HamptonsFilm’s annual Screenwriters Lab will pair three chosen screenwriters with three accomplished writer-director mentors.
HamptonsFilm’s annual Screenwriters Lab will pair three chosen screenwriters with three accomplished writer-director mentors.
The most recent commemorations of Roy Lichtenstein’s centennial are a 100-work retrospective at the Albertina Museum in Vienna and the completion of a catalogue raisonne of his work.
After a lifetime of defying authority, Sag Harbor’s Terry Sullivan is using filmmaking to tell his stories of resistance and activism on LTV, inspired in part by his 24-year friendship with Pete Seeger.
Evolving multimedia exhibition at Guild Hall, 1960s to 80s paintings at Eric Firestone in NoHo, NYFA honors Nina Yankowitz, Paton Miller and Eileen O’Kane Kornreich in Manhattan.
Classic Soul at Bay Street Theater, three shows at the Talkhouse, the Roses Grove Band and jazz at the Masonic temple, making sense in Riverhead.
“Look at the Book,” at the Southampton Arts Center, is broad and freeform in its examination of how 33 artists use books as a theme in their work.
Documentary on five notable women architects at Southampton Arts Center, Libero Canto vocal workshop in East Hampton, Perlman Music Program to revitalize its Shelter Island campus, horticulture scholarships from the Horticultural Alliance.
The psychedelic sights and sounds of the East Village in the ‘60s will fill The Church in Sag Harbor during a screening of the new documentary “Psychedelicized: The Electric Circus Story.”
Three-day printmaking event at LTV Studios, Matthew Satz to speak about his work at The Church, solo show and memoir by Audrey Flack, spring has sprung at Sara Nightingale.
The Watermill Center will open the studios of its resident artists—Lindsay Morris, a photographer from Sag Harbor, Joana P. Cardozo and Sara Stern, interdisciplinary artists, and Katherine Profeta, a dramaturge and writer.
Local musicians to celebrate Prince at Bay Street, a benefit and Little Head Thinks at the Talkhouse, drumming and jazz at the Masonic Temple, supper club Saturdays at Main Prospect, Creedence tribute in Riverhead.
The Cherry Bombs, a 1980s cover band from Amagansett and New York City whose lineup has shifted over the years, will bring edgy fashion, hard rocking, female empowerment, and a lot of fun to the Stephen Talkhouse.
Dance as liberation at The Church, comedy and acting workshop at Bay Street, garden books discussed virtually, comedy at the Cultural Center, cultural tour of Sag Harbor, new leadership for Long Island Historical Societies.
A year in Rome as an undergraduate art student and a screening years later of a film by Pier Paolo Pasolini led to Hallie Cohen’s “Mi Ricordo: Roman Watercolors,” a show of monumental paintings.
The Madoo Conservancy’s Manhattan lecture series will feature Cassian Schmidt, a German landscape designer, while LongHouse Reserve’s Larsen Salon lecture in Manhattan will welcome Calvin Tsao, an architect, for a conversation with Sherri Donghia.
Patrick Brennan’s "The Cage" at Halsey McKay Gallery takes over the space with an installation that aims to confound viewers' expectations in order to arrive at a greater understanding of the work.
Linda K. Alpern at Guild Hall, Mr. Wash, a self-taught artist, at The Church, Frida Kahlo doc at the Parrish, graphic novel readings at the Southampton Arts Center, five women artists in Montauk, group shows at LTV, Springs Library, and the Southampton Cultural Center.
Richard Baratta and Latin Jazz at the Southampton Arts Center, Glam Jam and Jam Session at the Masonic Temple, Johnny in the Basement at the Talkhouse, Irish trifecta at the Suffolk Theater, and live music at Kidd Squid.
Matthew K. Ward has taken the helm of the Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center after serving as a curator at the Museum of the Southwest in Texas and an educator at Stony Brook University, Hofstra University, and St. Joseph’s College.
The next exhibition at The Church in Sag Harbor, “Space - Sight - Line,” will focus on the building’s exhibition space and the opportunities it affords 10 artists to address visual perception.
Opera, brass, and soul at Bay Street, girl bands will live stream from the Talkhouse, an Oscar party complete with commentary, Latin Jazz at the Masonic Temple, a music trifecta in Riverhead, and more.
The Hamptons International Film Festival, set to expand to 11 days in October, is now accepting submissions. SummerDocs and outdoor screenings will return this summer.
A co-founder of the New Art Dealers Alliance and an art consultant, Sheri Pasquarella wanted to work in an organization connecting art and community, a goal fulfilled when she became executive director of The Church in Sag Harbor.
Renate Aller, April Gornik, and Susan Vecsey will discuss their work in the Parrish Art Museum's exhibition of women’s landscape paintings, and the Southampton History Museum is celebrating the Long Island Rail Road.
Guild Hall’s new exhibitions will feature mixed-media pieces by Darlene Charneco and photographs of artists who have lived and worked on the East End.
“Strictly Murder,” at the Hampton Theatre Company in Quogue, is a World War II-era thriller by the author of “The Avengers” filled with lies, subterfuge, and murder.
“Love Letters” in Southampton, a lecture series at Madoo, highlighting Sag Harbor’s Eastville community at the Sag Harbor Cinema, and more.
Billy Joel’s “Turn the Lights Back On,” his first new song in 17 years, has drawn raves from a cross-section of South Fork listeners, among them WLIW-FM’s Brian Cosgrove, Cliff Young, a music journalist, and Mark Schiavoni, a guitarist for the Montauk Project.
“The Finest Kind” at Clinton Academy features photographs by Doug Kuntz and others, who captured the vanishing way of life of the South Fork’s baymen for the project that became “Men’s Lives.”
Love and passion return to Springs, birthday cakes for Romany Kramoris, plein-air painters in Bridgehampton, an exhibition tour at Southampton Arts Center, Linda Stein is solo in Manhattan, and American artists in Paris at N.Y.U.’s Grey Art Museum.
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