Exhibition. Opened June 1983 and closed June 30, 1983. Located in the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum of Natural History. "Black Wings" was presented by the Smithsonian Institution's Traveling Exhibition Service and featured photographs of aviators and events in the history of Black aviation.
Exhibition. Opened October 17, 1980. Located in the Library Gallery at the American Museum of Natural History. "Books on Asia" featured many of the books used in the research and design of the then new Gardner D. Stout Hall of Asian Peoples.
Exhibition. Opened in March 2, 1971 and closed May, 1971. Located in Section 5, Floor 2 in the Corner Gallery at the American Museum of Natural History. "Boricua--Aqui y Alla" (Puerto Ricans--Here and There), a major audio-visual exhibition dealing exclusively with Puerto Rican life and culture in NYC and Puerto Rico, went on display.
Exhibition. Opened in November 20, 2010 and closed August 14, 2011. Located in Section 3, Floor 3 in Gallery 3 at the American Museum of Natural History. "Brain: The Inside Story" was an exhibition giving visitors a new perspective and insight into their own brains using imaginative art, vivid brain scan imaging, and interactive exhibits.
Exhibition. Opened August 2, 1944 and closed November 1, 1944. Located in the Grand Gallery at the American Museum of Natural History. "Brazil's Mineral Treasures" featured Tantalite ore, the rare "black gold" of strategic war minerals and the source of tough, tantalum metal.
Exhibition. Opened October 20, 1949 and closed November 14, 1949. Located in the Corner Gallery at the American Museum of Natural History. "Brazilian Flowers Drawn from Nature in the Years 1880-1882" featured tropical flower illustrations from the folio of an unknown artist.
Exhibition. Opened in January 16, 1986 and closed some time in the same year. Located in Section 12, Floor 2 in the Roosevelt Rotunda at the American Museum of Natural History. "Brazilian Princess" was an exhibition featuring the world's largest cut gem, a topaz weighing more than 21,000 carats.
Exhibition. Opened in May 20, 1994 and closed July 31, 1994. Located at the American Museum of Natural History. "British Gas Wildlife Photographer of the Year" was an exhibition of forty award-winning images.
Exhibition. Opened January 1987. Located in the Arthur Ross Hall of Meteorites at the American Museum of Natural History. The "Brunflo Meteorite" fell to earth 460 million years ago and was found in Sweden.
Exhibition. Opened April 4, 1977 and closed May 1, 1977. Located in the Center Gallery at the American Museum of Natural History. "Buckminster Fuller " was a photographic retrospective of Buckminster Fuller's designs and architectual drawings, which opened conjunction with an appearance by Buckminster Fuller entitled "An Afternoon with Buckminster Fuller."
Exhibition. Opened May 3, 1957 and closed June 16, 1957. Located in the Corner Gallery at the American Museum of Natural History. "Busmen's Holiday" was an exhibition of art created by 48 employees of the Museum, including scientists, secretaries, teachers, maintenance workers, technicians, and professional artists.
Exhibition. Opened May 1, 1968 and closed May 31, 1968. Located in the Grand Gallery at the American Museum of Natural History. "Butterflies of a New York Spring," was an "Exhibit of the Month" devoted to butterflies that take to the wing during the first days of spring.
Exhibition. Opened August 15, 1980 and closed October 15, 1980. Located in the New York State Roosevelt Memorial at the American Museum of Natural History. "California Condor: A Species in Peril" examined the threats to the rare California condor and the efforts to save it.
Exhibition. Opened February 3, 1941 and closed February 27, 1941. Located in the Education Hall at the American Museum of Natural History. "Camera Studies of Life of Southwest Indians: 'Indian Country'" featured a collection of about 100 camera studies of life among the Southwest Indians taken by Frank Kellogg.
Exhibition. Opened in May 1975 and closed some time in the same year. Located in the Environmental Information Desk at the American Museum of Natural History. "Cans From A Pressured City" was an exhibition featuring the work of Joe Sedacca, manager of the Museum's Graphics Division, who transformed the squashed cans he found on the streets of New York into small works of art.
Exhibition. Opened February 11, 1955 and closed March 3, 1955. Located in the Corner Gallery at the American Museum of Natural History. "Carl Bodmer Paints the Indian Frontier" featured the work of German naturalist and painter of the American Indian, Carl Bodmer.
Exhibition. Opened February 1986 and closed 1986. Located in the Library Gallery at the American Museum of Natural History. "Carl Ethan Akeley, 1864-1926" featured books, artifacts, photographs, and tools celebrated the accomplishments of Carl E. Akeley, taxidermist, inventor, naturalist, explorer and prime force behind the Museum's Hall of African Mammals.
Exhibition. Opened in December 24,1935 and closed January 7, 1936. Located in the Educational Hall at the American Museum of Natural History. "Carl Werntz Exhibition" was an exhibition of 534 sketches and paintings of peoples and art of 63 countries of the Far East by the well-known artist.
Exhibition. Opened in December 2, 1987 and closed May 1, 1988. Located in Section 3, Floor 3 in the Gallery 3 at the American Museum of Natural History. "Carthage: A Mosaic of Ancient Tunisia" was an exhibition displaying over 300 items including brightly colored mosaics, Roman bronzes and a collection of Punic jewelry.
Exhibition. Opened in August 14,1998 and closed December 6, 1998. Located on Floor 4 in the Library Gallery at the American Museum of Natural History. "Cave of the Warrior" was an exhibition featuring a selection of rare funerary objects from an intact burial site of an adult male, probably a warrior of high rank, dating to the early 4th millennium BCE (late Chalcolithic Period).