National Gallery of Art | Talks
Un pódcast de National Gallery of Art, Washington
Categorías:
981 Episodo
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Of Times and Spaces: On Looking at Thomas Struth and Candida Höfer
Publicado: 29/1/2013 -
A Conversation with Calvin Tomkins: "Duchamp: A Biography"
Publicado: 22/1/2013 -
Truth, Lies, and Photographs
Publicado: 15/1/2013 -
A Sculptor Looks at Rodin's Work
Publicado: 15/1/2013 -
Art and Espionage: Michael Straight's Giorgione
Publicado: 8/1/2013 -
Concerning America, and Alfred Stieglitz, and Myself
Publicado: 8/1/2013 -
Picasso and the Concept of the Masterpiece
Publicado: 1/1/2013 -
Viewing History Through the Filmmaker's Lens
Publicado: 1/1/2013 -
Painting in Emilia
Publicado: 25/12/2012 -
Living with the Dead in France: Nineteenth-Century Tomb Sculpture
Publicado: 25/12/2012 -
Tony Smith at 100 Symposium: Introductory Remarks and "Dream of the Proper Context": Tony Smith, the Abstract Expressionists' Architect
Publicado: 18/12/2012 -
Tony Smith at 100 Symposium: Tony Smith: X Marks the Spot
Publicado: 18/12/2012 -
Tony Smith at 100 Symposium: The Tony Smith Experience and Q and A Session
Publicado: 18/12/2012 -
Collecting for Quality: The Kaufman Collection of American Furniture, 1725-1825
Publicado: 11/12/2012 -
The Sydney J. Freedberg Lecture on Italian Art: Lodovico Carracci: Observations on a Faulted Genius
Publicado: 11/12/2012 -
George Bellows Symposium: The Late Work of George Bellows and the Question of Modernity
Publicado: 4/12/2012 -
The Lion in Great Age: Titian's Last Painting
Publicado: 4/12/2012 -
The Collecting of African American Art IX: Collecting Black: An Anachronism
Publicado: 27/11/2012 -
George Bellows Symposium: The Ashcan Goes to War: Bellows, Belligerence, and the Rape of Belgium
Publicado: 27/11/2012 -
George Bellows Symposium: Sunday in the Park with George Bellows
Publicado: 20/11/2012
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.