National Gallery of Art | Talks
Ein Podcast von National Gallery of Art, Washington
981 Folgen
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Celebrating the Old Master Collections of the National Gallery of Art: Venetian Painting, 1350–1800
Vom: 12.11.2019 -
Celebrating the Old Master Collections of the National Gallery of Art: Central Italian Painting
Vom: 12.11.2019 -
Celebrating the Old Master Collections of the National Gallery of Art: American Painting, 1700–1900
Vom: 5.11.2019 -
The End of the Sixties: Kerry James Marshall’s “Mementos”
Vom: 29.10.2019 -
Conversations with Artists: Oliver Lee Jackson
Vom: 29.10.2019 -
2019 Summer Sunday Lecture Series: Celebrating the Old Masters of the NGA: British Painting
Vom: 29.10.2019 -
Celebrating the Old Master Collections of the National Gallery of Art: British Painting, 1700–1850
Vom: 22.10.2019 -
Celebrating the Old Master Collections of the National Gallery of Art: French Art of the 18th Century
Vom: 22.10.2019 -
American Pre-Raphaelitism through the Lens and on the Canvas
Vom: 24.9.2019 -
FAPE 2019: Ken Burns and the American Story
Vom: 10.9.2019 -
The Art and Literature of the Great War
Vom: 3.9.2019 -
Two Writers on Art, Music, and Modality
Vom: 3.9.2019 -
Photography from the Sunny Side of the Alps
Vom: 20.8.2019 -
Signed JV, but not by Vermeer: Jacobus Vrel’s “Young Woman in an Interior”
Vom: 6.8.2019 -
Augusta Savage: A Woman of Her Word
Vom: 6.8.2019 -
I.M. Pei: A Celebration of His Life and Work
Vom: 30.7.2019 -
The Sculpture of David Smith (1906–1965), Part 1
Vom: 30.7.2019 -
The Sculpture of David Smith (1906–1965), Part 2
Vom: 30.7.2019 -
Mary Pinchot Meyer: Artist
Vom: 23.7.2019 -
From the Cathedral to the Billiard Room: Tracing the History of a Medieval Stained Glass Window from the William A. Clark Collection
Vom: 23.7.2019
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.