Looking up at the ceiling in the lobby.
The lobby and its amazing windows.
Upstairs, outside the children's area.
Activities in the children's area. What a beautiful space.
Architectural blocks for kids to build with.
The rooftop sculpture garden.
Mother and child sculpture on the rooftop.
Mother and Child, by William Zorach.
The staircase that leads down to the lobby, and the light coming in from the ceiling.
Looking down at a bench in the lobby.
Clear magnets kids can build with.
Special exhibit of floating sculptures.
The White Fence, by William Ned Cartledge.
Video game exhibit.
Special exhibit of glass works.
Artichoke Jar, by David Levi. Colored glass.
Mystic Dispersion, by Jon Kuhn. Plate glass, optical glass, and colored glass.
Red Kneeling Figure, by Stephen Dee Edwards. Glass and steel.
Magnetic wall that kids can stick metal object to in order to make art!
Blue glass sculpture- inside are elements such as a human with outstretched arms and a ladder. Bertil Vallien makes compositions of silence, ice, and Nordic mythology.
Hallway with amazing windows.
Exhibit in a hallway with square windows.
I love this chunky window!
On the One Hand, Builders, No. 2, by Bertha Husband.
On the Other Hand, Breakers, No. 2, by Bertha Husband.
Skinny window.
The lobby is marvelous!
Magnetic wall that kids can stick metal objects to, to make art.
Instruments, by Bertha Husband.
The entrance to the yellow Telfair Museum building, near Jepson Center. You pay for admission to this museum when you visit Jepson Center.
Statue of Michaelangelo outside Telfair Museum building.
The basement of the Telfair Museum building.
Dying Gaul sculpture.
Brooklyn Bridge in Winter, by Childe Hassam.
The Garden Umbrella, by Frederick Carl Frieseke.
The Hurrying River, by Robert Hogg Nisbet.
Over to Blackhead, by George Wesley Bellows.
Bird Girl, the statue that was on the cover of John Berendt's book "Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil."
Statue of Rubens.
Statue of Raphael.
Inside Le Cafe Gourmet, a lovely counter-service French cafe nearby.