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Auditorium 161 (Remis Auditorium)
Corridor LG37.5 (between Auditorium Lobby and Americas Wing)
Exterior EX01 (Gift of Lynne and Frank Wisneski)
Exterior EX03 (Gift of David and Ingrid Kosowsky)
Exterior EX05 (Calderwood Courtyard)
Exterior EX06 (Huntington Avenue Exterior at Museum Road)
Exterior EX07 (Bank of America Plaza)
Exterior EX08 (Huntington Avenue Exterior at Forsyth Way)
Exterior EX10 (Fenway Exterior at Forsyth Way)
Exterior EX12 (Japanese Garden)
Exterior EX14 (Museum Road Exterior)
Gallery 100.8 (Luce Foundation Gallery)
Gallery 101B (next to Huntington Staircase)
Gallery 102 (Wall Rotunda)
Gallery 102.1 (next to Wall Rotunda)
Gallery 103C (Musical Instruments)
Gallery 103D (Musical Instruments)
Gallery 104 (Kaplan Family Foundation Gallery)
Gallery 105A (Egypt: Pre-Dynastic and Dynastic)
Gallery 105B (Egypt: Old Kingdom Funerary Arts)
Gallery 105C (Egypt: Dynasties 6–11)
Gallery 108 (Old Kingdom)
Gallery 109 (Funerary Arts)
Gallery 110 (Ancient Near East)
Gallery 113 (Egypt: Old Kingdom Sculptures)
Gallery 113A (Egypt: Portraits)
Gallery 119 (Calderwood Gallery)
Gallery 121 (Crozier Gallery)
Gallery 121.1 (between South and Central Pavilions)
Gallery 121A (Servison Family Gallery)
Gallery 121B (Saltonstall Gallery)
Gallery 121C (Tarlow and Kay Gallery)
Gallery 121D (Marsh Gallery)
Gallery 124 (at southeast corner of Central Pavilion)
Gallery 126 (Landry Gallery)
Gallery 127 (Keane Family Gallery)
Gallery 128 (Saunders Gallery)
Gallery 130.10 (Sharf Visitor Center)
Gallery 130.9 (Shapiro Family Courtyard)
Gallery 132 (Lynch Gallery)
Gallery 133 (Servison Gallery)
Gallery 134 (Croll Family Gallery)
Gallery 135 (Fitzgerald Gallery)
Gallery 136 (Liberty Mutual Gallery)
Gallery 137 (Peabody Gallery)
Gallery 137.1 (between North and Central Pavilions)
Gallery 137.3 (at northeast corner of Central Pavilion)
Gallery 138 (Lurie-Marks Gallery)
Gallery 138A (Lombard Gallery)
Gallery 138B (Rodgers Gallery)
Gallery 141 (Italian Renaissance)
Gallery 141A (Firestone Memorial Room)
Gallery 141B (Italian Renaissance)
Gallery 142 (Russell Gallery)
Gallery 143 (Morrissey Gallery)
Gallery 144 (Vrachos Gallery)
Gallery 148 (Vrachos and Stamas Galleries)
Gallery 149 (foot of Hemicycle Staircase)
Gallery 152 (Hilles Gallery)
Gallery 153 (Stamas Gallery)
Gallery 155 (Rabb Gallery)
Gallery 158 (Foster Gallery)
Gallery 163 (Cohen Galleria)
Gallery 163W2 (Art Wall)
Gallery 168 (Linde Gallery)
Gallery 170 (Brown Gallery)
Gallery 171 (Carter Gallery)
Gallery 172 (Benin Kingdom)
Gallery 175 (Arts of Islamic Cultures)
Gallery 176 (South and Southeast Asia)
Gallery 177 (Arts of the Pacific)
Gallery 179 (Arts of Korea)
Gallery 183 (next to MFA Signature Shop)
Gallery 184 (Torf Gallery)
Gallery 204A (Shapiro Colonnade)
Gallery 204B (Shapiro Colonnade)
Gallery 204C (Shapiro Colonnade)
Gallery 205 (Shapiro Rotunda)
Gallery 206 (Roman Portraiture)
Gallery 207 (Behrakis Gallery)
Gallery 208 (Byzantine Art)
Gallery 211 (Condakes Gallery)
Gallery 212A-B (Daily Life in Ancient Greece)
Gallery 212C (Ruettgers Gallery)
Gallery 213 (Early Greek Art)
Gallery 214 (Lubin Family Gallery)
Gallery 215A (Krupp Gallery)
Gallery 215B (Ancient Greece: Dionysos & Symposium)
Gallery 215C (Ancient Greece: Greek Theater)
Gallery 218 (Gothic)
Gallery 219.4 (Italian Renaissance)
Gallery 221 (Adelson Gallery)
Gallery 222 (Bressler Gallery)
Gallery 223 (Pellegrino Gallery)
Gallery 223.1 (between South and Central Pavilions)
