| Description:
 
 Exploring A Love of Art is much like walking the halls of an art museum;  some things you love, some things you're indifferent toward, and some things you  don't quite understand. This program, itself a series of five programs contained  on as many CD-ROMs, is comprised of the following titles: Art & Music of the  20th Century, Starry Night, Scrutiny in the Great Round, Painters Painting, and  The Claude Monet Collection.
   We Loved: The highlight of the package, and what makes it worth the  purchase price (and perhaps even a bargain!), is Painters Painting; fans or  followers of modern American art will find hours of fascinating information,  presented in a manner that echoes the feel of the period's height in the 1960s  and 1970s. Based on Emile de  Antonio's documentary of the same name, Painters Painting revolves around  the 1969-70 retrospective of American painting at the Metropolitan Museum of Art  entitled New York Painting and Sculpture, 1940-70.   The software program is filled with highlights from the film, all set to edgy  period music and design. View the original film in its entirety, put nicely into  context by a detailed textual introduction, or watch video clips of interviews  with many of the artists involved in the retrospective show. If you tire of the  somewhat grainy film clips, peruse more complete transcripts of the interviews  or bios of the artists; read a description of the museum show, then watch a  video tour of the exhibit filmed in the museum. (Seeing clips of museum visitors  in their '60s getups is a real treat.)   While there are some failures of the program (not enough examples of artwork  from each artist to review in detail, less-than-stellar video quality), this is  truly a find--the chance to learn about modern art from the artists themselves,  to essentially step back in time to the New York art scene, is a rare and  wonderful experience.   And even casual fans of van Gogh will enjoy Starry Night, a program about the  artist focused around perhaps his best-known painting of the same name. Easily  installed and guided by a simple, cleanly designed interface, Starry Night's  strongest feature is a lengthy slideshow (to be viewed on autopilot or  self-guided) that combines an academic's musings on the artist and his masterwork  with historical context, art from other artists and periods, and, of course,  other work from van Gogh himself. Also interesting are the 50-plus letters from  the artist to members of his family.   We Were Indifferent About: Art & Music of the 20th Century is a crude  series of slideshow presentations, definitions, and historical background  focusing on 20th-century art, all set to soothing classical music. (Sound  familiar?) A poor graphic interface and a somewhat useless search functionality  make this program useful only as a very broad introduction to a mammoth  topic.   Fans of water lilies and Giverny will doubtless enjoy The Claude Monet  Collection, essentially a translation of a selection of the artist's work into  screensavers. When the fun wears off, make virtual puzzles of your favorite  selections. A nice complement to the package, but not a product that can stand  on its own.   We Didn't Quite Understand: Scrutiny in the Great Round might best be  classified as software performance art--a lot of unusual but interesting music  and sound effects drawn from the natural world, with a dose of esoteric  spoken-word clips for good measure. The program's art creates itself before your very  eyes, but unfortunately, it's quite difficult to determine what most of the  objects are intended to be or signify. There's no menu or guide to the program  to provide a context, and once you get into the program, there's no easy way  out. --Leah Ball
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