A trove of some of the earliest portrait photographs taken in America and long-lost, were found in a North Fork shed and sold at auction on Monday.
A trove of some of the earliest portrait photographs taken in America and long-lost, were found in a North Fork shed and sold at auction on Monday.
After losing his barn studio, Mark Wilson reflected on the history, authenticity, and changing nature of the East End's built environment.
HamptonsFilm Screenwriters Lab is open for submissions, documentary takes aim at Big Pharma, an acting workshop at Bay Street, and a virtual garden lecture
The Sag Harbor Cinema Festival of Preservation will feature movie classics such as "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes," "Night of the Living Dead," "One-Eyed Jacks," as well as never before seen presentations, and a number of guest speakers.
Tile Club talk at Guild Hall, liquor bottles and Sag Harbor landmarks on canvas, video by Miles Jaffe, and more
Hope Sandrow's art embraces her daily life, her family background, her personal challenges, and the history and politics of Shinnecock Hills.
The Whitney Museum highlights women artists contributions to early abstraction and gives its Andy Warhol film archive material to MoMA.
Annie Leibovitz in Southampton, photography at The Church, Slater and Zerner at MM Fine Art, a barn happening, and more
New shows opening at the Parrish feature video by peter campus and paintings by Virginia Jaramillo and John Torreano.
A new Bay Street Theater virtual production of "Macbeth" reimagines Shakespeare's tragedy in a Scottish asylum in 1963.
Amanda M. Fairbanks's "Lost Boys of Montauk" has been optioned by Bert Salke, a veteran showrunner and former studio president who has a production deal with Disney Television Studios.
Documentary at Sag cinema revisits Native American genocide and American slavery, classical music concerts in Sag Harbor, Water Mill, and on Shelter island
After 21 years at the helm of Guild Hall's theater, Josh Gladstone reflected on his high notes and described what his next, more creative, chapter might look like.
A sly, perceptive, and timely comedy at Hampton Theatre Company tackles race, class, and a "border wall" with a deft touch.
After more than 21 years at Guild Hall and leading its stage program through its 90th anniversary, Josh Gladstone, has announced his retirement from the institution at the end of 2021 to pursue other opportunities.
Guild Hall will finish out its 90th anniversary year with two exhibitions that reflect its commitment to both the history of the East End’s art community and its contemporary vitality.
M. Louise Stanley brought her distinctive sensibility to East Hampton in August for a 10-week residency at the Elaine de Kooning House, and a group exhibition of satirical paintings and imagined narrative scenes at the Ranch in Montauk.
A piano concert at St. Luke's will honor the life and career of Redjeb Jordania on Sunday, Watermill Center presents Paula Aros Gho "In Process," and the Masonic Temple in Sag Harbor keeps the music coming
Bridgehampton Chamber Music will launch its new BCM Autumn series with two Beethoven concerts of music for piano and wind instruments on Nov. 6 and Nov. 13.
Folioeast will present an exhibition at Ashawagh Hall, "Land Claim" focus of a community panel, a new show at Sara Nightingale, "Clearing the Air tour, and more
"Paul Thek: Interior / Landscape," an exhibition now on view at the Watermill Center, is an event much in the way that all of the center's visual arts presentations are.
New opera from the Met, Pennebaker documentary on Sondheim's "Company," Motown, rock 'n' roll, classical music, and poetry and drama
A "Surreal . . . weird" Picasso play from 1941 will have a rare performance in East Hampton.
Documentary film and panel on art's healing power, and a talk-workshop on finding art materials in the natural world
What was Roy Lichtenstein thinking about before Pop? A Parrish exhibition offers a new examination of his early work.
Mercedes and Herbert Matter at Mark Borghi, plein-air painters at Gardiner Mill Cottage, photographs at a new gallery on Shelter Island, and more
In a new documentary, the actress Selma Blair faces multiple sclerosis with courage, honesty, and humor.
The Sag Harbor Cinema Arts Center announced on Tuesday that its acting director, Genevieve Villaflor, will become its executive director.
The Met: Live in HD returns to Guild Hall, starting with an encore screening of "Boris Godunov" on Saturday.
Kelcey Edwards's two careers, filmmaker and art curator, come together in "The Art of Making It," her new documentary about artists struggling to find success.
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