Gallery 224 (at southeast corner of Central Pavilion)
Gallery 226 (Murray Gallery)
Gallery 227 (Croll Gallery)
Gallery 228 (Henderson Gallery)
Gallery 231 (Shapiro Gallery)
Gallery 232 (Shapiro Gallery)
Gallery 233 (Vinik Gallery)
Gallery 234 (Alfond Gallery)
Gallery 235 (Cohn Gallery)
Gallery 236 (James Gallery)
Gallery 237 (Linde Gallery)
Gallery 237.1 (between North and Central Pavilions)
Gallery 238 (Forkner and Gill Family Gallery)
Gallery 238A (Heide Family Galleries)
Gallery 238B (Heide Family Galleries)
Gallery 239 (Goel Gallery)
Gallery 241 (Hartman Galleries)
Gallery 241A (Hartman Galleries)
Gallery 241B (Hartman Galleries)
Gallery 242 (Art of the Netherlands in the 17th Century)
Gallery 243 (Beranek Gallery)
Gallery 243A (Coolidge Gallery)
Gallery 244 (Remis Gallery)
Gallery 245 (Elfers Gallery)
Gallery 246 (Shapiro Gallery)
Gallery 247 (Cunningham Gallery)
Gallery 248 (Coolidge Gallery)
Gallery 250 (Koch Gallery)
Gallery 251 (Beal Gallery)
Gallery 252 (Rosenberg Gallery)
Gallery 253 (Hill Gallery)
Gallery 254 (Museum Council Gallery)
Gallery 254A (Colburn Chapel Gallery)
Gallery 255 (Rabb Gallery)
Gallery 258 (Farago Gallery)
Gallery 259 (Lubin Gallery)
Gallery 260 (Cogan and Cornille Gallery)
Gallery 261 (Towles Gallery)
Gallery 262 (Buttenwieser Gallery)
Gallery 263 (Ives Family Gallery)
Gallery 265 (Cohen Galleria)
Gallery 268 (Cohen Galleria)
Gallery 269 (Asian Contemporary)
Gallery 270 (Bernat Galleries)
Gallery 271 (Bernat Galleries)
Gallery 273 (Bernat Galleries)
Gallery 274 (Bernat Galleries)
Gallery 275 (Schmid Gallery)
Gallery 278A (Japanese Prints)
Gallery 278B (Japan: Buddhist Art)
Gallery 278C (Japan: Buddhist Art)
Gallery 279 (Japan: Buddhist Temple Room)
Gallery 280 (Arts of Japan)
Gallery 321.1 (between South and Central Pavilions)
Gallery 325.1 (Central Pavilion Walkway)
Gallery 326 (Axelrod Gallery)
Gallery 327 (Blake and Purnell Gallery)
Gallery 328 (Lane Galleries)
Gallery 332 (Lane Galleries)
Gallery 334 (Lane Galleries)
Gallery 335 (Burke Gallery)
Gallery 336 (Art of the Americas: 20th Century)
Gallery 338.2 (at northeast corner of Central Pavilion)
Gallery LG26 (Roberts Family Gallery)
Gallery LG27 (Cleaves Gallery)
Gallery LG28 (Putnam Gallery)
Gallery LG31 (Gund Gallery)
Gallery LG32 (Ancient Mesoamerica)
Gallery LG33 (Pre-Columbian Gold and Andean Civilizations)
Gallery LG34 (Native North American Art)
Gallery LG35 (17th-Century New England: Brown-Pearl Hall)
Gallery LG36 (17th-Century New England: Manning House)
Lobby 100.3 (Brown Lobby)
Lobby 119.1 (next to Calderwood Gallery)
Lobby 124.5 (Restroom Lobby)
Lobby 126.1 (outside Landry Gallery)
Lobby 130.2 (Cox Lobby)
Lobby 136.1 (outside Liberty Mutual Gallery)
Lobby 164 (near Bookstore and Shop)
Lobby 224.6 (Restroom Lobby)
Lobby 226.1 (outside Murray Gallery)
Lobby 230.2 (Roberts Lobby)
Lobby 236.1 (outside James Gallery)
Lobby 326.1 (outside Axelrod Gallery)
Lobby 330.5 (Sinai Lobby)
Lobby G72 (near Garden Cafeteria)
Lobby LG30.4 (Rickabaugh Family Lobby)
Restaurant 165 (Taste Café and Wine Bar)
Restaurant 266 (465 Bar & Restaurant)
Restaurant LG84 (Garden Cafeteria)
Staircase 101.1 (Huntington Staircase)
Staircase 177.1 (next to Arts of the Pacific)
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Artist/Maker: United Airlines
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Only United Air Lines' spacious DC-6 and DC-6B Mainliners link the East and Midwest with the West and entire Pacific Coast.
