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American Art Online Videos
a catalogue of online lectures and conversations with artists, scholars and others
with content focusing on representational art presented free of charge
The Khan
Academy provides an online, open access, compilation of brief lectures
on a myriad of topics. A section pertains to art
history, with videos grouped by time periods. As of June, 2012, videos
covering American representational art history covering specific paintings
and their artists include:
Accessed May, 2015.
The J. Paul Getty Museum collaborated
with Khan Academy to provide several brief videos. .As of December 2013
postings included videos on photographs and photographers including "'Manhatta:'
A film by Paul Strand and Charles Sheeler" (07:27); "'Poison:'
a short film by Man Ray" (03:30); "Walker Evans in his own words"
(04:38); "Dorothea Lange's documentary photographs" (04:32); "John
Humble's photographs of Los Angeles" (03:21); "David Hockney's
'Pearblossom Hwy'" (03:11); "Carrie Mae Weems on her series 'From
Here I Saw What Happened and I Cried'" (02:47) [Link found to
be expired as of 2015 audit. TFAO is saving the citation for use by researchers.]
Alex Katz's website contained the 21:33
video "Alex Katz Five Hours" by Vivien Bittencourt and Vincent
Katz from Checkerboard Film Foundation, Inc. [Link found to be expired
as of 2015 audit. TFAO is saving the citation for use by researchers.]
KCET,
the Los Angeles PBS affiliate, presented the Life & Times series
covering a broad array of happenings and stories about greater Los Angeles.
Life & Times includes an arts section with numerous videos and
transcripts. Examples:
Also from KCET's CA video archive / arts and performance section:
[Links found to be expired as of 2015 audit. TFAO is saving the citation
for use by researchers.]
KCTS,
a PBS affiliate in Seattle, WA, offered streaming video programs. A section
was titled Spotlight on the Arts. Segments previously included:
[Link found to be expired as of 2015 audit. TFAO is saving the citation
for use by researchers.]
From KETC, Living St. Louis Producer
Patrick Murphy tours
the Kodner Gallery in Clayton during an exhibit featuring the art of
the American West. Nearly 200 works of art were on display-including original
lithographs of Native Americans, cowboys and the final frontier. [4:53]
Accessed May, 2015.
"Nature's
History: American Landscape Art and Environmental Thinking" video
of Angela Miller's lecture [1:24:58] at Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum on10/23/13.
Accessed August, 2015.
Weaving is Life is a 2007 Kennedy Museum of Art exhibit that
features the work of multiple generations of Navajo weavers. Combining works
drawn from the Kennedy Museum of Art's existing collection of Southwest
Native American textiles with newly commissioned weavings, the exhibition
includes the work of as many as four generations of weavers from four different
families. Weavers represented are Grace Henderson Nez, Mary Henderson Begay,
and Gloria Begay from Ganado; Glenabah Hardy, Irene Clark, and Teresa Clark
from Crystal; Lillian Taylor, Lillie Taylor, Rosie Taylor, Diane Taylor
and Amber and Twyla Gene from the Indian Wells community; and D. Y. Begay
from Tselani. The exhibition incorporates videotaped interviews in which
the artists explain how Navajo weaving has functioned as an important carrier
of cultural values. Within the online page for "Take
a virtual tour of the exhibit" there are four sections devoted
to the weavers and their families. Within each section is an Interactive
Video Kiosk featuring QuickTime videos. The museum advised TFAO in April,
2007 that the online exhibit will be permanent. Accessed May, 2015.
Kentucky
Educational Television offers a series of 1/2 hour videos from Mixed,
a weekly arts series starting in 2003.
Accessed May, 2015.
KERA's Think
is a topic-driven interview program hosted by Krys Boyd covering a wide
variety of topics ranging from history, politics, current events, science,
technology and emerging trends to food and wine, travel, adventure, and
entertainment. As of 2009 the Think video podcasts page no longer
archives videos available for download, except very recent episodes. Episodes
no longer available include a 26 minute Feb. 15, 2008 video podcast which
features Arjun Makhijani, Ph.D., who joins host Krys Boyd to discuss the
future of energy. Also, in the "Scene" segment of the podcast,
Jane Myers, Senior Curator of Prints and Drawings at the Amon Carter Museum,
joins host Krys Boyd. KERA says: "Fort Worth is known the world over
for its beautiful art museums and vibrant art scene. A new exhibit at the
Amon Carter Museum pays particular attention to a group of influential artists
who helped create the scene. Jane Myers, Senior Curator of Prints and Drawings
at the Amon Carter, will join us during the Scene segment to preview "Intimate
Modernism: Fort Worth Circle Artists in the 1940s" which opens this
weekend."
KETC/St.
