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| Sister Wendy's American Collection, Box Set | 
enlarge | Actor: Sister Wendy Studio: Wgbh Boston Category: Video
List Price: $79.95 Buy New: $30.99 You Save: $48.96 (61%)
Buy New/Used from $30.99
Avg. Customer Rating:   (8 reviews) Sales Rank: 25507
Format: Box Set, Closed-captioned, Color, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Media: VHS Tape Running Time: 360 minutes Number Of Items: 6 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.4 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 6.7 x 4.3
ISBN: 1578075785 UPC: 783421325531 EAN: 9781578075782 ASIN: B00005O5N5
Release Date: September 25, 2001 Theatrical Release Date: 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Description Museums, like theaters and libraries, are a means to freedom. Here, we can move out of our personal anxieties and disappointments into the vast and stable world of human creativity. ?Sister Wendy Beckett Sister Wendy Beckett comes to America for a spectacular tour that blends art, history, culture and storytelling into one delightful experience. Described as "a phenomenon" by The Washington Post and "a pop star" by The New York Times, Sister Wendy shares her contagious enthusiasm, eloquent descriptions, self-taught expertise and warm humor as she guides you through six of America?s greatest art museums. The Art Institute of Chicago Discover intriguing facts behind Grant Wood?s classic painting American Gothic, the brilliance of a gold ceremonial knife from Peru?s lost Chimu empire, and Marc Chagall?s stained glass epic America Windows. The Cleveland Museum of Art Explore rare Asian art and Medieval European pieces, as well as Rodin?s sculpture The Thinker, an elaborately detailed suit of armor, and Rousseau?s richly fantastic painting The Fight of a Tiger and a Buffalo. Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, Texas Share the museum?s carefully selected art collection, including Cezanne?s painting Man in a Blue Smock, the lacquered beauty of a Japanese wine flask, and Caravaggio?s The Cardsharps. Los Angeles County Museum of Art Enjoy the museum?s wonderfully diverse works, including David Hockney?s painting Mulholland Drive, a colorfully woven Chinese emperor?s robe, and examples of pre-Columbian sculpture. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York Tour New York?s legendary museum and its vast art collection, including Velazquez?s stunning painting Juan de Pareja and a calligraphic page from the Koran. And join Sister Wendy to experience the heavenly beauty of The Cloisters. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston Marvel at such masterpieces as Gauguin?s Polynesian painting Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going?, the intricate Wedgwood inlays of an antique piano, and Paul Revere?s silver Sons of Liberty Bowl.
Amazon.com Sister Wendy Beckett, a cloistered nun and Oxford-educated art scholar who became a most unlikely TV personality in Britain, takes an art appreciation tour across America, visiting six major art museums in this series from PBS. Strolling through the galleries in her flowing black habit, Sister Wendy looks like someone from another age, but her opinions are often quite modern. In the Metropolitan Museum in New York she speaks eloquently about native sculpture in the oceanic gallery as well as about works by great masters, and in Boston's Museum of Fine Arts she spends a few minutes discoursing about pop art and specifically Roy Lichtenstein's "Glass V." At the Art Institute of Chicago she delivers a succinct lecture on Edward Hopper's "Nighthawks," noting how it was painted soon after Pearl Harbor and depicts a New York City rife with anxiety. She also visits the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and Fort Worth's Kimbell Art Museum. Sister Wendy's insights are entertaining, and she has a unique gift for communicating the joy one gets from appreciation of great art. --Robert J. McNamara
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| Customer Reviews: Read 3 more reviews...
  Ok but political correctness makes it worse than it should have been. May 1, 2006 2 out of 14 found this review helpful
Sister Wendy's American collection box set is an interesting survey of art collected in six American museums.About two thirds of the works surveyed merit the time dedicated to them.Her comments on art and specific works in general are MOSTLY informative and insightful but the format is marred by her use of "WE" and US" in describing HER feelings on specific works. Also, can we ever find a documentary that is not catered to hide a politically correct message behind it? I want to learn and understand art history not be given a feminist lecture.
  Halleluyah! March 17, 2006 6 out of 8 found this review helpful
If you can get past the habit and listen, you have a really interesting and respectful open-minded art critic who is a nun, but we all look past that part! Wendy Beckett is an art scholar and I trust her implicitly. Her views are not only psychologically and philosophically enchanting but mesmerizing as well as intriguing. Looking at her open-mindedness to art and her appreciation of fine art is absolutely delightful and entertaining!
As an art aficionado who has spent time in most of these museums, she really posits true and genuine opinions and interpretations based on her own thoughts, without imposing her own private religiousity on you!
Bravo, sister Wendy!
[...]! It is a great box set! And no, she is NOT boring as other reviewers who just don't appreciate fine art have reviewed her with one star!
  Sister Wendy's American Collection October 7, 2005 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
If you love Sister Wendy then there is no need for a review on this collection. She has a wonderful persona and opens up a knew understanding of art for those who know little about this world. Art becomes more than simply a famous piece of artwork or an ancient artifact etc.. because Sister Wendy gives you a different prespective from the inside out! Great work! About time you could get her on DVD!
  Brillant! May 10, 2005 9 out of 11 found this review helpful
Any half-decent or better University Art History class is sure to appreciate the perspectives Sister Wendy brings to these discs. Sister Wendy does a brillant job, as always, with the American Collection! You will be a better person for watching and understanding this collection.
  Thank You, Sister Wendy!! August 22, 2004 25 out of 25 found this review helpful
Sister Wendy Beckett has done for art appreciation and art history what the late Carl Sagan did for the science of astronomy: she has taken a subject that most people would like to know more about, but fear is beyond their ability to understand, and made it accessible and entertaining. She has wrested art from the hands of intellectuals and elitists and given it back to the people, to whom it has always rightfully belonged. Some people appear to resent this. The rest of us should stand up and cheer.
In this charming series, Sister Wendy visits six of the United States' most renowned art museums and shares with her viewers some of their masterpieces. Her opinions, sometimes whimsical, sometimes wistful and sometimes reverent, are delivered with great passion and enthusiasm. This open love of her subject matter is infectious and draws the viewer to her and to the art works she so clearly loves. This is what makes her so effective as a guide and teacher.
Sister Wendy also makes a wonderfully evocative use of language, at one point, during a discussion of Grant Wood's "American Gothic" she describes the woman's hair as having been "...scraped back in a bun." This captured the woman's hairstyle with such economy and vividness that I, in my mind's eye, could see her combing her hair into a repressed little bun. Except for that one tendril, which Sister Wendy also points out to her viewers.
Like all those who view a work of art, Sister Wendy brings her own, unique perspective to each work she has chosen to discuss. Nowhere is this more powerfully shown than in her discussion of the Kinbell's "An Exiled Emperor on Okinoshima." While most people would perceive the solitary figure on the Japanese screen as lonely and isolated, Sister Wendy, who spends most of her time alone in silent contemplation and prayer, at first sees a kindred spirit. This leads her to identify with the Emperor in ways most people would never dream of and she shares her unique perspective with us. And we are richer, not just for seeing the screen and hearing her interpretation, but also for having been given this tiny scrap of insight into a life most of us can't even imagine.
Through her books and television series, Sister Wendy has given us something she seems to greatly admire about the United States: Freedom. The freedom to look at a work of art and interpret and enjoy it through our own particular lens, our own perspective. By showing and telling us how she understands and appreciates art, Sister Wendy invites us to take the liberty to do likewise.
Thank you, Sister Wendy!
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