Austin Sights

University of Texas Museums & Galleries

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Lonely Planet review for University of Texas Museums & Galleries

The University of Texas, if not quite in the Ivy League, is a rich and prestigious school boasting several impressive museums and galleries. The Lyndon Baines Johnson, Archer Huntington and Texas Memorial museums are particularly worthwhile.

The LBJ Library, named for the 36th President, is a highlight of any visit to Austin. It much propaganda, but also offers a candid look at the social and political climate of the 1960s.

Also on campus, the Texas Memorial Museum packs a huge art deco building with displays of Texas' natural and social history. Exhibits focus on geology, paleontology, anthropology and natural history. Don't miss the impressive pterodactyl skeleton.

The Archer M Huntington Gallery at UT is one art museum in two buildings: the Harry Ransom Center (HRC) on the West Campus and the Art Building on the East. The collection focuses on 20th century North American and Latin American art and on drawings from the 15th century on. Major figures represented include Elsworth Kelly, Andy Warhol, Joan Mitchel, Thomas Hart Benton and Robert Henri. On the first floor of the HRC is the museum's prized Gutenberg bible.

 

Traveller reviews for University of Texas Museums & Galleries (1)

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    Creepy, hilarious Lyndon Johnson automaton worth the visit

    colonelplink recommends this,

    To see LBJ reduced to a muppet-like state, greeting guests to his own presidential library, is oddly fitting and quite amusing. The brow-beating former president was famous for his coercive style of persuasion, but his robotic effigy reminds the viewer of Chuckie Cheese or some other low-rent carney diversion. The corny, jerky machine is poetic justice for an egomaniac tyrant: a stunted imitation of a man who was almost thoroughly false in life.