National Gallery of Art | Talks
A podcast by National Gallery of Art, Washington
Categories:
981 Episodes
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New Discoveries from the Robert H. Smith Collection
Published: 3/22/2016 -
Elson Lecture 2016: Cecily Brown
Published: 3/22/2016 -
Procession: The Art of Norman Lewis
Published: 2/16/2016 -
What Makes a Statue?
Published: 2/9/2016 -
Unabridged and Incomplete: Series and Sequences in Contemporary Art
Published: 2/2/2016 -
Bronzes from the Aegean: The Lost Cargos and the Circumstances of Their Recovery
Published: 1/26/2016 -
The Artist as Weatherman: Hans Haacke's Critical Meteorology
Published: 12/29/2015 -
Introduction to the Exhibition — Power and Pathos: Bronze Sculpture of the Hellenistic World
Published: 12/22/2015 -
Thomas Hart Benton: Painting the Song
Published: 12/1/2015 -
Rajiv Vaidya Memorial Lecture: New York's Cinema 16 Film Society: Programming for a Divided World
Published: 11/24/2015 -
Rajiv Vaidya Memorial Lecture: Germany in the 1920s: Expanding the Film Avant-Garde beyond the Political Divide
Published: 11/17/2015 -
Rajiv Vaidya Memorial Lecture: Time Frames: Andy Warhol's Film and Video
Published: 11/10/2015 -
The Sydney J. Freedberg Lecture on Italian Art: Canova and Color
Published: 11/10/2015 -
Artists and Mentorship: David C. Driskell in Conversation with Ellington Robinson
Published: 11/3/2015 -
Abstraction and Its Capacities
Published: 10/27/2015 -
American Experiments in Narrative, 2000–2015: Don Perry
Published: 10/13/2015 -
Introduction to the Exhibition — The Serial Impulse at Gemini G.E.L.
Published: 10/13/2015 -
Talking Shop with Sidney Felsen: Fifty Years of Artists at Gemini G.E.L
Published: 10/6/2015 -
Behind the Scenes of "The Serial Impulse": Conserving Works of Art on Paper
Published: 10/6/2015 -
Caillebotte/Durand-Ruel: Making Impressionism
Published: 9/29/2015
Messages, meanings, movements—how does art history help us understand our world? Join curators, historians, artists, musicians and filmmakers as they explore art and its histories in a search for our shared humanity. Download the programs, then visit us on the National Mall or at www.nga.gov, where you can explore many of the works of art mentioned.