After the River Walk stroll, I headed back to the hotel, packed up my stuff, and drove to the San Antonio Museum of Art. The San Antonio Museum of Art, which opened to the public in 1981, is located in an old Lone Star Brewery building, which makes for a very neat place for an art museum. It has an excellent collection of Latin American art, including Spanish colonial, contemporary and popular. It also has very nice collections in contemporary art, European art, Asian art, Oceanic art, Egyptian art, Roman art, Indian art.
I have found that art museums on my road trips provide a place of solace and calm from the hustle and bustle of the road trip, and the constant moving from one place to another. With this in mind, I had penciled in a visit to the San Antonio Museum of Art if only to provide a respite from the sure to be stifling heat of San Antonio which was supposed to be close to 100 degrees today. And after my stroll on the River Walk, I really did need some cool comfort which I got in spades - it was so cool that I had to go back to the car to get a light vest to slip over my t-shirt!
The visit to the museum was thoroughly enjoyable and calming. Afterwards, I grabbed a light lunch at Tre Trattoria which is housed in a building on the museum's campus. Here's some of the art I viewed (I especially liked the painting titled "Street Gallantry" - which is the first one below).
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| Street Gallantry |
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| David Lyon in the Contemporary Gallery |
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| Diego Rivera's El Albañil (The Bricklayer, 1903), |
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| Albert Bierstadt's Passing Storm over The Sierra Nevada |
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Yogini in the Himalayan Gallery
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| Roberto de la Selva's At the Fair |
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