A Frank Stella sculpture show in Montauk, collage and assemblage at Firestone, talks at LongHouse, modern masters at Christie's, architecture and design tour in Southampton, folk art in Sag Harbor, and much more
A Frank Stella sculpture show in Montauk, collage and assemblage at Firestone, talks at LongHouse, modern masters at Christie's, architecture and design tour in Southampton, folk art in Sag Harbor, and much more
Scott Chaskey, a poet, farmer, and educator, reflects on the wit, empathy, and emotional range of the sculpture of William King, who was also Mr. Chaskey's stepfather-in-law.
Jazz at the Parrish, Main Prospect, and the Masonic Temple, Israeli singing star in East Hampton, Ruehl and Yulin in "Love Letters," a documentary on a filmmaker's return to Cuba
The Parrish's Jasper Johns print show focuses on how his personal themes and imagery have informed his printmaking, and it offers a compelling complement to his Whitney and Philadelphia retrospectives.
Kenny Scharf's paintings of cartoonish faces and fantastical creatures will take over the Phillips auction house in Southampton.
Laurie Anderson, in residence at the Elaine de Kooning House, talks about the joys (and anxieties) of painting, her big show at the Hirshhorn Museum, her involvement with virtual reality and artificial intelligence, and hiking in East Hampton.
A new exhibition at The Church in Sag Harbor highlights tapestry, weaving, embroidery, quilting, and other fiber practices informed by ideas from contemporary art.
American Modernists at Bernard Goldberg, craft at Hauser & Wirth, energy flux at Pace, Jennifer Bartlett at Drawing Room, Robert Harms at Madoo, Rudolph Serra at Borghi, nature, water, street art, animals, and more
A "docusoap" promises to show the real Hamptons of locals vs. "cidiots," but falls back on typical reality-TV tropes.
Hamptons Jazz Fest and Jazz at Lincoln Center will bring Wynton Marsalis and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra to the Southampton Arts Center.
The Caroline Davis Quartet will perform in the summer music series at the Arts Center at Duck Creek in Springs on Saturday at 5 p.m. The ensemble features Ms. Davis on saxophone, Julian Shore on piano, Chris Tordini on bass, and Chad Taylor on guitar.
Mike Birbiglia, a comedian, director, and actor, will perform five nights of comedy at Bay Street Theater in Sag Harbor from July 11 through July 16.
Latin Music from the Parrish and OLA, documentary on LGBTQ subculture, concert for Maureen's Haven, outdoor movies at Marders, all about Central Park
The new documentary "Fire of Love" tells the story of Katia and Maurice Krafft, French volcanologists whose love affair with the mystery and drama of volcanoes took them to the far corners of the earth.
East Hampton's Sejal Kukadia is one of the few female virtuosos of the tabla, the primary percussion instrument of Hindustani classical music.
New site-specific installation at Dia Bridgehampton features sculptures that engage with the history and geography of the region as well as an original musical score.
Historic houses and studios open their doors, solo shows for Mercedes Matter, Georg Baselitz, Josh Dayton, Shirley Gorelick, and others, an East End art roundup at MM Fine Art, a talk at The Church, an outdoor sculpture tour, and more.
The Pulitzer Prize-winning "Anna in the Tropics," next up at Bay Street, is a romantic melodrama about the intersecting lives of the Cuban-American workers at a cigar factory in 1920s Tampa.
The Southampton African American Museum will celebrate Juneteenth with a talk by the writer A'Lelia Bundles about the holiday, her remarkable female ancestors, and the Harlem Renaissance.
The Art Barge is now open for in-person classes and offering a broad range of classes to artists at all levels of experience.
Under the nimble direction of Jason Alexander, Bay Street's new office comedy, "Windfall" by Scooter Pietsch, is a "genuine crowd-pleaser."
Musical reflections on Matisse, jazz at Duck Creek, celebrating Sondheim, Colin Quinn at Bay Street, choral society goes Baroque, the audience takes the stage at the Clubhouse
"Turn Every Page: The Adventures of Robert Caro and Robert Gottlieb" premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival on Sunday. It was made by a director who understands that creative endeavors have innate tension and drama, mostly from witnessing them in her own household.
A yearlong retrospective of the films of Julie Andrews will open at the Sag Harbor Cinema with the comedy classic "Victor/Victoria."
Barbara Bloom in conversation with Ben Lerner, appraisal day in East Hampton, garden painting classes, focus on Jasper Johns at Parrish, Darius Yektai at Grenning, a spate of group shows
HamptonsFilm has announced its SummerDocs lineup for 2022, with films to be screened at the East Hampton Cinema beginning June 25.
More than 50 years after her parents left Cuba, a documentary filmmaker visits that country for the first time and bonds with family members she had never known.
Amanda Green, a lyricist, composer, and part-time East Hampton resident, is up for a Tony for best original score for "Mr. Saturday Night."
The summer's benefits will lure revelers with music, auctions, drama, dancing, artworks, food and drink, even a seance to raise the spirit of Marcel Proust.
A smorgasbord of entertainment from the Gilbert & Sullivan Light Opera Company, the Perlman Music Program, Hamptons Jazz Fest, the Shinnecock Nation, Edna's Kin—and a film about a master gardener.
Copyright © 1996-2024 The East Hampton Star. All rights reserved.