981 Episodes

  1. About Four Honest Outlaws

    Published: 3/20/2012
  2. Andrew W. Mellon: Collecting for the Nation

    Published: 3/20/2012
  3. Conversations with Artists: Joel Shapiro, Thoughts on the Organization of Form in Modern Sculpture

    Published: 3/13/2012
  4. Mellon: A Life

    Published: 3/13/2012
  5. Nineteenth-Century Redux: A New Look at a Great Collection of French Paintings

    Published: 3/6/2012
  6. Exhibiting Blackness: African Americans and the American Art Museum

    Published: 3/6/2012
  7. A Sense of Place—Norman Lewis in Harlem: "An Inquiry into the Laws of Nature"

    Published: 2/28/2012
  8. The Collecting of African American Art VIII: Elliot Perry and Darrell Walker in Conversation with Michael Harris

    Published: 2/28/2012
  9. Conversations with Artists: David C. Driskell and Frank Stewart

    Published: 2/21/2012
  10. Nazi Loot in American Collections

    Published: 2/21/2012
  11. Conversations with Artists-Compositions and Collaborations: The Arts of Lou Stovall

    Published: 2/21/2012
  12. Remembering and Forgetting: Imagery and Its Role in the Slave Trade and Its Abolition

    Published: 2/14/2012
  13. Pictures of Nothing: Abstract Art since Pollock, Part 6: Abstract Art Now

    Published: 2/14/2012
  14. The Collecting of African American Art VII: David C. Driskell in Conversation with Ruth Fine

    Published: 2/14/2012
  15. Works on Paper by African Americans: The Growth of the National Gallery of Art Collection

    Published: 2/7/2012
  16. A Conversation with David C. Driskell

    Published: 2/7/2012
  17. Pictures of Nothing: Abstract Art since Pollock, Part 5: Satire, Irony, and Abstract Art

    Published: 2/7/2012
  18. Pictures of Nothing: Abstract Art since Pollock, Part 4: After Minimalism

    Published: 1/31/2012
  19. Pictures of Nothing: Abstract Art since Pollock, Part 3: Minimalism

    Published: 1/24/2012
  20. Pictures of Nothing: Abstract Art since Pollock, Part 2: Survivals and Fresh Starts

    Published: 1/17/2012

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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.