ANTIQUES ROADSHOW'S Season 29 tour is underway! See where we're going
ANTIQUES ROADSHOW is in Santa Clara, where host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Stephen Fletcher travel to the Japanese American Museum of San Jose to learn about arts and crafts made by Japanese and Japanese Americans interned in camps during World War II.
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Host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser John Buxton visit the Birmingham Museum of Art
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Host Mark L. Walberg joins appraiser James Supp at the Pacific Pinball Museum
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In Tucson, appraisers saw three pieces of "Outsider Art"—but what is that?
The museum was founded in 1990 in Kansas City, Missouri, the place where the Negro National League was founded in 1920.
A bar mitzvah gift that survived the Holocaust provides a chance to reflect on the "Night of Broken Glass" — November 9, 1938.
Margaret Keane is known for her iconic "Big Eyes" paintings. When they first emerged on the market in the late 1950s, she let her then-husband take credit for her work. But in the mid-1980s Keane proved her artistry in a courtroom. She still paints, and her story was made into a 2014 movie, Big Eyes, directed by Tim Burton.
ANTIQUES ROADSHOW visited the Japanese American Museum of San Jose to explore the beautiful and poignant art work of Japanese and Japanese Americans held at camps around the United States during World War II.
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A weekly collection of previews, videos, articles, interviews, and more!