Immigration in New York State is the theme of three eclectic music programs and a film series at the Montauk Library.
Immigration in New York State is the theme of three eclectic music programs and a film series at the Montauk Library.
“Lee Krasner: Portrait in Green” at the Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center focuses on an important year for the artist, when she created one monumental painting and a series of gouaches.
Well into a career in television production, and without an art background, Isabella Rupp decided to try her hand at glass art, a leap that turned into a 20-year deep dive yielding exhibitions, prizes, and a wide-ranging body of work.
Estia’s Little Kitchen in Sag Harbor is featuring an exhibition of Peter Spacek’s scrimshawed drawings on fiberglass, surfboards repurposed as sea creatures, cartoons for The Star, and more.
Lauren West solo at Tripoli, seven watercolorists at Ashawagh Hall, Hiroyuki Hamada at the Parrish to discuss his Road Show, two painters at Keyes, mixed-media works at Lucore Gallery.
Robert Wilson, the Watermill Center’s founder and artistic director, was honored with four other prominent artists by Jill Biden and Hillary Clinton at the White House.
Indigenous music and Shinnecock celebration at Duck Creek, classical pianist and Joe Delia at the Montauk Library, auditions for the Choral Society of the Hamptons, dance-cinema in Southampton, four-hands piano recital.
Bay Street Theater will host the Hamptons Comedy Festival, featuring four master comics, and present “Speak to Me,” the next entry in the ongoing Black Film Festival.
The current exhibition at the Southampton Arts Center, "Change Agents: Women Collectors Shaping the Art World," is a many layered thing. If ever an exhibition shared a multiplicity of viewpoints, backgrounds, and ideas, this would be it, even if its curators' focus is narrowed to artwork procured solely by women.
The Sag Harbor Song Festival will bring six young opera stars to The Church in Sag Harbor for three programs of opera, operetta, musical theater, and more, with music ranging from Mozart and Verdi to Sondheim and Sonny Bono.
A “bird happening” at the Leiber Collection, Indigenous weaving workshop in Bridgehampton, Amy Wickersham solo, group shows at Ashawagh and the Ranch, artist talk at Guild Hall.
The wood sculptures of Jonathan Shlafer range from tall and sinewy to squat and abstract, tribalistic totems to biomorphic forms, all raw and unfinished, allowed to carry on a dialogue with nature’s weathering forces.
Offshore Art & Film will bring three days of screenings, artworks, and panel discussions to Montauk.
The Hamptons International Film Festival's full schedule has interviews of Paul Simon and Todd Haynes, Bradley Cooper’s “Maestro," and much more.
Dan Koontz, an East Hampton musician and composer, has written “The Free Life,” a rock opera about the ill-fated hot- air balloon that took off from Springs 53 years ago in hopes of making the first trans-Atlantic balloon flight.
Center Stage at the Southampton Arts Center is holding open auditions for “War of the Worlds,” a live radio play based on the 1938 broadcast that caused mass panic.
Bill Akin is a writer and raconteur whose life has been intimately entwined with the culture of Montauk as a fisherman, environmental activist, writer, surfer, and founder of Music for Montauk.
Staged readings at LTV and Montauk Library, black comedy thriller at Sag Harbor Cinema, theater workshops at Bay Street, Black Film Fest continues in Bridgehampton, string quartet at Perlman Music Program.
Keith Sonnier’s artful interpretations in neon and on paper of herd animals, inspired by his travels abroad and visits to the Museum of Natural History in New York, are at the Madoo Conservancy in Sagaponack for two more days.
OLA’s Latino Film Festival will include four features and one animated short, with two U.S. premieres, at the Sag Harbor Cinema, the Parrish Art Museum, and the Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center.
It’s all about memoirs this weekend at The Church in Sag Harbor, with a four-hour memoir-writing workshop on Saturday and a panel discussion with four accomplished writers on Sunday.
Contemporary artists and local history come together at Ashawagh Hall, deadline looms for Guild Hall’s members show, solo shows for Julian Schnabel and Sanford Biggers, two group shows at MM Fine Art.
All Star Comedy will bring three comic talents to Bay Street, and Julie Andrews and Emma Hamilton will be there with a new children’s book.
Jazz and Latin music at Duck Creek, sustainable landscape tour in East Hampton, classical piano at Southampton Cultural Center, house tour in Southampton, Sag Cinema fund-raiser, gardening tips in Bridge.
Duck Creek has two concerts this weekend to celebrate the beginning of the shoulder season here. Anna Webber and Shimmer Wince play on Saturday and Mambo Loco is on Sunday.
The next stop for the Parrish Art Museum’s Road Show series is the South Fork Natural History Museum in Bridgehampton, where Hiroyuki Hamada will show three large-scale site-specific sculptures.
In the wake of a recent Supreme Court decision, Carol Steinberg, an expert in art law who will speak at the East Hampton Library, unpacks the implications of copyright law for practicing artists.
The Art Barge to travel to Springs, a garden painting workshop in Bridge, solos for Michael Butler, Stephen Laub, Joan Semmel, Jane Wilson, and Stephen Loschen, a group show from Folioeast, two shows at Halsey McKay, an Artists Alliance tour, and more.
The Church in Sag Harbor has announced two art-focused road trips, one to the North Fork and Shelter Island, and another to the Whitney Museum and Chelsea.
Thanks in part to an East Hampton family, Ann Lowe, an African-American high-end couturier who designed Jackie Kennedy’s wedding gown but died largely forgotten, is being recognized with an exhibition at the Winterthur Museum.
Copyright © 1996-2024 The East Hampton Star. All rights reserved.