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PERMANENT EXHIBITIONS <br />ONGOING <br />California Bounty is the first curatorial interpretation of the museum's distinguished painting collection <br />since 1994. Viewers will take a ramblingjourney through California's visual history, a history shaped <br />by a unique mixture of Mexican and Anglo traditions as well as the state's position on the Pacific Rim. <br />Each painting epitomizes California's land, people and offerings as a place of produce and plenty. The <br />exhibition brings together many of the museum's most cherished paintings, including works by early artists <br />documenting the Mission and Rancho periods; landscapes by plein air painters portraying California's coasts <br />and canyons; sumptuous portraits and still-life paintings of flowers and paper -wrapped fruit by Alberta and <br />William McCloskey; and a small selection of works indicating California as a continued place of possibility. <br />ONGOING <br />Photographer Chris Rainier guest curated this exhibition of art from an area spanning the geographic <br />region collectively referred to as Oceania. This comprehensive exhibition highlights masterworks from <br />the three cultural regions of Micronesia, Melanesia, and Polynesia. Particular focus is placed on New <br />Guinea, land of the headhunter, and the rich artistic traditions infused into daily and ritual life. Submerge <br />into a visually stunning world and come face to face with larger -than -life masks, finely crafted feast bowls, <br />objects associated with the secretive Sepik River men's house, beautiful shell and feather currency, <br />magic figures and tools of the shaman, objects related to seagoing trade routes, gorgeous personal <br />adornments, weapons of warfare and the most precious of human trophies taken in retribution. <br />ONGOING <br />Featuring over 250 intricate works of silver, Miao: Masters of Silver features jewelry and textiles primarily <br />made in China's Guizhou Province, where the largest population of Miao people reside. Male silversmiths' t ;` <br />create a variety of ornaments through casting, smelting, repousse (a reverse hammering technique), <br />forging, engraving, knitting, coiling, cutting, and other methods. Concepts such as beauty, unity, fortune, <br />and pride are expressed as visual abstractions and geometric motifs. <br />ONGOING <br />The nine oversized paintings shown in this exhibition are all the work of one extraordinary 69-year-old <br />Buddhist monk named Shashi Dhoj Tulachan, a second generation thangka artist living in Tuksche, a remote <br />village located in Mustang, Nepal's northernmost district adjacent to Tibet. Shashi Dhoj Tulachan has <br />devoted much of his life to the restoration of a nearby 18th century gompo (Tibetan monastery) known as <br />the Chhairo Gompa. The paintings in this collection are not thangkas in the traditional sense. Thangkas are <br />usually much smaller and are rolled on canvas so that they can be easily transported and hung anywhere <br />for teaching. The thangkas exhibited here are similar in size to mural paintings found in monasteries. <br />