The Cultural Commons website, powered by WordPress, offers a glimpse of the types of works available right from the homepage. With a simple contrasting black and white design, the site encourages visitors to watch, listen, read, and experience through image galleries, articles, and embedded video.
]]>The Noguchi Museum’s website works as an extension of the physical museum. It offers visitors a calm digital space to learn more about Noguchi and the museum. It includes high-quality photographs, videos, and other archival materials that are easy to find and navigate through. Different sections provide details about the museum, collections, and ways to support it. The site also includes useful information, like a dynamic section at the top showing the museum’s current hours.
The site’s design emphasizes the artwork and the story of Isamu Noguchi. As visitors scroll, they’ll see visual references to the museum—whether it’s the greenery of the gardens or a naturally lit hallway—that create a subtle nod to wandering through the actual space.
With WordPress as a working canvas, the Noguchi Museum transforms its mission into a complementary digital experience.
]]>The Designmuseum Danmark website takes a contemporary approach to its look and feel, which is both minimal and dynamic. Bright colors, heavyweight fonts, and smooth scrolling create a well-crafted nod to the importance of design and the museum’s mission.
Visitors can quickly move from one section to another with a simple fixed site menu. It doesn’t detract from the rest of the content on the page unless it’s being directly interacted with.
The website showcases a variety of information, including details about the museum’s operating hours and history, current exhibitions and permanent collections, its resource library initiative, and workshop schedules. Visitors can purchase tickets directly from the website thanks to a seamless WooCommerce integration.
Designmuseum Danmark is a significant feature of Danish arts and culture, and its website—all built in WordPress—offers visitors a taste of quality design even before they step into the space.
]]>Diving into the Te Tuhi website, visitors are greeted by a bright color palette and patchwork type of layout. The design guides them through the gallery’s newest exhibitions, past featured works, and upcoming events. The clean and clear navigation makes it easy to move to other site sections and discover more information.
The website not only highlights the innovative artwork visitors can expect to see, but tells a deeper story about the artists and the community they represent. Photography punctuates each section of the site, connecting the gallery’s work to the human element behind it—whether in describing its educational programs or through its collections archive.
Te Tuhi has created a lively space to support and foster the boundary-busting work of its artists. Its website is an extension that allows the world to see what its community is capable of—proudly powered by WordPress.
]]>Often we forget that the artist is a person who also travels. Sometimes they travel for pleasure, but often they travel due to the need to develop their artistic careers, or simply the need to survive.
Rufino Ferreras, Head of Education
This unique section on the museum’s website functions as a curated documentary archive, peering behind the curtain to display these particular artists’ journeys and artistic visions. The website, built with WordPress, has a striking layout, paying close attention to composition and typography, creating an elegant canvas to show the artwork and video content.
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