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Title: |
Artists in America Film Series |
Sub Title: |
at the Nassau County Museum of Art in Roslyn, Long Island, New York |
Date: |
November 17, 2012 - February 24, 2013 |
Time: |
Varies
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Admission: | Free with Museum admission. First come, first seated. |
Location: |
Nassau County Museum of Art |
Street Address: |
1 Museum Drive |
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Roslyn Harbor, NY 11576 |
Description: |
Artists in America Film Series November 17, 2012 through February 24, 2013 at the Nassau County Museum of Art in Roslyn, Long Island, New York.
Six films, each running one day a week.
Each film screens at 11:00AM, 12:00PM, 1:00PM, 3:00PM
Tuesdays-Romantics and Realists: Whistler (2006)
A 50-minute film exploring the wit and work of James Abbott McNeill Whistler, regarded by many as the forerunner of Abstract Art. A talented engraver, he produced many etchings, lithographs and dry-points.
Wednesdays-Great Women Artists: Georgia O’Keeffe (2000)
A 45-minute film about this 20th-century American painter best known for her dramatic large paintings of desert flowers, cowskulls and the scenery of Northern New Mexico.
Thursdays-Discovery of Art: Maxfield Parrish (2008)
A 45-minute film exploring the works of one of the greatest 20th-century American painters and illustrators, whose work was characterized by blue skies, pastoral landscapes and captivating figures.
Fridays-Robert Motherwell: Storming the Citadel (2010)
A 55-minute film that profiles Motherwell in the context of Modernism through archival footage, photographs and film clips and also reviews the origins of Abstract Expressionism along with its links to Surrealism.
Saturdays-Realism in Twentieth-Century American Painting (1991)
This 60-minute film uses work by Wood, O'Keeffe, Marsh, Hopper, Wyeth and Estes to examine the strong artistic current of American Realism, Regionalism and Social Realism through to contemporary photo-realism.
Sundays-Norman Rockwell's World, an American Dream (1972)
A 30-minute Academy Award-winning film that uses archival film footage, dramatic reenactments and the artist’s work to show how Rockwell faithfully recorded the world around him. |
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