"Let's Not Pretend" is a film by Riley Bartolomeo about acclaimed artist Susan Calza. This documentary follows this award and fellowship grant winning artist to discover the autobiographical stories which lay beneath her art. Moreover, the film emphasizes the importance of art in our communities, country and world!

Buenos Aires is a complex, chaotic city. It has European style and a Latin American heart. It has os...

Tell Them We Were Here is an inspirational feature-length documentary about eight artists who show u...

Artist Katinka Simonse, alias Tinkebell, is a controversial, very mediagenic phenomenon. In her univ...

Martin Blaszko is considered one of the most important artists of geometric abstraction in Latin Ame...

An experimental film about that one hypnotic moment on a regular, unassuming Tuesday when one realiz...

Documentary in which Ros Savill, former director and curator at the Wallace Collection, tells the st...

A group of leftist activists expose the exploitation of immigrant workers by a criminal network with...

Why is it that art by male artists always sells for more than that of female artists? Is it subject ...
A short film with shots of sculptures by Anneke Walvoort. The materiality of film plays an important...

For us, a thought always presupposes a society, a culture and above all the consciousness of time. W...

This portrait of a guinea fowl is the first clear vision I've had of the hot-blooded dinosaurs still...

WORM AND WEB LOVE begins with bracketed light, a throbbing worm in the sand and sea foam mixed with ...

This is a film made in Toronto, in memoriam, so to speak - a memory piece, a "piecing-together" of t...

This stream-of-consciousness could be nothing less than pathway of the soul, as images of Marilyn's ...

"Firstly, I revealed in salutary confession the secret filth of my misdeed, which had long been fest...