142 Southern Drive, Rosenwald Building Statesboro, GA 30458
Tuesday through Friday, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays, 2 p.m. – 5 p.m. Closed Mondays and University holidays
Contact: (912) 478-5444
Contact: ,
143
,
The United States Navy Memorial is proud to recognize the long and storied contributions of the United States Navy Reserve Centennial with a year-long celebration. Get involved and become a supporter of the National Exhibit!
Contact:
6
,
The most comprehensive collection of Australian war art ever seen outside of Australia consists of artworks from the Australian War Memorial depicting Australian military experience from the First World War to Afghanistan. The exhibition features Australia
Contact:
5
,
Political cartoons, newly printed in vivid color during the war era, were widespread and quickly consumed by popular culture across national borders and language barriers. As with today, caricatures allowed artists and audiences to laugh, reflect and inform opinions of current events. Dutch artist Louis Raemaekers, described as the “supreme cartoonist of the war,” used his pencils as a weapon to create powerful impressions characterizing and criticizing the nature and legacy of war.
Born in the Netherlands in 1869, Raemaekers’ first wartime political cartoon was published in the Amsterdam newspaper De Telegraaf on Aug. 1, 1914, following the German declarations of ...
Contact:
5
,
The year 1915 was pivotal in terms of the world-wide involvement in the war. World War I was the first truly global war starting in Europe, then spreading to Africa, Asia and the Near East. The European powers mobilized their colonies and commonwealths around the world. Soldiers and laborers from Southeast Asia, India, Africa and the Caribbean were sent to Europe and the Near East to fight. Particularly, the British Commonwealth nations of Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa made a decisive impact.Sand to Snow: Global War 1915 illustrates the convergence of diverse military, political, economic and social forces ...
Contact:
5
,
More than 9 million combatants from the belligerent nations died in World War I, the largest number of any conflict in world history to that time. The World Remembers is an international education project whose purpose is to remember and honor these combatants who perished, for each year of the war, by displaying their names in more than 100 locations throughout Europe and North America, for a period of weeks ending with the Western Front Armistice Day of Nov. 11. For 1915, names from 12 nations are represented. Accompanying the names are images of soldiers and civilians caught up in ...
Contact:
5
,
A 1940 historical film by renowned German director Max Ophüls, From Mayerling to Sarajevo begins in the aftermath of the Mayerling Incident in 1889. The film depicts the love affair and marriage between Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria and Sophie, leading up to their assassination in 1914. The New Yorker says that the film, “points to the origins of war in romance, to the roots of politics in personal relationships.” Digitally remastered and shown in French with English subtitles, From Mayerling to Sarajevo is presented by in partnered with the Kansas City Filmfest and The Alliance Française de Kansas City. ...
Contact:
5
,
Georgia Southern Museum Georgia Southern University 2142 Southern Drive, Rosenwald Building Statesboro, GA 30458
Tuesday through Friday, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays, 2 p.m. – 5 p.m. Closed Mondays and University holidays
Contact: (912) 478-5444
Contact: ,
143
,
The United States Navy Memorial is proud to recognize the long and storied contributions of the United States Navy Reserve Centennial with a year-long celebration. Get involved and become a supporter of the National Exhibit!
Contact:
6
,
Time and again, American soldiers have stood against the enemies of our nation, risking and often sacrificing their lives so that you and I may live in freedom. Countless unsung heroes from bustling metropolises and small towns like ours, along with the battles in which they fought are fast disappearing. Help us keep their memories alive, along with the memories of the WW1 Doughboys and the battles in which they fought. Join us at the Doughboy Statue as we welcome guest speakers: 1LT Paul Johnston, Executive Officer DELTACO2-121 IN.48th IBCT, Tom Jackson, Head of Georgia
Contact:
60
,
Otranto Disaster Commemoration held at The Old Berrien County Courthouse in Nashville, Ga
Contact:
60
,
The most comprehensive collection of Australian war art ever seen outside of Australia consists of artworks from the Australian War Memorial depicting Australian military experience from the First World War to Afghanistan. The exhibition features Australia
Contact:
5
,
Political cartoons, newly printed in vivid color during the war era, were widespread and quickly consumed by popular culture across national borders and language barriers. As with today, caricatures allowed artists and audiences to laugh, reflect and inform opinions of current events. Dutch artist Louis Raemaekers, described as the “supreme cartoonist of the war,” used his pencils as a weapon to create powerful impressions characterizing and criticizing the nature and legacy of war.
Born in the Netherlands in 1869, Raemaekers’ first wartime political cartoon was published in the Amsterdam newspaper De Telegraaf on Aug. 1, 1914, following the German declarations of ...
Contact:
5
,
The year 1915 was pivotal in terms of the world-wide involvement in the war. World War I was the first truly global war starting in Europe, then spreading to Africa, Asia and the Near East. The European powers mobilized their colonies and commonwealths around the world. Soldiers and laborers from Southeast Asia, India, Africa and the Caribbean were sent to Europe and the Near East to fight. Particularly, the British Commonwealth nations of Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa made a decisive impact.Sand to Snow: Global War 1915 illustrates the convergence of diverse military, political, economic and social forces ...
Contact:
5
,
More than 9 million combatants from the belligerent nations died in World War I, the largest number of any conflict in world history to that time. The World Remembers is an international education project whose purpose is to remember and honor these combatants who perished, for each year of the war, by displaying their names in more than 100 locations throughout Europe and North America, for a period of weeks ending with the Western Front Armistice Day of Nov. 11. For 1915, names from 12 nations are represented. Accompanying the names are images of soldiers and civilians caught up in ...
Contact:
5
,