Search Results


Showing results for ڿ Ʊ׶ ᣱ6.ţ Ƣơڡ óƮ ¶κƱ׶ Ի굶ڹ ߱ġ عٶ ? Ʊ׶ ũ þ˸ ¶ ó

  1. Satyajit Ray’s The Apu Trilogy

    The trilogy takes a Modernist approach, depicting the evolution of male consciousness by observing how Apu matures in a changing world. Each film features music by the legendary Ravi Shankar. It is a transcendent experience to view this trilogy in new, 4K digital restorations. Considered a landmark in 20th-century cinema, the films follow the life of Apu from childhood to maturity.

  2. Sara Driver: Filmmaker

    A creative force in New York’s independent film industry for decades, Driver is a New Jersey native who received her MFA in film from New York University. —Anthology Film Archives, New York “Sara Driver’s films exist in the boundaries of myth, between realism and fantasy, between a solid narrative and the freedom of a poem. Precisely like the city of New York, which constitutes the canvas for her films and is a ‘fabricated’ world, built on the lives of vivid people, strange stories, and urban myths, her films are defined by a crooked line of emotions

  3. Ruth K. Shartle Lecture

    George R. Brown), a major benefactor who served 26 terms as a trustee of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, this lecture series was established in memory of Ruth K. Shartle, a longtime Museum benefactor. William C. Winter/Spring 2019–2020 Sunday, December 15, 3 p.m. “Art for a Civil Society: Norman Rockwell in the 1960s” Thursday, December 19, 6:30 p.m. “The Four Freedoms: Franklin D. Thursday, March 5, 6:30 p.m. “Rockwell’s Home Front Imaginary” The Ruth K. Shartle Lecture Series is made possible by a generous grant from The Brown Foundation, Inc. 

  4. Rohmer X 2

    Eric Rohmer (1920–2010), a co-founder of the French New Wave, directed over 50 films, in addition to garnering acclaim as a critic and novelist.

  5. Rivette X 2

    A belated tribute to French filmmaker Jacques Rivette, who turned 85 earlier this year, includes the discovery of a film never released in the U.S. and a new print of his enigmatic epic.

  6. Rienzi Reels

    Pack a picnic and enjoy an outdoor film screening in Rienzi’s beautiful Camellia Garden! Movie selections enhance the European decorative arts and paintings on view in the MFAH house museum. 

  7. Rienzi Fall Lecture Weekend

    Due to recent weather events, the first talk has been relocated to Bayou Bend’s Kilroy Visitor and Education Center at a new time, 2 p.m.; the second lecture takes place as scheduled at the MFAH in Brown Auditorium Theater, located

  8. Reflections of a New World: Japanese Protest and Art on Film

    The exhibition For a New World to Come: Experiments in Japanese Art and Photography, 1968–1979 explores the struggle of Japanese artists to forge a new identity during a time of political and social turmoil.

  9. Radical Light

    A reception and book signing in the museum galleries follows the 2 p.m. show. The Radical Light tour is made possible in part by the National Endowment for the Arts and The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. Alternative film and video from San Francisco and its nearby environs has historically drawn on a rich arts scene of poets, visual artists, composers, and technology innovators which accounts in part for the cross-fertilized nature A selection of programs from Radical Light is currently touring the country, bringing seminal as well as rediscovered works from the Bay Area to new audiences with the hope of inspiring continued experimentation within the media

  10. QFest: The Annual Houston International LGBTQ Film Festival

    MFAH members, students with ID, and seniors (65+) receive a $2 discount. The 23rd edition of the annual LGBTQ film festival offers a fresh, topical, and fascinating selection of films that have been popular on the international circuit. Film programming by Kristian Salinas, QFest’s artistic director and a member of the MFAH film committee. Film festival ticket prices apply: General admission is $10.