National Gallery of Art | Talks
A podcast by National Gallery of Art, Washington
981 Episoade
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Anne Charlotte Robertson: Selections from “Five Year Diary”
Publicat: 31.07.2018 -
Water, Wind, and Waves: Marine Paintings from the Dutch Golden Age
Publicat: 24.07.2018 -
Collecting for the Nation: The 75th Anniversary of the Lessing J. Rosenwald Gift
Publicat: 24.07.2018 -
Film in the Sculptural Field
Publicat: 17.07.2018 -
The Description of the Sacred Mountain of La Verna
Publicat: 10.07.2018 -
Introduction to the Exhibition—Sharing Images: Renaissance Prints into Maiolica and Bronze
Publicat: 03.07.2018 -
The Evidence of Things Seen and Unseen
Publicat: 19.06.2018 -
Cézanne's Portraits: Doubt, Certainty, and Painting in Series
Publicat: 19.06.2018 -
Abstraction in Reverse: A Conversation with Alexander Alberro and James Meyer
Publicat: 19.06.2018 -
Differing, Drawn: A Conversation with Lynne Cooke and Darby English
Publicat: 05.06.2018 -
Crossing Paths
Publicat: 05.06.2018 -
The East Building at Forty: Reflections from Curators Past and Present
Publicat: 05.06.2018 -
FAPE 2018: Why Is Art Necessary?
Publicat: 05.06.2018 -
History, Photography, and Race in the South: From the Civil War to Now Part 3
Publicat: 29.05.2018 -
History, Photography, and Race in the South: From the Civil War to Now Part 1
Publicat: 29.05.2018 -
History, Photography, and Race in the South: From the Civil War to Now, Part 5
Publicat: 29.05.2018 -
History, Photography, and Race in the South: From the Civil War to Now Part 2
Publicat: 29.05.2018 -
History, Photography, and Race in the South: From the Civil War to Now Part 4
Publicat: 29.05.2018 -
Claude Monet’s “The Artist's Garden at Vétheuil”—Two Masterworks Reunited, Part I: Curators’ Take
Publicat: 22.05.2018 -
Claude Monet’s “The Artist’s Garden at Vétheuil”—Two Masterworks Reunited, Part III: In Context
Publicat: 22.05.2018
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.