It was another season of Fashion at Lincoln Center, and SundayArts was there to follow all the action.
Philippe de Montebello interviews American fashion designer Kasper about the drawings and photographs from his collection currently on view at the Morgan Library & Museum.
"The agonies of Haiti are as wide as they are deep," a journalist recently wrote. And perhaps no one exposes those agonies more poignantly than Haitian-American writer Edwidge Danticat.
Rafael Pi Roman speaks with director Debra Granik about the many difficulties involved in independent filmmaking, and specifically about her work on "Winter’s Bone," which was nominated for Best Picture at this year's Academy Awards.
Philippe de Montebello explores the Metropolitan Museum of Art's collection of 19th and 20th Century European paintings and sculpture.
Guest curator Elizabeth V. Warren guides us through "Quilts - Masterworks from the American Folk Art Museum" (on view through October 16th at the American Folk Art Museum) and gives a preview of "Infinite Variety - Three Centuries of Red and White Quilts" (on view March 25 - 30 at the Park Avenue Armory).
This season the New York Philharmonic’s Mary and James G. Wallach artist in residence is the dazzling violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter. Paula Zahn interviews Mutter in this SundayArts Profile.
For eight decades, Will Barnet has had one of the most distinguished careers in american art -- his paintings, drawings, and prints are in major museums around the world -- and on the eve of his 100th birthday he is still creating the works of a true American master.
Paula Zahn speaks with Lowery Stokes Sims, the Charles Broadman International Curator at the Museum of Arts and Design; she is also a co-curator of the Global Africa Project an unprecedented exhibition which explores the broad spectrum of contemporary African art, design and craft worldwide.
Jennifer Tonkovich, curator of drawings and prints at the Morgan Library and Museum, guides us through an exhibition devoted to the drawing and sketchbooks of Edgar Degas.