The Rubin is transforming. Read important updates from our Executive Director.
close-button

All year long we’ve been disguising, revealing, and transforming ourselves, and now it’s almost time to take off the mask—Becoming Another: The Power of Masks closes on February 8, 2016. From poems to films, writing classes to shamanic workshops, we hope you have had a chance to “become another” in our mask-filled year.

“Behind every mask there is a face, and behind that a story.” —Marty Rubin, author


Check out photos from the past year’s unforgettable mask-filled activities and some of our favorite masks from the exhibition:




vvvvv
Kengpa; Monpa or Sherdukpen Peoples; Arunachal Pradesh, India or Bhutan; 19th century Wood; Rubin Museum of Art



ddd
Raven Mask; Unknown Kwakwaka'”˜wakw artist; Knight'”˜s Inlet, British Columbia, Vancouver Island, Canada, Northwest Coast; Wood, pigment, cedar bark; Brooklyn Museum, Gift of Herman Stutzer, Esq.





Ko-omote ; Japan; 17th century; Wood and lacquer; Brooklyn Museum, Gift of Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt in memory of Kermit Roosevelt, 44.192.1.
Ko-omote ; Japan; 17th century; Wood and lacquer; Brooklyn Museum, Gift of Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt in memory of Kermit Roosevelt, 44.192.1.



Appa India, Arunachal Pradesh; c. 18th-19th century Wood, felt, metal, and cloth; Bruce Miller Collection
Appa India, Arunachal Pradesh; c. 18th-19th century Wood, felt, metal, and cloth; Bruce Miller Collection

Curious about Noh masks? Join us tomorrow, January 20, for a special tour of Becoming Another: The Power of Masks with curator Jan Van Alphen.

Be sure to visit Becoming Another: The Power of Masks, before February 8, 2016.


Event photography by Adam Elstein, Lyn Hughes, Michael J. Palma and Michael Seto Photography.
zoom