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Online Video on Demand
focusing on American representational art, streamed free to viewers
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
To locate videos by artist name, please click here.
Viewers can locate videos by theme by browsing through TFAO's Topics in American Representational Art
The Mandelman-Ribak Foundation sponsors
an Oral
History Project originated in 1999 in collaboration with Douglas Dreishpoon,
Senior Curator at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, New York. To
date, the Project has recorded 41 interviews of which 32 have been transcribed.
Each interview runs about an hour in length and develops around a set of
questions researched and conducted by Douglas Dreishpoon. The sessions were
recorded on broadcast quality digital video by award-winning videographer/director
Doug Crawford. Some of the interviews are with artists who create representational
works.
David Gilbert, a professor of communications
at Marymount Manhattan College, worked
with his students in 2005 to produce unofficial audio
guides for art exhibited at MoMA. The audio guides are available as
podcasts and they may be played on iPods while touring the museum. RocketBoom
features a June 8, 2005 video
interview with Dr. Gilbert and two of his students, explaining the project.
BBC News television reported
on it June 2, 2005 and Randy Kennedy of the New York Times also reported
on the audio guides in a May 28, 2005 article titled "With
Irreverence and an iPod, Recreating the Museum Tour." Audio guide
segments include Max Beckmann's Family Picture,
Tom Wesselmann's Still Life Number 30,
Robert Rauschenberg's Bed, plus others.
The Mead Art Museum at Amherst College
presented "American Edge: Photographs by Steve Schapiro, from February
1 through March 23, 2003. An interview
with Steve Schapiro with nine
one to two minute video clips was produced in connection with the exhibit.
Mefeedia features New Jersey artist Anne
Dushanko Dobek who speaks to L. Craig Schoonmaker briefly of a Livingston
institution. Craig mentions in error being on the cover of VFW magazine,
which should have been AMERICAN LEGION magazine.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art Web site
contains several video presentations. In two 2005 video
clips the Met introduces the 25 foot tall large-scale sculpture Plantoir
and Corridor Pin, Blue by Claes Oldenburg and Coosje Van Bruggen,
installed on the roof of the museum.
Milderd Lane Kemper Art Museum at Washington
University in St. Louis presents Marsden Hartley's The Iron Cross
from YouTube 02:33
Milford
Zornes.is the subject of a 3-minute video by Bill Anderson of Anderson
Art Gallery in which he familiarizes the viewer in this short video with
the works for the 99-year-old artist, Milford Zornes.
The Mint Museum of Art / Mint Museum
of Craft+Design Web site contains a page dedicated to changing video and podcast presentations.
MSN Video offers a 7m26s clip
from the Today Show in which "NBC's Jamie Gangel talks with the
famous, but reclusive American painter Andrew Wyeth about a retrospective
of his work, his career, and his 'Helga' paintings.
Museum
of Afro-American History partnered with the WGBH Forum Network for:
In 2002 the Museum of Contemporary Art
of Georgia produced a 4-part video
documentary with commentary by John Howett, Professor of Art History,
Emory University, Atlanta, GA on an important Georgia corporate art collection.
Dr. Howett connects the "amalgam of artistic influences" of historic
art with the work of contemporary Georgia artists. Another video
discusses a commissioned work by African American artist Benny Andrews
Museum
of Contemporary Art, North Miami partnered with the WGBH Forum Network
for:
Museum
of Fine Arts, Boston partnered with the WGBH Forum Network for:
In 2004 the Museum
of Glass in Tacoma, WA hosted the "Summer Hot Shop Artists Series"
that ran from May 14 through September 7, featuring seasonal residencies
by glass artists in the Museum's Hot Shop. During the residencies the Museum's
Web site featured a special section devoted to the Summer Hot Shop Artists
Series including biographies, images and streaming video of the artists
in the Hot Shop. Susan Warner, Director of Education for the Museum, said
in a April 4, 2005 conversation with TFAO that the streaming video feature
will again be offered during the residencies starting May 31, 2005. Another
check on August 12, 2009 found this feature still available.
Museum
of Science, Boston partnered with the WGBH Forum Network for:
TFAO catalogues:
Individual pages in each catalogue are continuously amended as TFAO adds content, corrects errors and reorganizes sections for improved readability. Refreshing or reloading pages enables readers to view the latest updates.
TFAO suggests www.truveo.com and Google Videos to find online video.
TFAO welcomes your suggestions for additions
to this catalogue. Please send them to: ![]()
Links to sources of information outside of our Web site are provided only as referrals for your further consideration. Please use due diligence in judging the quality of information contained in these and all other Web sites. Information from linked sources may be inaccurate or out of date. TFAO neither recommends or endorses these referenced organizations. Although TFAO includes links to other Web sites, it takes no responsibility for the content or information contained on those other sites, nor exerts any editorial or other control over them. For more information on evaluating Web pages see TFAO's General Resources section in Online Resources for Collectors and Students of Art History.
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