

From the Pocono mountains to Lake Erie's shore, the Steel City to the City of Brotherly Love, the Keystone state is a great place to live and a wonderful place to visit
With its rich history and heritage, natural beauty, culture and entertainment, there's almost no limit to what you can see and do in Pennsylvania. Just ask the more than 100 million people who visit here each year.
Not suprisingly, Pennsylvania has been a source of inspiration for famous artists for centuries. From Fraktur folk art, created by the Pennsylvania Dutch, to the impressionist painting style of Mary Cassatt, and later, the pop art created by Andy Warhol.
Use our Artist Search to find paintings, graphic art, baskets, jewelry, sculpture, art glass, drawings, photography and MUCH more.
As one of the largest museums in the United States, the Philadelphia Museum of Art invites visitors from around the world to explore its renowned collections, acclaimed special exhibitions, and enriching programs, both in person and online.
Overlooking one of the nation's most culturally vibrant cities, the Philadelphia Museum of Art welcomes nearly a million visitors each year, encouraging them to embark upon a walk through time that extends across two millennia and six continents.
Whether it's the first visit to the new Perelman Building or the hundredth to the main building, there is always something new to delight, surprise, enlighten, excite, and inspire.
The Museum presents more than 25 exhibitions each year, ranging from comprehensive single-artist retrospectives to historical surveys to focused presentations that explore specific topics.
The Central Pennsylvania Festival of the Arts will bring over 125,000 people to downtown State College and the University Park campus of Penn State to celebrate the arts with its nationally recognized Sidewalk Sale and Exhibition, gallery exhibition, Sand Sculpture and music, dance and theatrical performances in a variety of traditional and non-traditional venues.
The first Central Pennsylvania Festival of the Arts was held in July 1967, and lasted nine days. Musical performances took place downtown and on campus, and the first sidewalk sale and exhibition consisted of people hanging work on snow fence along "The Wall" on the southern border of the Old Main lawn.
The festival is now five days long, from Wednesday through Sunday in early July each year. A large portion of the event takes place in the Borough of State College, PA, and the remainder on the adjacent University Park campus of The Pennsylvania State University.