|
|
Art and Entertainment in Fort Worth
|
|
||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Features:
Site Search |
Get Listed |
Referrals |
Advertise |
About Us |
Links |
Feedback |
Get Email |
Get a Site
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
National Cowgirl Museum
| ||||||
![]() A new IMAX® film, Ride Around the WorldFrom Morocco to Chile to Texas, a new IMAX® film and special exhibit reveal a global horse culture in all its gritty glory. Fort Worth’s Omni Theater and National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame to open film and related exhibit May 27 A new IMAX® film, Ride Around the World, takes you on a spectacular journey through Morocco, Spain, Argentina, Chile, Mexico, British Columbia and Texas, to meet vaqueros, gauchos, baqueanos and cowboys who are part of a single global horse culture – an unbroken trail stretching back 1,500 years. These rugged men and women were often first to settle the wild frontiers, lay the foundation in language, music and dress for the entire New World, and shape a culture. Filmed in exotic and rarely visited locations, Ride Around the World includes some of the most spectacular horse footage ever seen on an IMAX® screen, truly a profound visual and cultural experience. The film premieres at the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History’s Omni Theater May 27. Ride: A Global Adventure, on display at the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame May 27 through October 1, also looks at the international roots of the American cowboy and cowgirl. From the dusty deserts of Morocco to the high plains of the Four Sixes Ranch in West Texas, Ride: A Global Adventure takes you beyond the myth that all cowboys are from Texas. The classic American cowboy, although a universal icon, evolved over time and has counterparts in other corners of the world. Ride: A Global Adventure showcases the physical differences in dress, tack and tools of diverse horse cultures seen in Ride Around the World while emphasizing their similarities. It reveals the long trail through time that brought forth the American cowboy. Starting with the early Moroccan warriors to the Spanish conquistadors and onto the Mexican vaqueros, cowboy figures emerged in the New World as far north as Canada and south as Patagonia. Regardless of how each culture developed the look and feel of their tools, people used horses to travel, explore new horizons and accomplish their work on the land. It is these international influences that cultivated the American cowboy and cowgirl and spawned a global adventure. Ride: A Global Adventure is an original exhibit designed by Bob Weis Design Island Associates (Weiss was formerly with Walt Disney Imagineering, part of The Walt Disney Company.) It is a collaborative effort of the Cattle Raisers Museum, Fort Worth Museum of Science and History, and National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame. Ride Around the World promises an international journey that will thrill audiences around the world while uniting them in a shared heritage. Ride Around the World is proudly presented by Ford Motor Company. Texas Highways magazine and the Fort Worth Star-Telegram are local sponsors of both the film and exhibit. Fact SheetRide Around the World and Ride: A Global Adventure A film and exhibit experienceFilm Venue: Exhibit Venue: Description: Ride: A Global Adventure is an original exhibit inspired by the film, Ride Around the World. The exhibit highlights artifacts from horse cultures seen in the film and tells the international story of the American cowboy’s roots in global horse cultures. It is designed by Bob Weis Design Island Associates (Weiss was formerly with Walt Disney Imagineering, part of The Walt Disney Company) and is a collaborative effort of the Cattle Raisers Museum, Fort Worth Museum of Science and History, and National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame. Film & Exhibit dates: Press Preview: For more information contact DJ Latham at:
dlatham@cowgirl.net or
National Cowgirl Museum, 1720 Gendy, Fort Worth, TX 76107, 817-336-4475,
Website: www.cowgirl.net The National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame is the only museum in the world dedicated to honoring women of the American West who have displayed extraordinary courage and a pioneer spirit in their trail blazing efforts. The National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame’s 167 honorees include pioneers, artists, writers, entertainers, humanitarians, businesswomen, educators, ranchers and rodeo cowgirls including: Sacajawea, principal guide for the Lewis and Clark expedition; painter Georgia O’Keeffe; potter Maria Martinez; writer Laura Ingalls Wilder; sharpshooter Annie Oakley; Enid Justin, who created the multimillion dollar Nocona Boot Company; Hollywood icon Dale Evans and U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor. Established in 1975 in Hereford, TX, the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame relocated in June 2002 to a new 33,000-square-foot building in the heart of Fort Worth’s internationally acclaimed Cultural District. The new $21 million venue includes interactive exhibit galleries featuring artifacts of the permanent collection, a traveling exhibit gallery, three theaters, an expanded research library, a retail store, and a grand rotunda where visitors begin to learn about the spirit of the cowgirl. Open Tuesdays through Saturdays 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sundays noon to 5 p.m., the Cowgirl Museum is also available for evening rentals for receptions, corporate functions, dinners and parties. For more information about the museum, current exhibits and rentals, please call 817-336-4475 or 800-476-FAME, or visit the Cowgirl Museum’s website at www.cowgirl.net. For more information contact DJ Latham at:
dlatham@cowgirl.net or
National Cowgirl Museum, 1720 Gendy, Fort Worth, TX 76107, 817-336-4475,
Website: www.cowgirl.net |
|
Site Information:
Terms of Service |
Privacy Policy |
Copyright © |
|
|
|
|
|
