The Sag Harbor Cinema Arts Center will screen “Do the Right Thing,” on Sunday at Pierson High School in Sag Harbor.
The Sag Harbor Cinema Arts Center will screen “Do the Right Thing,” on Sunday at Pierson High School in Sag Harbor.
‘I think you’re going to hear a lot of space in this record,” Inda Eaton, the roots-rock, Americana artist said last about her new album "Shelter in Place."
A formidable and groundbreaking curator at the Museum of Modern Art spent much of his downtime in our backyard. His friends from here and the city remember him.
Margaux Ogden at Rental; Small Works at Folioeast; Straus at Grenning, and more
The Hampton Theatre Company will present “The Boys Next Door,” Tom Griffin’s 1988 comedy about four men with mental disabilities who live in a group home, from next Thursday through April 8 at the Quogue Community Hall.
The Parrish Art Museum's building inspired Therese Lichtenstein to create "Image Building: How Photography Transforms Architecture," a new show opening this weekend at the museum.
"All docs all year" is the new mantra for The Hamptons Take 2 Documentary Film Festival, joining the Sag Harbor Cinema Arts Center, the Hamptons International Film Festival, the Southampton Arts Center, Guild Hall, the Parrish Art Museum, and area libraries, in showcasing film.
Next Thursday, Sydney Albertini will take Japan with an exhibition of her fiber works at Julien David’s Jingumae Shop through May 31.
The annual LongHouse Reserve winter benefit will honor Axel Vervoordt on March 28 at Hearst Tower in Manhattan with dinner to follow.
Terry Sullivan, who performed with Pete Seeger for 24 years, brings his social justice songbook to Canio's and the Eastville Community Historical Society this weekend.
The Ludmilla Brazil Quartet will play bossa nova’s fusion of samba and jazz at the Parrish Art Museum in Water Mill tomorrow at 6 p.m.
“Bach, Before and Beyond,” a music series directed by Walter Klauss, will present a concert at the Old Whalers Church on Sunday.
The Stowaways deliver improvisational comedy that is three parts extreme sporting event and two parts theater, a tribute to the mental and verbal agility of the group.
Corinne Erni never planned to leave New York City until the Parrish Art Museum and the East End landscape beckoned.
Next up in The Met: Live in HD series is Rossini’s “Semiramide,” an opera based on Voltaire’s 1748 tragedy about the murderous Assyrian queen on Saturday.
The pianist Misuzu Tanaka will perform a free concert of classical works by Bach, Beethoven, Janacek, and Rachmaninoff at the Montauk Library on Sunday.
Christopher LaGuardia will deiliver Madoo's last winter lecture, “Our Waterways," on Sunday at noon in the conservancy's 1740 barn.
Sotheby's will open an exhibition of Gerson and Judith Leiber's collection of Chinese ceramics in advance of an auction on March 20.
Robert Wilson's “Power and Beauty in China’s Last Dynasty” at the Minneapolis Institute of Art; Photographers East at Ashawagh Hall
Ten years before winning the best director Oscar for “The French Connection,” William Friedkin, made "The People vs. Paul Crump."
The Southampton Arts Center's Hip-La-Jaz Night will offer a mix of hip-hop, jazz, and Latin music on Saturday.
Like a lion, the Hamptons International Film Festival is coming in strong this month with rock documentaries, a master class on “Romeo and Juliet” in film, and animated family fare.
The Bridgehampton Chamber Music Festival’s spring series will kick off on Saturday, offering the high caliber of talent and artistry audiences have come to expect from the series.
The Southampton Cultural Center's production of Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast” will open Friday and continue through March 25.
“In Dog We Trust,” at Ille Arts; Miles Partington at Tripoli Gallery; Folioeast's "Abstraction and Realism" at Markel, and more
Todd Longstaffe-Gowan, a British landscape architect, will present the fifth annual Madoo in Manhattan lecture on Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. at the Cosmopolitan Club.
Sure, the brightly hued wall sculptures and paintings of Mary Heilmann looked more fitting at Dia’s Dan Flavin Art Institute during the summer, but the shot of infectious cheerful color is just what we need on these gray days.
Those crazy kids Romeo and Juliet are coming to Guild Hall’s John Drew Theater in a contemporary, post-punk production.
In Process @ the Watermill Center will feature presentations by artists working in four different disciplines on Saturday afternoon between 2 and 4, with a tour offered between 1 and 2.
“The Americanization of Emily,” the next film in the Sag Harbor Partnership’s American Values series is already has a wait list.
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