What kind of museum do you want to go to? What do you want to see?
“Fish” – Zhang Hongtu, 1985, Acrylic on Canvas
For me, as an artist, photographer, writer, I want to see art. I want to see what will make my eyes open wider.
“Moonrise” – George Inness, 1888, Oil on canvas
I want to see what will touch my very being and remind me of who I am. Because in today’s intense, fast-moving world, it can be easy to sometimes forget.
“Moon Beam” – Pat Steir, 2005, Oil on canvas
I want to try and understand another human being who looks at the same thing as me, but sees it in such a vastly different way.
L to R – “Tiger Drinking from A Stream” – Yumashiro Yuhi, October 1761, Ink, color, gold pigment on silk; “Bridge to Heaven 2006.2” – Arnold Chang, 2006, Ink on paper; “An Immortal’s Abode Above the Clouds” – Gong Xian, mid 1680s, ink on silk.
I want to see what someone creates who has a totally different life and totally different experiences than me.
“To Be Sold” – Titus Kaphar, 2018, Oil on canvas with rusted nails. References the sale of 6 enslaved persons belonging to a former president of the university on this site, 1761-1766.
I want to get my heart cracked open a little.
“A.M.X.” – Nancy Grossman, 1969-1970, Wood with nailed and stitched leather.
I want to go home and keep thinking for a while, not just of what I saw, but of what the artist stated their intentions were.
“Naga” – Tuan Andrew Nguyen, 2024, Primarily pounded and polished brass plates made from unexploded bomb metal and artillery shells.
I want to take in these feelings from another’s visions, and I want them to call to me, wash over me, not to drown me, but to pull me … me … to the surface.
“Painting” – Willem De Kooning, 1948, Enamel and oil on canvas.
This museum visit is the first chance I’ve had to get out and see art in a while. I’d forgotten how intense an experience it can be. How wonderful.
“Self-Portrait” – Robert Mapplethorpe, 1972, Photo silkscreen
The art pictured here is all from the recently reopened (10/31/2025) Princeton University Art Museum, located on the Princeton, NJ campus. The construction took three years, and was built on the same site where the previous museum had existed and was then razed.
“Dogariya – The Queen’s Guard, from the series Anima Project” – Marcia Kure, 2022, Kola nut, indigo, and watercolor on board.
The PUAM houses both classical and contemporary art from around the world. Art pictured here is only from two small special exhibits, one on photography and another on Willem de Kooning, and a larger exhibit of pieces recently donated or promised upon the reopening. Some of what I photographed was in the hallways connecting exhibits. One could spend days there. I’ll be going back.
Go find some inspiration. See new stuff. Be happy
Find more at the Princeton University Art Museum.










