
Hidden within these hallowed walls are clues that you must find.
3 deeds deemed irreversible before we run out of time.
Search corridors on tours and ask for help along the way.
I suggest you form a group to “cover more ground” as they say.
Before the clock strikes 10 Tonight, you will bring these clues to me.
And the first to present all 3 will be named this coven’s new Supreme.
The deeds lay hidden in Global Africa and Global Asia comes to mind. Bonnie Ramirez: Catteya may hold a secret, I heard. Visit all 3 and come to us before you speak a word.
TRAVEL TO EACH GALLERY AND FIND A WITCH WITH A HINT. FIND ALL THREE ANSWERS AND PRESENT THEM AT THE END OF THE NIGHT TO BECOME OUR COVENS NEW SUPREME
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Arts of Global Africa
The Arts of Global Africa collection ranks among the nation’s earliest and most comprehensive, reflecting the rich diversity of artistic creativity on the continent and its global reach, both past and present.
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Arts of Global Asia
Asian art has been a central focus of the Museum since its inception. The Museum was founded with the purchase of a collection of several thousand Japanese works from Newark pharmacist George T. Rockwell. Since that time, the collection has grown to nearly 30,000 objects. The renown Tibetan collection—the largest in North America—is unique in its breadth of material.
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Bony Ramirez: Cattleya
Over the course of a year, he explored the Museum’s collections broadly, with a focus on historic portraiture, landscape, and contemporary art. Childhood memories of the Dominican Republic and the complicated histories of the Caribbean inform his surreal narrative style. Cattleya is a genus of orchid native to Central and South America that Ramirez associates with colonialism.
IN ANIMAL KINGDOM (3RD FLOOR)
IN THE PLANETARIUM
IN THE COURT