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 pioneering documentary film depicts the lives of the indigenous Inuit people of Canada's northe...
The shape-shifting and enigmatic hip hop artist Kool Keith has managed to surprise, shock, and enrag...

Snowflakes at the End of the World offers a meditation on the beauty and ugliness of Montreal winter...

A young woman of the Tarahumara, well-known for their extraordinary long distance running abilities,...

In 1940, the German artist Charlotte Salomon (1917-43) undertook an extraordinary artistic adventure...

In this feature-length documentary, six teenage girls, aged 14 to 16, agree to open up and have thei...

The history of New York’s Meatpacking District, told from the perspective of transgender sex workers...

Shere Hite’s 1976 bestselling book, The Hite Report, liberated the female orgasm by revealing the mo...

Fashion revolutionary Bethann Hardison looks back on her journey as a pioneering Black model, modeli...

While navigating daily discrimination, a filmmaker who inhabits and loves her unusual body searches ...

Since 1987, and for almost three decades, New York cinephiles had access to a vast treasure trove of...

Four Black transgender sex workers in Atlanta and New York City break down the walls of their profes...

Dedicated to the portrait work of Paul Cézanne, the exhibition opens in Paris before traveling to Lo...
"The prevailing stigmatization of the 'villero' universe is fed back by the images. In order to dism...

Filmed In the heart of the mountainous villages of Greece and North Macedonia, the documentary follo...

Stop for Bud is Jørgen Leth's first film and the first in his long collaboration with Ole John. […] ...