Kristin Resurreccion

Kristin Resurreccion appears in the following:

Allan D. D'Arcangelo

Tuesday, March 20, 1973

Views on Art host, Ruth Bowman, interviews painter and print maker, Allan D'Arcangelo.

Allan D'Arcangelo, a New York state native, was quickly identified as a Pop Artist upon his emergence onto the New York art scene with his first solo exhibition at Fischbach Gallery in 1963. Bowman ...

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Rosa Esman

Monday, June 14, 1971

Join Views on Art host, Ruth Bowman, as she speaks with art publisher, Rosa Esman of Tanglewood Press to discuss contemporary American graphics and editioned art.

Although the concept of editioned artworks, or multiples, was not new to the 20th century, many would credit Marcel Duchamp with ...

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The Monumental Works of Beverley Pepper

Thursday, December 03, 1970

The prime function of art, in a world that is increasingly hostile, is to get people involved.

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Mormon Paintings of C.C. Christensen

Wednesday, August 19, 1970

Join Views on Art host Ruth Bowman as she talks with David W. Evans and Mahonri Sharp Young about the Whitney's Christensen panorama exhibition, Mormon art and architecture.

In its May/June issue of 1970, Art in America published a feature by Carl Carmer entitled, "A Panorama of ...

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Interview with Max Kozloff

Tuesday, June 23, 1970

Art is no stranger to socio-political subject matter, as exemplified by pieces like Picasso's Guernica. But can the role of the artist go beyond expression? Can artists truly effect change? Art critic and representative of the Emergency Cultural Government, Max Kozloff, grapples with some of these issues in this interview ...

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Hedda Sterne

Monday, April 20, 1970

Though a working artist for the span of some 80 years, Hedda Stern may be best known for simply being in a photograph featuring some of the brightest stars of the Abstract Expressionist movement in America. In this interview with Views on Art host, Ruth Bowman, we gain some insight ...

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El Museo del Barrio

Monday, January 05, 1970

The conceptualization of El Museo del Barrio began in the wake of the civil rights movement in the United States, in a time when local community activists in Central and East Harlem began to demand changes in the city's education system that included the acknowledgement of the cultural diversity of ...

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Thomas B. Hess on William De Kooning at MOMA

Thursday, April 10, 1969

The de Kooning exhibition at MOMA.

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Factory Girl Ultra Violet on WNYC

Monday, July 15, 1968

Listen to a first-hand account of the colorful milieu surrounding Andy Warhol and the 1960s New York ˜underground from Factory denizen and Superstar, Ultra Violet in this Views on Art interview with Ruth Bowman.

The Factory was established in New York City in 1962, during a time ...

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Tracy Atkinson, Director, Milwaukee Art Center on Growth and Future of Art Centers

Wednesday, May 01, 1968

Atkinson discusses his various activities as art museum director on his current visit to New York City and the ways in which the Art Center in Wisconsin differs from its big city counterparts. Bowman and Atkinson also cover topics that include the Art Center's upcoming exhibitions, its role as the ...

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William Rubin

Wednesday, January 03, 1968

While William S. Rubin later went on to become a somewhat controversial figure in the art world as Director of the Department of Painting & Sculpture at MoMA from 1972 - 1988, this interview focuses on the development of his very first exhibition at the Modern.

Rubin ...

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Tate Director Sir John Rothenstein

Thursday, December 07, 1967

The man who made sure the Tate survived World War II.

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Rene D'Harnoncourt

Monday, October 23, 1967

As one of the most influential artists of the 20th century, Pablo Picasso is probably best known for his iconic paintings. It is in his sculpture however, that we may find the most evidence of his artistic process and development. In Head of a Woman (Fernande), (1909), for example, one ...

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Education at the Met Museum

Monday, July 24, 1967

Before his retirement in 2005, Harry S. Parker, III sat at the helm of San Francisco's largest public art institution, The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, where he directed the renovation and revitalization of its buildings and collections. Before that, he did much of the same for the Dallas ...

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The Early Works of Edward Hopper

Sunday, January 01, 1967

In these short clips, Views on Art host, Ruth Bowman, speaks with American painter and printmaker, Edward Hopper, about two of his earlier works of art.

Mention the name Edward Hopper and, for most, Nighthawks (1942) immediately comes to mind - a now iconic scene portraying the ...

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