"Abstraction is one thing, passion is another. Artist William Quigley exhibits both in every single painting he does, and he does both of them perfectly," Keyes relayed.
"Since I live in L.A. and work in New York City, I am looking forward to going out to Greenport with my family, we have never been to the East End and are very excited," Sisto told us about the Festival.
"I really wanted to make them all modern day, so the language was modern and the situations were all recognizable, because Poe's language is archaic now," Pomerantz told us.
"We've know each other since the 70s and the theme of Goddesses in our work has woven in and out separately," East Hampton's Amy Zerner told us.
"There has been great interest. I know we are pleased to be able to do this in a really safe way, which is most important," Raff told us.
"Times are especially tough for artists because what they're selling is their own imagination, their own integrity, and their own vision," Warren Strugatch said.
"He inspired such incredible humanity amongst music artists, politicians and regular people like you and me," Korn told Hamptons.com about the late singer, songwriter and activist.
"The gallery is pleased to show four important artists - all who have roots locally in the Hamptons," Christine Berry noted.
"With current restrictions on gatherings, we are fortunate to have the ability to utilize our grounds to continue offering a variety of new and classic feature films and documentaries to the community before it gets too cold," Amy Kirwin noted.
"Curated from thousands of submissions, this year's selection runs the gamut from introspective dramas to compelling documentaries to off-the-wall delights," Costello told us.
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