National Gallery of Art | Talks
A podcast by National Gallery of Art, Washington
981 Episodes
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Elson Lecture, A Conversation with Artist Robert Gober
Published: 1/11/2011 -
Edgar Degas Sculpture: The Systematic Catalogue
Published: 1/11/2011 -
The Early Modernists in America
Published: 1/4/2011 -
Puvis de Chavannes and the Invention of Modernism: Parsing the National Gallery of Art Paintings
Published: 12/28/2010 -
The Image of the Black in Western Art, Part 1
Published: 12/28/2010 -
Robert Frank and the Photographic Book, 1930�1960
Published: 12/21/2010 -
Michelangelo: In the Beginning
Published: 12/14/2010 -
The Vogel Collection Story: Postcards from Artists
Published: 12/7/2010 -
The Greatest Unknown Work of Art in America
Published: 12/7/2010 -
Conversations with Authors: Michael Fried on Photography, Modernism, and the Importance of Not Losing Faith in the Dialectic
Published: 11/30/2010 -
The Sydney J. Freedberg Lecture on Italian Art 2010: Thoughts on the Caravaggisti
Published: 11/23/2010 -
The New Acropolis Museum: A Conversation with Dimitrios Pandermalis
Published: 11/16/2010 -
What I Saw: An Art Critic's Report on Forty Years in Washington
Published: 11/9/2010 -
Arcimboldo, 1526-1593: Nature and Fantasy
Published: 11/2/2010 -
The Collecting of African American Art IV: A Historical Overview
Published: 11/2/2010 -
Edvard Munch: Understanding His Master Prints
Published: 10/26/2010 -
Sirens, Sea Unicorns, and Aquatic Angels: Fantastic Marine Creatures from Renaissance Venice
Published: 10/19/2010 -
Are Books Making Us Illiterate? How e-Reading Can Save Civilization
Published: 10/12/2010 -
Martin Puryear: "How Things Fit Together"
Published: 10/5/2010 -
Martin Puryear: "Sculpture that Tries to Describe Itself to the World"
Published: 9/28/2010
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.