Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-21 of 21
- The life of a divorced television writer dating a teenage girl is further complicated when he falls in love with his best friend's mistress.
- A small-town detective searching for a missing man has only one lead: a connection with a New York prostitute.
- Arnold Schwarzenegger and Lou Ferrigno face off in a no-holds-barred competition for the title of Mr. Olympia in this critically-acclaimed film that made Schwarzenegger a household name.
- Interrogated by a customs officer, a young man recounts how his life was changed during the making of a film about the Armenian genocide.
- A look at the life, work, and impact of Andy Warhol (1928-1987), pop icon and artist, from his childhood in Pittsburgh to his death after a botched surgery. Warhol coined the word "superstar," became one, and changed the way the culture looks at and understands celebrity. After studying at Carnegie Tech, he goes to New York to be a commercial artist. By 1960, Warhol, Lichtenstein, and Rosenquist are inventing pop art. Warhol starts "The Factory," his workshop where he paints and makes movies. His is a cafe society of late nights and parties. His family, friends, an agent, a curator, gallery owners, actors, the co-founder of "Interview," and others tell stories and assess his art.
- Herb and Dorothy Vogel redefine what it means to be an art collector.
- Documentary about former Black Panther.
- Floating through a pastoral yet maze like setting of raw wooden debris cobbled together into a benign shantytown, six long haired women in flowing white nightgowns "milk" their locks and the goats they live with to generate cheese. Shots of animals crowded in pens and the sisters' bunk bed- cluttered room visually compare the women to their ruminant allies. As nurturing caretakers, these women represent maternal aspects of Mother Nature. Here Rottenberg investigates feminine magic, the ability to "grow things out of the body" as she says, as the ultimate, wondrous physical mystery
- Raymond Carver's short stories and poems provide important insights into his life, where the seeds for his stories can be found. They are brilliant in their own right and give the viewer an intimate, close-up look at this literary genius.
- A millennial death doula introduces us to the world of end-of-life care. With a matter of fact demeanor and intense physicality she guides us into the largely uncharted waters of corpse care - practical, political and spiritual.
- Commissioned by David Bienstock, creator of the New American Film Series at the Whitney Museum of Art to raise funds for the second season of the series. The film was projected at the end of each program and a box to receive donations was placed at the exit of the theater. Whitney Commercial ran for two or three years until the Museum agreed to sponsor the series on its own which has continued to the present season.
- The extraordinary life of Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven: Dada pioneer, proto-feminist, and 20th century enigma.
- In this video installation held at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, from June 5-17, 1979, Takahiko Iimura plays with language constructions by equating all the pronouns. With Takahiko Iimura and the audience participation.
- The film performance imagery is culled from ancient Chinese joss (incense) paper, tarots, and star charts portraying the Goddess Kannon as she enters the red chamber to observe the different phases of the Moon.
- A work in progress inviting people to contribute "words, photographs, video, graphics, WWW links, and sound via the Internet, the World Wide Web, email, regular mail, and personal visits. Restored in 2013 by the Whitney Museum, New York.
- Presents a psychic landscape or "inscape" in which the viewer experiences the workings of the human mind, in particular, the process of remembrance.
- A full-scale overview of the work of California-based media artist Bill Viola: 15 room-sized video installation works, from 1972 to 1996, and 22 of the artist's single-channel videotape works, shown in a rotating schedule of screenings.
- This short film celebrates multiculturalism in the United States and served as a PSA calling for health care reforms in the country. Made in conjunction with a US-French co-production of a public art event titled "Trans-Voices."
- "A Tale of Two Cities" is a potpourri of pop personalities, groundbreaking antics and international cultural kitsch, where past, present and future collide in the kaleidoscopic, hyper-kinetic, television-looking "now."
- 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?