Wish You Were Here: Joy Episalla
Joy Episalla’s work repositions photography and the moving image into the territory of sculpture. From a queer/feminist perspective, Episalla engages with the dynamics of transformation, multiplicity, and hybridity through the mutability of materials, observation, process, time, movement, seriality, and sound.
The 90-Second Newbery Film Festival
The 90-Second Newbery Film Festival. The George Eastman Museum, Writers & Books, and KidsOutAndAbout.com have partnered to bring to Rochester this program of short films by children and teens.
Skylark A Cappella Quartet
Performance Plus: Violin Sonatas by Gabriel Fauré and Maurice Ravel
Women Composers of La Belle Époque
The Five Point Performance Company
Steve Kelly, Aeolian pipe organ
Scandinavian Harmonies
Performance Plus: Music for Reed Quintet
Pining for the Nordic Mountains, Lakes & Fjords and Diatonisk & the Dulcimer
Home Movie Day
Home Movie Day is a worldwide event that invites the public to see and share their own home movies with an audience from their community.
Wish You Were Here: Lindsay McIntyre
Lindsay is an Inuk artist and filmmaker who explores place-based knowledge, material practices and personal histories in her experimental/ documentary shorts.
Lindsay McIntyre’s Ajjigiingiluktaaqtugut (We Are All Different) forms a remarkable statement about Indigenous identity
George Eastman Museum Celebrates Women’s History Month Through Photography, Film, and Performance
New Wish You Were Here Lecture Series at George Eastman Museum
Free panel discussion at George Eastman Museum to mark the close of "Evoke: A Youthful Expression" exhibition
April Fools Program (35mm)
Come celebrate the silliest day of the year with films featuring silent comedy’s “Big Four”: Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, Harold Lloyd, and Harry Langdon.
Shadow of a Doubt
Hitchcock Through the Ages This slow-building, disquietingly cynical small-town thriller was also Hitch's avowed personal favorite of his many pictures.
Pat and Mike
From Rochester, With Love Pat and Mike is one of the most successful mutual films of Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn. The delightful comedy sustains its contemporary meaning by its depiction of love as an equal proposition.