The Oklahoma
City Museum of Art serves over 125,000 visitors annually from all fifty
states and over thirty foreign countries and presents exhibitions drawn from throughout
the world. The Museum’s collection covers a period of five centuries with highlights
in European and American art of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and a growing
collection of contemporary art as well as a comprehensive collection of glass sculpture
by Dale Chihuly. The Museum boasts the region’s premiere repertoire cinema, which
presents the finest international, independent, and classic films. Amenities include
Museum School, which offers classes for students of all ages as well as art
camps for children; a library; Museum Store, a roof terrace, and the Museum Cafe,
a full-service restaurant, offering lunch, dinner, Sunday brunch, afternoon tea,
a full bar and catering services. Reservations are recommended for dinner and Sunday
brunch at the cafe, call (405) 235-6262.
Map / Directions
The OKCMOA is located at 415 Couch Drive, Oklahoma City, OK 73102.
Parking Information
There are several pay-to-park lots next to the museum. For tour bus
parking information, call (405) 278-8286. More Parking Information
Ticket Information
Single Tickets
Group Tickets *
Multi-Day Tickets
Adult
$19.95
$14.95
$34.95
Child **
$11.95
$10.00
$21.95
Senior †
$16.95
$14.95
$29.95
Military
$10.00
College Students ‡
$14.95
* Groups consist of 15 or more individuals ** Children tickets apply to ages 6-18, children 5 and under are free
† Seniors tickets apply to ages 62 and over
‡ College Students must show valid College ID for admission prices.
Your admission price includes:
The use of an iPod touch as your audio guide at NO additional cost
All children's interactive activities and achievement awards
Docent assistance throughout the exhibit
Special lectures by world reknown scholars
Schedule a Group Tour
To schedule a senior or adult group tour, contact (405) 278-8286 or tours@okcmoa.com
Join OKCMOA curator Alison Amick as she interviews
Dr. Scott Carroll, director of The Green Collection, and learn more about this fascinating
collection and its presentation in Passages. Connect vol. 2011, issue 2
Special Multi-Day Pass
Passages is more than an exhibit. A person can spend several hours in the exhibit
if desired. Due to the extensive number of artifacts on display, the numerous interactive
areas, the various listening tracks available, the special guest lecture series
and the rotating special exhibit area – Passages is offering a multi-day pass for
slightly more than a single day ticket. This multi-day pass allows you to visit
as many times as you wish. It is a tremendous value and makes for a great gift item
also.
Beyond the Renaissance: Critical Texts and Bible Translation
David Lyle Jeffrey is Distinguished Professor of Literature and Humanities at Baylor
University; Senior Fellow at the Institute for Studies of Religion (ISR), and is
in international demand as a speaker on English Literature, the Biblical Tradition,
and related cultural implications. He has written widely in these areas and others;
and was three times the recipient of the CCL Book of the Year Award, and also recipient
of the Lifetime Achievement Award of the Conference on Christianity and Literature.
His books include A Dictionary of Biblical Tradition in English Literature; The
Early English Lyric and Franciscan Spirituality; Chaucer and Scriptural Tradition;
English Spirituality in the Age of Wesley; The Law of Love: English Spirituality
in the Age of Wyclif; People of the Book: Christian Identity and Literary Culture,
and; Houses of the Interpreter: Reading Scripture, Reading Culture. He has edited
William Cowper: Selected Poetry and Prose and co-authored book on The Bible and
the University. Most recently he has published Christianity and Literature: Philosophical
Foundations and Critical Practice (IVP, 2011), co-authored by Gregory Maillet, and
The King James Bible and the World it Made (2011) and Luke: a Theological Commentary
(Brazos Press, forthcoming). He serves as the ISR Director of Manuscript Research
in Scripture and Tradition, which involves professors and their students in the
research of rare items from the Green Collection.
* Response by Dr. Christopher Hutson, Abilene Christian University
The Contents and Challenges of the Dead Sea Biblical Scrolls
Peter Flint serves as the Canada Research Chair in Dead Sea Scrolls Studies and
actively promotes Scrolls studies through sponsored symposia, teaching, writing
and delivering public lectures. He is the author of numerous studies on the Dead
Sea Scrolls, including the critically acclaimed The Dead Sea Psalms Scrolls and
the Book of Psalms (E. J. Brill), co-author of the widely-read Dead Sea Scrolls
Bible (Harper San Francisco), and editor of the major two-volume collection The
Dead Sea Scrolls after Fifty Years: A Comprehensive Assessment (E. J. Brill). Dr.
