Chilean singer-songwriter & activist NANO STERN On Tradition, Innovation & the Power of Song - Highlights

Chilean singer-songwriter & activist NANO STERN On Tradition, Innovation & the Power of Song - Highlights

Musician and Songwriter

There is a metaphor to every single word that we say, we're just not aware. But if we were aware, then it would become very interesting. And that's the quest for me to be constantly more and more aware because it's so beautiful. It's a quest for beauty as well.

The Intersection of Music, Culture & Activism with NANO STERN

The Intersection of Music, Culture & Activism with NANO STERN

Musician and Songwriter

There is a metaphor to every single word that we say, we're just not aware. But if we were aware, then it would become very interesting. And that's the quest for me to be constantly more and more aware because it's so beautiful. It's a quest for beauty as well.

Exploring Femininity & The Spirituality of Form with Artist PINAREE SANPITAK
Interdisciplinary Approaches in the Humanities with DAVID PALUMBO-LIU - Highlights

Interdisciplinary Approaches in the Humanities with DAVID PALUMBO-LIU - Highlights

Writer · Activist · Comparative Literature Professor

Students come in already knowing what they want to do. And so they've already excluded and taken out of consideration all sorts of options, which is exactly the opposite of what a university is supposed to do. It's supposed to give you a broad set of possible ways of thinking about life and training your mind and your talents. And so I like to open that up more for students.

Writing for Change: DAVID PALUMBO-LIU on Advocacy, Scholarship & the Role of the Public Intellectual
Understanding LEONARDO DA VINCI with Art Historian JACQUES FRANCK - Highlights

Understanding LEONARDO DA VINCI with Art Historian JACQUES FRANCK - Highlights

Painter and Art Historian for Louvre Museum & Armand Hammer Center for Leonardo Studies at UCLA
Interview Highlights

Well, I have always considered Leonardo as the perfect artist, and more or less like a father. The real master is a kind of a father figure. So, to help me understand better, improve myself, know more, make the proper efforts and listen to someone who is so knowledgeable that in listening to what he says you will make real progress. I was listening to Maria Callas some time ago, because when she came to Paris in 1968 she was in the Opéra Paris, and she was in a concert. Music was in her psychology. In Leonardo, art was in his psychology, as an expression of the mystery of life in him. The same in Callas. I'm always observing artists performing because it's very interesting to observe. She was living in another dimension. As if she were connected to an invisible source, and that invisible source suddenly gave her genius. On top of all she'd been learning technically, so she had the art, the architectural setting of the technique. So she couldn't fail, because of course what she was singing was very difficult, but also, suddenly, life came into it.

Leonardo at 500: A Conversation with Art Historian & Da Vinci Specialist JACQUES FRANCK

Leonardo at 500: A Conversation with Art Historian & Da Vinci Specialist JACQUES FRANCK

Painter and Art Historian for Louvre Museum & Armand Hammer Center for Leonardo Studies at UCLA

Da Vinci certainly must have been very well organized because you can't make so much work without a base in the organization of your life which is very strict. You can't go and penetrate such high intellectual spheres unless you're a man of good. Do you understand what I mean? To have some ideal of perfection, beauty, and humanity inside yourself…Art is art, and that's all. To me, art is the expression of beauty, and beauty is something like the sun, shall we say. An absolute.