Dance will be highlighted at Sag Harbor's The Church, with a dance party and an open rehearsal of a new dance-theater performance this week.
Dance will be highlighted at Sag Harbor's The Church, with a dance party and an open rehearsal of a new dance-theater performance this week.
A concert of traditional polyphonic music from the Eastern European country of Georgia will be performed by a seven-piece ensemble from that country at LTV.
The Peter Marino Art Foundation in Southampton will open with exhibitions of work by Georg Baselitz, a German neo-expressionist, and Erwin Wurm, an Austrian sculptor, along with photographs by Eugene Atget and Priscilla Rattazzi.
Kate Mueth will direct and Josh Gladstone will produce a staged reading of Strindberg’s 1888 classic ‘Miss Julie’ at the Montauk Library.
Early Helen Frankenthaler, Haim Mizrahi solo, plein-air painting classes, four painters at Grenning, Ugo Rondinone at Storm King, Eric Firestone double play, Sara Nightingale pop-up.
An evolving roundup of benefit events, updated frequently, and a guide to summer celebrations in 2023.
An award-winning classical pianist will play a concert of works from the Romantic period at the Parrish Art Museum, and "Latin Dance Night" at LTV Studios.
The Church in Sag Harbor will celebrate the art of that village’s Eastville and SANS communities with a panel discussion, an exhibition tour, and a reception.
Jeremy Blutstein's new Montauk restaurant is "a steakhouse, but not a steakhouse," and the vision of an obsessive locavore with "the chops to cook your chops."
Melanie Crader has been hired as director of visual arts to oversee Guild Hall's exhibition program in the renovated galleries it will reopen in July.
The Southampton Arts Center will host a jazz concert by the Robin Verheyen Quartet and a six-session acting workshop with Kate Mueth and Josh Gladstone.
Ann Pibal and Emily Pettigrew at Halsey McKay, Alice Aycock drawings in Chelsea, Dan McCleary at Madoo, group shows at LTV and Alex Ferrone Gallery, and a virtual lecture on Charles Pollock, Jackson’s oldest brother.
Piano concert and a dance party at the Parrish, a communal fire at Ma’s House, classical music in Montauk and Southampton, streaming Dead and Company, Gilbert & Sullivan and a ‘Hamlet” talk in East Hampton.
Photographs by Harry Benson that bring to life seven decades of political and cultural history will be at the Southampton Arts Center.
The Sag Harbor Cinema will celebrate the collaboration between Julie Andrews and her husband Blake Edwards with an exhibition of rare photographs, sketches, artworks, and other memorabilia, as well as a screening of “S.O.B.”
In the revised edition of her book “Hole in My Heart,” Lorraine Dusky advocates for the rights of adoptees to access their birth records, but cautions that adoptions don’t guarantee happy outcomes for the babies.
An exhibition and panel discussion at Eric Firestone Gallery establish the wide ranging originality of Miriam Schapiro’s body of work, which included, but went far beyond strictly feminist content.
The new exhibition at the Pollock-Krasner House features artworks and other objects from more than 30 friends listed in Pollock and Krasner’s address books.
The writer and farmer Scott Chaskey will be at The Church in Sag Harbor to talk about “Soil and Spirit,” his new collection of essays.
“Is There Still Sex in the City?,” Candace Bushnell’s one-woman show, will come to The Church in Sag Harbor for one night only, and tickets are selling fast.
J. Oscar Molina at LongHouse, Richard Mothes at Clinton Academy, Laith McGregor at Tripoli, Nathan Slate Joseph at Keyes, and Seek One at White Room, 16 women at Ashawagh Hall, art talks at LTV, group show at Romany Kramoris.
While they often start with a simple image — a palm tree, or a lighthouse — Jamie dePasquale’s paintings develop over time into works of remarkable, and often surreal, complexity.
A conversation on Indigenous arts and culture in Southampton, a classical concert at Old Whalers Church in Sag Harbor.
Harper’s Gallery has paintings and ceramics by three artists whose moody, complex works “straddle an axis of abstract and recognizable imagery.”
Parrish Art Museum marks its 125th year with invigorated curatorial and administrative leadership, naming Corinne Erni chief curator of art and education as it enters a global dialogue.
New comic romp from the East End Special Players will enliven Bay Street Theater with slapstick, spies, a storm, stolen goods, and plenty of mayhem.
At The Church in Sag Harbor, Sabina Streeter will discuss her portraits inspired by the films of Douglas Sirk, and Michael A. Butler will talk about his “narrative folk” paintings and the history of that village.
Strong stories by four female playwrights will have staged readings in Bay Street Theater’s New Works Festival.
The Ranch in Montauk to feature sculpture by Lena Henke, documentary on the artist Nathan Slate Joseph in Southampton, Anahi DeCanio goes solo in Montauk, and a group show in Gansett Square.
The Art Center at Duck Creek will open with geometric wooden abstract paintings by Don Christensen, and ritualistic sculptural groupings by Brianna L. Hernandez.
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