National Gallery of Art | Talks
Een podcast door National Gallery of Art, Washington
981 Afleveringen
-
Innovation, Competition, and Fine Painting Technique: Marketing High-Life Style in the Dutch 17th C
Gepubliceerd: 6-2-2018 -
Dutch burghers and their wine: Nary a sour grape
Gepubliceerd: 6-2-2018 -
Pictures in Paintings
Gepubliceerd: 6-2-2018 -
Saul Steinberg: Outsider Extraordinaire
Gepubliceerd: 30-1-2018 -
Vermeer and the Masters of Genre Painting: New Insights and Discoveries
Gepubliceerd: 23-1-2018 -
Frederick Douglass and the Visual Arts in Washington, DC
Gepubliceerd: 16-1-2018 -
Picnic Ware Fit for a Feast
Gepubliceerd: 16-1-2018 -
The Art of Working with Visitors with Memory Loss: A New Gallery Program
Gepubliceerd: 16-1-2018 -
More than Mimicry: The Parrot in Dutch Genre Painting
Gepubliceerd: 9-1-2018 -
A Century Gone By: American Art and the First World War
Gepubliceerd: 9-1-2018 -
Anne Truitt in Washington: A Conversation with James Meyer and Alexandra Truitt
Gepubliceerd: 9-1-2018 -
Fashion à la Figaro: Spanish Style on the French Stage
Gepubliceerd: 9-1-2018 -
Time and Temporality in Seventeenth-Century Genre Painting
Gepubliceerd: 9-1-2018 -
Projections of Memory: Romanticism, Modernism, and the Aesthetics of Film
Gepubliceerd: 26-12-2017 -
Edgar Degas (1834–1917): A Centenary Tribute, Part 8—Degas’s Sculpture: An Inside Look
Gepubliceerd: 26-12-2017 -
Edgar Degas (1834–1917): A Centenary Tribute, Part 7—Authorship and Evidence
Gepubliceerd: 19-12-2017 -
Charles Le Brun—Louis XIV’s Most Powerful Artist
Gepubliceerd: 19-12-2017 -
Calder: The Conquest of Time: A Conversation with Jed Perl and Alexander S. C. Rower
Gepubliceerd: 5-12-2017 -
Collector of Lives: Giorgio Vasari and the Invention of Art
Gepubliceerd: 5-12-2017 -
The Sydney J. Freedberg Lecture on Italian Art: Sugar and Spice and All Things Nice?
Gepubliceerd: 5-12-2017
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.