Videos from the Center

Videos related to Center programs and people, including program recordings and stories about art and its histories.

Stories from our collection

Aruna D'Souza

Playlist :  5 Pictures for a New World

Aruna D’Souza (2022 Edmond J. Safra Visiting Professor) discusses works in the National Gallery’s collection that, to her, hold a promise for a better future.

To our left, a young woman sits facing us on a low stone wall at the base of the vertical, black bars of an iron fence and a young girl stands facing away from us to our right in this horizontal painting. Both have pale skin. The woman looks directly at us with dark eyes as she holds an open book, a closed red fan, and a sleeping brown and white puppy in her lap. Her long auburn hair falls down over her shoulders. Her navy-blue dress is accented with white piping on the skirt, collar, and sleeves, and has three large, white buttons down the front and her black hat is adorned with two red poppies and a daisy. The girl wears a sleeveless white, knee-length dress belted with a marine-blue sash tied in a large bow at her back. The girl’s blond hair is pulled up and tied with a black ribbon. She raises her left hand to grasp the bar of the fence she faces. A bunch of green grapes lies on the low wall to our right. A plume of steam fills much of the space beyond the black fence, which spans the width of the painting and extends off the top edge. A few details can be made out beyond the fence, including a stone-gray building with two wooden doors to our left and a bridge along the right edge.

Playlist :  Reflections on the Collection

This video series explored iconic works in the National Gallery’s collection with the Center’s Edmond J. Safra Visiting Professors from 2011 to 2021.

Video:  “Agrippina and Germanicus” with Mary Beard

Center alum Mary Beard explores the story of “Agrippina and Germanicus” by Sir Peter Paul Rubens.

Perspectives on American art

Video:  Latinx Art and the Intimacy of Dislocation

Wyeth Lecture in American Art presented by Roberto Tejada (2023)

Video:  Prioritizing Indigenous Communities and Voices: Curating in This Time

Wyeth Lecture in American Art presented by Patricia Marroquin Norby (2021)

Video:  The African American Art World in 20th-Century Washington, DC

Held on March 17, 2017, eight distinguished artists discuss their careers and relationships as members of the Washington, DC, art world.

Video:  Art Is an Excuse: Conceptual Strategies, 1968–1983

Wyeth Lecture in American Art presented by Kellie Jones (2019)

Six bunches of harvested corn close to us lead back to two people planting fields, which in turn lead back to a red barn and white house in this horizontal landscape painting. The shocks of corn are tied into rounded, pyramidal shapes on a ground streaked with brown dirt and green growth. In the center of the composition and in the distance, a person on a horse-drawn wagon hands a sack or other object down to a person standing at the back of the wagon. Vibrant green hills roll back to red and white structures to the left and a row of dark green trees on the horizon to the right. In the top third of the painting, a wave of white clouds seems to crest against a jewel-blue sky. The curves of the land are slightly exaggerated, giving the painting a stylized look. The artist signed and dated the painting in the lower left corner, “Benton 48.”

Video:  The Panorama and the Globe: Expanding the American Landscape in World War II

Wyeth Lecture in American Art presented by Cécile Whiting (2017)

Take a deep dive with the Mellon Lectures

Video:  Chasing That Which Is Not Me / Chasing That Which Is Me

The A. W. Mellon Lectures in the Fine Arts presented by Anna Deavere Smith (2024)

Video:  Vital Signs: The Visual Cultures of Maya Writing

The A. W. Mellon Lectures in the Fine Arts presented by Stephen D. Houston (2023)

Video:  Colorstruck! Painting, Pigment, Affect

The A. W. Mellon Lectures in the Fine Arts presented by Richard J. Powell (2022)

Video:  Contact: Art and the Pull of Print

The A. W. Mellon Lectures in the Fine Arts presented by Jennifer L. Roberts (2021)

Video:  End as Beginning: Chinese Art and Dynastic Time

The A. W. Mellon Lectures in the Fine Arts presented by Wu Hung (2019)

Video:  Positive Barbarism: Brutal Aesthetics in the Postwar Period

A. W. Mellon Lectures in the Fine Arts presented by Hal Foster (2018)

New findings on Italian art

Video:  Blood Joining Blood: The Immersive in Caravaggio’s Malta

Sydney J. Freedberg Lecture on Italian Art presented by Keith Sciberras (2024)

Video:  Sofonisba Anguissola: Recent Discoveries and Debates

Sydney J. Freedberg Lecture on Italian Art presented by Michael Cole (2023)

A woman and two children, all with pale skin and flushed cheeks, sit together in a landscape in this round painting. The woman takes up most of the composition as she sits with her right leg, to our left, tucked under her body. Her other leg, on our right, is bent so the foot rests on the ground, and that knee angles up and out to the side. She wears a rose-pink dress under a topaz-blue robe, and a finger between the pages of a closed book holds her place. Her brown hair is twisted away from her face. She has delicate features and her pink lips are closed. She looks and leans to our left around a nude young boy who half-sits and half-stands against her bent leg. The boy has blond hair and pudgy, toddler-like cheeks and body. The boy reaches his right hand, on our left, to grasp the tall, thin cross held by the second young boy, who sits on the ground next to the pair. This second boy has darker brown hair and wears a garment resembling animal fur. The boy kneels facing the woman and looks up at her and the blond boy. The trio sits on a flat, grassy area in front of a body of water painted light turquoise. Mountains in the deep distance are pale azure blue beneath a nearly clear blue sky.

Video:  Michelangelo, Raphael, and the Genius Paradox

Sydney J. Freedberg Lecture on Italian Art presented by Cammy Brothers (2022)

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The Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts is the National Gallery’s research institute.