Flint serves as a General Editor of one series on the Old Testament: "The Formation
and Interpretation of Old Testament Literature" (E. J. Brill), as well as three
series on the Dead Sea Scrolls. He has also edited over 25 Dead Sea Scrolls for
three volumes in the internationally acclaimed series "Discoveries in the Judaean
Desert" (Oxford University Press).
* Response by Dr. Eric Niccum, Abilene Christian University
The Making of a Bible Classic: The Translation of the King James Bible
Gordon Campbell is Professor of Renaissance Studies at the University of Leicester,
England; author of numerous books on John Milton; most recently a full-length biography
of Milton (2008); a 12-volume edition of Milton’s works (2008-2010); a history of
the King James Bible, The Bible: The Story of the King James Version, 1611-2011
(2011), and an edition of the 1611 KJV Bible (2011), all with Oxford University
Press. Dr. Campbell keeps an active international speaking schedule, and also has
decades of research and interaction with Islamic texts and cultures. He serves as
Senior Scholar for the Green Scholars Initiative, KJV Project.
* Response by Dr. Lisa Wolfe, Oklahoma City University
The Greatest Archaeological Discoveries and the Old Testament
Edwin Yamauchi is Professor Emeritus of History at Miami University (OH). Over several
decades he has authored scholarly articles on ancient history, and numerous books.
Some of them include Africa and the Bible, Persia and the Bible, and The Stones
and the Scriptures. He is co-editor of Peoples of the Old Testament World, and has
appeared on a number of television documentaries. Dr. Yamauchi’s research has been
cited in numerous studies, from the leading journals in ancient history to popular
works such as Lee Strobel’s The Case for Christ. He has served as the president
of the Institute for Biblical Research, and the Near East Archaeological Society.
He is a founding advisory board member of the Green Scholars Initiative.
* Response by Dr. Brad Young, Oral Roberts University
The Green Collection, Scientific Breakthroughs and Bible Translation
Scott Carroll is the founding Director of the Green Collection, Principal Investigator
of the Green Scholars Initiative, and Research Professor of Manuscript Studies and
the Biblical Tradition at Baylor University’s Institute for Studies of Religion.
He directed the excavation of the earliest, unoccupied monastery in the world at
Wadi Natrun, Egypt, recovering important material evidence about the earliest stages
of Christian monasticism. He has edited and published numerous undocumented ancient
and medieval texts primarily written in Greek, Coptic, Syriac, Latin, Hebrew and
Aramaic. He has won various teaching awards, and has over 30 students who have gone
on to earn Ph.D.s and teach in Higher Education. His work has been featured throughout
the media, including his lead role in forming the Passages Exhibition. He led the
development and execution of the KJV exhibits featuring the Green Collection at
the Vatican Embassy (D.C.) and Baylor University’s Armstrong Browning Library, which
have garnered around 100 million views among various media channels. Dr. Carroll
has done numerous documentaries, TV and radio interviews, including being featured
on NPR’s Talk of the Nation. He also lectures regularly for the Asian Baptist Theological
Institute throughout Asia. His Odyssey in Egypt Program garnered international acclaim,
including a place in the Smithsonian for creative pedagogy.
* Response by Dr. Kyle Harper, University of Oklahoma
Scot McKendrick serves as the Head of History and Classical Studies, The British
Library. He has contributed to major exhibitions in several countries. He has facilitated
projects for the Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts, acted as consultant
to the Royal Academy of Arts for the exhibition “Illuminating the Renaissance,”
and is a founding committee member of the Research Centre for Illuminated Manuscripts
in London. He lectures widely in London and at British universities, as well as
in Florence, Antwerp, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York and the J. Paul Getty
Museum, Los Angeles. He has a wide array of books on manuscripts, e.g., The Illuminated
Manuscript: Makers and Interpreters; Bible Manuscripts: 1400 Years of Scribes and
Scripture; The Bible as Book: Transmission of the Greek Text; In a Monastery Library:
Preserving Codex Sinaiticus and the Greek Written Heritage, and; Flemish Illuminated
Manuscripts 1400-1550. His Illuminating the Renaissance: the Triumph of Flemish
Manuscript Painting in Europe won the Eric Mitchell Prize for the best exhibition
catalogue and The Eugène Baie Prize for the best publication. In the late 1990s
he assisted Drs. Carroll and Pattengale with the “The Bible as Book” conferences
at Hampton Court, Herefordshire.
