An experiment in narrative blending, the film is a murder mystery within a suspense film.
"It was like the fates were telling us we have to be together for 50 years."
A film about war, friendship, and the American New Wave.
"A camera was considered a weapon by the Russians. They shot you on the spot."
"As long as we are out of our country and can't go back, let's just go to Hollywood."
Meet the people exploring the intersection between art and science with origami.
“Origami is a metamorphic art form; You don’t add to it [or] take away from it, you change it.”
Not all origami must be representative. There can be beauty in a single crease.
“When you put a crease in a piece of paper, you’re essentially changing the memory of that piece.”
Performance artist Alexander Pushkin pushes the limits of creative dissent in a dictatorship.
The murals in Chicago's Pilsen district started a tradition of Latino culture.
Meet the world’s best product designers, and discover how the things they make impact our lives.
Apple's Jonathan Ive gets obsessive about design.
"You can now buy into good design and good taste."
"Why do we feel we need to keep revisiting the archetype over and over again?"
Herb and Dorothy Vogel travel the festival circuit with filmmaker Megumi Sasaki.
A couple of modest means builds one of the most important contemporary art collections in history.
The Vogels only collected what they liked, and what would fit in their flat.
Herb would negotiate the lowest prices for the best (and most) art he could get.
Christo and Jeanne-Claude gave the Vogels art in exchange for cat-sitting services.
Take a rare look into one of China's most treasured commodities — acrobats.
An architect takes his eco-construction to Indonesia to house those displaced by the tsunami.
Can you own a sound? Go inside the clash between sampling culture and intellectual property law.
"What the photographer is to the painter is what the modern producer is to the instrumentalist."
"They say I’m the world’s number one sampledest drummer. I haven’t got a penny for it yet though."
"You can’t put soul in a bottle. You can’t quantify soul by a person who’s just got a briefcase."
Pat’s daily dialysis regimen requires vigilance about germs and some creative problem-solving.
Jill Nielsen-Farrell and her family explain her decision to volunteer to be a living donor for Pat.
Pat gets an opportunity to meet the family of the young man whose kidney Pat received.
Drummer Pat Spurgeon is an up-and-coming rock star when his only kidney begins to disintegrate