A feature-length documentary portrait of Québécoise painter Johanne Corno, who has lived and worked in New York City for more than 20 years. Ignored by the art intelligentsia in Québec, she settled abroad to escape that creative constraint, and built an enviable international career. Today, she casts a lucid eye on her work and describes the resources she draws on to survive in the jungle of the contemporary art world.

This feature-length film tells the story of the passion between Marie de l’Incarnation, a mid-sevent...

On October 1, 2013, the elusive street artist Banksy launched a month-long residency in New York, an...

A documentary about the confluence of Christianity and mixed martial arts, including ministries whic...

Perpetuating art was the main objective in the life of visual artist, filmmaker and cultural manager...

From the lower St. Lawrence, a picture of whale hunting that looks more like a round-up, with a corr...

This pioneering documentary film depicts the lives of the indigenous Inuit people of Canada's northe...

Dubbed New York's "Queen of the Night," proto–club kid Susanne Bartsch has been throwing unforgettab...

The sculptor and painter Agueda Lozano narrates the first contacts with plastic art that she had in ...

An investigation of Edward Brezinski, an ambitious, charismatic Lower East Side painter hell-bent on...

Fernando Lemo's world is fiercely stripped of any external logic, as Jorge de Sena once said. His ar...

Martin Scorsese’s electrifying concert documentary captures The Rolling Stones live at New York’s Be...
This film is about the francization of Québec that has taken place since the Parti Québécois won pow...

Janette Bertrand, 96, is at the time of the balance sheets. Where are the women, where is the fight ...
Yagorihwanirats, a Mohawk child from Kahnawake Mohawk Territory in Quebec, attends a unique and spec...

Seeing is to painting what listening is to politics. Survival as an artist demands both. Paint Until...