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1-15 of 15
- Impressionism was one of the most revolutionary movements of the XIX century. Monet, Renoir, Cezanne, Degas and Pissarro among other shook the foundations of artistic practice, and here we learn who they really were.
- This stunning film, based on the remarkable Renoir collection at Philadelphia's Barnes Foundation, explores the artist's later work, which still provoke extreme reactions - some people are repulsed by them and others seduced.
- Released alongside Barbie as Rapunzel (2002), this documentary profiles the success of a young Texas artist named Amanda Dunbar as well as children who are passionate about following in her footsteps.
- Inventor of the Steadicam, Garrett Brown talks about its use on Rocky (1976) and how much things have changed since then.
- A brief documentary (11') of the Philadelphia Museum of Modern Art in occasion of the exhibition about the Birth of Italian Fashion in Florence organized by Marchese Giorgini (1950) where the young Roberto Capucci (17 years old) arrived as a star.
- "Belle Harbor" interviews residents of New York City about the hurricane Sandy disaster. "Three Million Open Jobs" examines how millions in America remain unemployed while U.S. manufacturers are having trouble filling jobs requiring skill with high-tech machinery. "McCullough" follows the historian to Paris and examines how the city had a profound influence on the United States.
- Could a mysterious, murky canvas covered in white paint be hiding a lost painting by one of the most important painters of the 20th century, Armenian-American artist Arshile Gorky?
- Scarlet and Sistine are determined to help Sophia get over her debilitating fear of public speaking. Sly fears his celebrity is preventing him from being taken seriously as a fine artist.
- A film about Photography and Art.
- 1979–TV EpisodeThe challenges of disposing of plastics; sandboarding in Colorado's Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve; North American Truffle Dog Championship in Oregon; the increased rate of maternal deaths associated with childbirth in the United States;
- The post-war exploration of music, impelled by the LP, the transistor radio and the television, has taken Western music beyond early jazz into folk, rock and electronic music. Yet as old rules are questioned, man clings to the forms of music that will always remain rooted in the deepest instincts of his nature. Yehudi Menuhin examines the divergent trends in music following World War II: Bela Bartok's arrangements of traditional folk tunes; Oscar Peterson's jazz improvisations; John Cage's exploration of random sound; and the Beatles' impact as "pop idols" on an entire generation.