Louis offers a video archive of segments from the series Living
St. Louis. A segment titled Ste. Genevieve Art Colony cover
in depth this depression-era Missouri art colony. Other segments include
the history of the St. Louis Art Museum, the Contemporary Art Museum, artists
Charles Houska, Paul Jackson and Peter Max, the Logos school mural, and
a discussion of the artist's model by Andrea Paulette. Accessed May,
2015.
The Kimbell
Art Museum was featured in a KERA video featuring Lee
Callum speaking with Kimbell Art Museum Director Eric Lee In the 27-minute
2014 video Lee "...discusses the sleuthing behind acquiring notable
works of art." Accessed June, 2015.
KLRU,
a PBS affiliate in Austin TX, features Austin
NOW video clips including: the art of Austin artist Julie
Speed; East Austin artists who named themselves Sodalitas
Accessed May, 2015.
KNME offered Promises Kept: WPA Art
Treasures of New Mexico in it's entirety [26:32] In small towns across
New Mexico are treasures from one of New Mexico's great artistic periods.
For years they have been hidden away in schools, post offices and court
houses. Promises Kept rediscovers our WPA artistic heritage by interviewing
some of the remaining WPA artists such as Pablita Velarde and by looking
closely at the artists and artworks themselves. The goal: to form a new
respect, appreciation and to help preserve this treasures for generations
to come. Funded in part by New Mexico Arts, a division of the Office of
Cultural Affairs and the National Endowment for the Arts and the National
New Deal Art Restoration Task Force. Orginally broadcast on New Mexico PBS
station KNME. [Link found to be expired as of 2015 audit. TFAO is
saving the citation for use by researchers.]
Steve Cotham on East Tennessee Artists
is a lecture (53:50) at the Knoxville Museum of Art, released April 6, 2011.
The museum says "Steve Cotham is the manager of the McClung Historical
Collection located in the East Tennessee History Center in downtown Knoxville.
Cotham holds three academic degrees from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville,
including advanced degrees in history and library science." Another
video titled Steve Cotham: Dine and Discover (31:10) was released
November 13, 2008 in connection with the exhibition Higher Ground: A
Century of the Visual Arts in East Tennessee, which is according to
the museum "... a new permanent installation celebrating the art and
artists of Knoxville and the surrounding region. The fascinating and complex
story of our area's rich artistic heritage and its connections to the larger
currents of American art are largely unknown, and certainly under appreciated...the
first permanent installation devoted to the creative achievements of important
artists active since the late 19th century whose lives and legacies are
closely linked to East Tennessee." [Link found to be expired
as of 2015 audit. TFAO is saving the citation for use by researchers.]
Other videos are available on the Knoxville Museum of Art website page for podcasts and videos. Examples are:
The Life And Art Of Anna Catherine Wiley, by Steve Cotham [36:51] May 22, 2013;
Higher Ground: A Century of the Visual Arts in East Tennessee, by Patricia Rutenberg. KMA says: "...Rutenberg's talk offers an in-depth look at Catherine Wiley, one of East Tennessee's most talented painters." September 7, 2011 [38:14];
Paint Brush for Hire: The East Tennessee Odyssey of James and Emma Cameron, 1856-1862, by UT Emeritus Professor Fred Moffatt. [50:24] October 5, 2011.
Accessed August, 2015.
Koehnline
Museum of Art maintains a Web page named Oakton
Art Video Archives which lists videos produced in connection with exhibitions
at the museum. One of the archived videos is "Convergence: Jewish and
African American Artists in Depression Era Chicago" [6:48]. Other video
include "Agustin Portillo: America" [10:08], "A Gift to Biro-Bidjan,
Chicago, 1937: From Despair to New Hope" [10:33] and "Seymour
Rosofsky: Fresh Glance" [8:18], The videos are produced by Oakton's
Television & Production Services. Videos are also available for viewing
locally via Instructional Media Services of Oakton
Community College. Accessed May, 2015.
KQED /
San Francisco offers streaming video relating to "arts
& literature" in the Bay Area.
Gallery Crawl visits a number of Bay Area art galleries each month to "check out what's up in the local art scene." The archive of videos contains episodes dating from 2005. For instance:
Arts Archive includes:
Accessed May, 2015.
KLRN
in San Antonio produced San
Antonio American Family Portraits. Actor and art collector Cheech
Marin speaks on aspects of Chicano Art in a 4-minute video. Accessed
May, 2015
KUED-TV
in Salt lake City, UT, produces "Utah Now" a 30-minute magazine-style
series, which KUED says "thoughtfully considers issues, events and
people that are affecting life and creating dialogue in Utah." The
February
23, 2007 show features interviews with Brian
Kershisnik and his wife Suzanne, David Dee, director of the Utah Museum
of Fine Arts, and David Ericson, owner of David Ericson's Fine Art. Utah
artist Brian Kershisnik's work has been described as a journey of exploration.
From his vantage point in rural Utah, Kershisnik finds forms for the elements
of the life he sees around him. Accessed May, 2015.
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