United Airlines
Accession Number: 2015.13137
Important business and production centers from coast to coast are linked by the Main Line Airway.
United Airlines
Accession Number: 2015.13159
Capable of spanning the continent in 9 1/2 hours, United's "Age of Flight" 4-engined Mainliners will carry 52 passengers and 5500 pounds of mail and express at speeds up to 300 miles an hour.
United Airlines
Accession Number: 2015.13160
Coast to coast, border to border, and across the blue Pacific to Hawaii speed United's giant DC-6 Mainliner 300s. Capable of carrying 52 passengers and nearly three tons of cargo as fast as 5 miles a minute, this famous luxury liner offers unprecedented comfort and convenience aloft.
United Airlines
Date:
after 1949
Accession Number: 2015.13161
As graceful as a bird! United's big DC-6 Mainliner 300 is truly the "queen of the skyways," as it soars high in the smooth-flight levels above the clouds. Its four giant 2100 horsepower engines drive it through the skies at speeds of 5 miles a minute!
United Airlines
Date:
after 1949
Accession Number: 2015.13162
United's efficient ground crews make short work of loading baggage, freight, express, and mail aboard before take-off. Each of United's DC-6 Mainliner 300s carry as much as 5400 pounds of cargo as fast as 300 miles an hour, between major Main Line Airway cities.
United Airlines
Date:
after 1949
Accession Number: 2015.13163
United's 747 ... the Friend Ship. The most notable feature of our friendly giant is its atmosphere of relaxed sociability, engendered in part by wide aisles, wide seats and high ceilings but mostly by the friendly hospitality of our gracious stewardesses.
United Airlines
Accession Number: 2015.13178
United's Super DC-8's add a new dimension of capacious comfort to jet travel. Nearly forty feet longer than their predecessors, the huge aircraft carry close to 200 passengers on United's nonstop coast-to-coast routes and between California and Hawaii.
United Airlines
Accession Number: 2015.13179
United's 747 ... the Friend Ship. The most notable feature of our friendly giant is its atmosphere of relaxed sociability, engendered in part by wide aisles, wide seats and high ceilings but mostly by the friendly hospitality of our gracious stewardesses.
United Airlines
Accession Number: 2015.13180
The 18'8" width of United's DC-10 gives 250 passengers living-room comfort on flights of from 300 to 3600 miles. Meals are prepared in a lower-lobe galley. Three GE fanjets provide 117,000 pounds of takeoff thrust. Length: 179'9". Wingspan: 155'4". Tail height: 58'1". Takeoff weight: 410,000 pounds, loaded and fueled (22,000 gallons).
United Airlines
Accession Number: 2015.13181
UNITED AIR LINES BOEING 727, world's first short to medium range tri-jet transport to go into service, has a speed of 600 miles per hour and is capable of taking off from 5000-foot runways with a full payload.
United Airlines
Accession Number: 2015.13182
UNITED AIR LINES SUPER DC-8, first of the "jumbo jets." Carries 196 persons.
United Airlines
Accession Number: 2015.13183
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