* Response by Dr. John Harrison, Oklahoma Christian University
Dirk Obbink is the Lecturer in Papyrology and Greek Literature in the Faculty of
Classics at Oxford University and is the head of the prestigious Oxyrhynchus Papyri
Project. Obbink has achieved the rare distinction of a dual appointment as an American
University Professor (Collegiate Professor of Papyrology, University of Michigan)
and Fellow and Tutor in the University of Oxford (Christ Church). He is also Director
of the Imaging Papyri Project at Oxford. This project is working to capture digitized
images of Greek and Latin papyri held by the Ashmolean Museum (the Oxyrhynchus Papyri),
and the Bodleian Library and the Biblioteca Nazionale in Naples (the carbonized
scrolls from the Villa of the Papyri at Herculaneum), for the creation of an Oxford
bank of digitized images of papyri. In addition to several books and many scholarly
articles, he has led the publication of nearly 80 volumes on the Oxyrynchus texts.
Dr. Obbink serves as Senior Scholar for the Green Scholars Initiative for both the
Papyri and Climaci Rescriptus Projects.
What Do William Tyndale and C. S. Lewis have in Common?
Alister McGrath is among the most recognized authors on Christian apologetics in
the English-speaking world. He was elected University Research Lecturer in Theology
at Oxford University in 1993, and also served concurrently as research professor
of theology at Regent College, Vancouver, from 1993-7. In 1995, he was elected Principal
of Wycliffe Hall, and in 1999 was awarded a personal chair in theology at Oxford
University, with the title of "Professor of Historical Theology". He earned an Oxford
Doctorate of Divinity in 2001 for his research on historical and systematic theology.
In September 2004, he resigned as Principal of Wycliffe Hall to become the first
Director of the newly-established Oxford Centre for Christian Apologetics. In October
2006, he was elected to a Senior Research Fellowship at Harris Manchester College,
Oxford, where he began directing a major new research project on natural theology,
funded by the John Templeton Foundation, while also serving as President of the
Oxford Centre for Christian Apologetics. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society
of Arts in 2005. In September 2008, McGrath took up the newly-established Chair
of Theology, Ministry and Education in the Department of Education and Professional
Studies at King's College, London. He also serves as the academic leader of the
Centre for Theology, Religion and Culture, and is involved both in theological research
and the professional development of clergy from a range of Christian denominations.
He serves as Senior Scholar for the Green Scholars Initiative, King James Version
Project.
* Response by Dr. Charles Bressler, Indiana Wesleyan University
Ralph Hanna serves as Professor of Palaeography and Tutorial Fellow, Keble College,
Oxford University. He is a noted scholar on Regionalism in Middle English literature,
alliterative poetry (especially Piers Plowman), and language contact in England.
Among his recent publications are London Literature, 1300-1380 (Cambridge), Richard
Rolle: Uncollected Verse and Prose with related Northern Texts (Oxford), The Knightly
Tale of Golagros and Gawane: A Critical Edition (Woodbridge), and Speculum Vitae:
A Reading Text (Oxford). He has held editorships with many of the world’s leading
journals and sponsoring societies, such as Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies,
UCLA; Medieval Academy of America; Johns Hopkins University (ELH); Society for Early
English and Norse Electronic Texts; The Chaucer Library Committee; Council of the
Oxford Bibliographical Society, and Council of the Early English Text Society. He
has served on advisory boards for many of the world’s greatest libraries and repositories
of special collections, including the Huntington Library, Oxford University computing
center, Cambridge University, Calgary University, Queen’s University, Belfast, and
many others. Dr. Hanna serves as Senior Scholar for the Green Scholars Initiative,
Richard Rolle Project.
* Response by Dr. Bobby Kelly, Oklahoma Baptist University
The Greatest Archaeological Discoveries and the New Testament
Robert E. Cooley is President Emeritus of Gordon-Conwell Seminary, and remains active
in its Charlotte campus. Recognized widely for his research and writing in the field
of archaeology, Dr. Cooley has overseen a number of excavation projects in the USA,
and during the past fifty years he has directed excavations at locations such as
Tell Dothan, Khirbet Haiyan, et'Tell, and Khirbet Raddana (Ramallah) in Palestine,
and at Tell er-Retaba in Egypt. He has served as the principal investigator related
to these excavations for over 100 monographs published by the Missouri State University
Center for Archaeological Research. In addition to his excavation activities, Dr.
Cooley has directed more than 70 study trips throughout the Middle East. As a working
scholar, he has been active in a variety of professional societies, in numerous
public, community and state civic activities, and served Christianity Today as a
Senior Editor. Dr. Cooley is the past president of The Association of Theological
Schools in the United States and Canada; and, has served on boards of trustees at
European and American institutions. He serves on the Board of Directors for the
Museum of the Bible, which upon its completion will house much of the Green Collection.
* Response by Mr. Harold Smith, President, Christianity Today International