artblog radio
By theartblog.org
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Podcast Description
artblog radio interviews artists from Philadelphia and beyond. Hosted by Roberta Fallon and Libby Rosof from theartblog.org
| Name | Description | Released | Price | ||
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1 |
CleanHeadlong Dance Theater on movement with citizen dancers | Andrew Simonet, David Brick and Amy Smith founded Headlong Dance Theater in Philadelphia in 1993. The three college friends use theatrical props, street clothes, and speech in their works, which honor movement in space. Their non-standard productions lie between dance and theatre and may not ever include jette or pirouette moves. Over the years the team, which is based in Philadelphia, has performed nationally and internationally and received a Pew Fellowship (2006). More recently they have done some performances in galleries in response to art -- at the ICA (for the Sheila Hicks exhibit) and at Dalet Gallery in Old City. Their upcoming 2012 Fringe Festival work is a collaboration with "citizen dancers." The works will take place in the citizens' homes and be metaphorical choreographies that reflect the life of the household. Headlong's work is often humorous and inspired by pop culture. | 5/19/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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CleanA talk with Matt Giel about his performance photography | Artist Matt Giel makes his photos the old-fashioned way, with film and chemicals. But they are really hybrids, part sculpture, part performance--as in the time he wrestled his gigantic developer out of his cellar studio to truck it to a one-day performance, printing a long photographic scroll. He names Marlo Pascual and James Welling among his influences. Giel will be in the 2012 Truck Show opening June 2--a 14-artist show organized by Tim Belknap and Ryan McCartney, with pick-up trucks made into artwork, in the Icebox! | 5/6/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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3 |
CleanCindi Ettinger, master printer, on collaborating with artists on their prints - artblog radio podcast | Cindi Ettinger created C. R. Ettinger Studio in 1982 after working for a print studio in New York and deciding she'd like to open her own studio in Philadelphia. Over the years the master printer and University of the Arts graduate has made prints in her small studio in Old City with the who's who of Philadelphia artists. In this interview, Ettinger talks about how artists like the collaborative aspect of making a print with her. Among other things, collaborating with Ettinger gives an artist someone to bounce ideas off of and think a project through. | 4/22/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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4 |
CleanDaniel Heyman on artblog radio! | The irrepressible printmaker Daniel Heyman brings extraordinary empathy to his subjects--and never seems to run out of it. His widely shown Amman Portfolio--a series of portraits of Iraqi Abu Ghraib prison survivors with their stories hand-written right on the print --was at the Baltimore Museum of Art last month. | 4/8/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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5 |
CleanFrank Bramblett talks about painting, truth and growing up in Alabama - on artblog radio! | Frank Bramblett is a painter of large abstractions that spring from his love of materials and his need to experiment like an alchemist. Frank is a Pew Fellow, and you can see several marvelous paintings of his in the exhibit Elemental: Nature as Language now on view at Woodmere Art Museum. Frank taught at Tyler School of art for many years and had a huge impact on many students. When he retired in 2010 his former students organized an exhibition called "Thanks, Frank" in his honor. We were fortunate to co-teach a class at Tyler with Frank in 2006. Bramblett is an astute observer of paintings and people. And his level of intense observation and insight makes him someone you want to talk with about art. | 3/25/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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6 |
CleanGary Steuer to the rescue in City Hall | You have a friend in City Hall, artists. The guy in the white hat, Gary Steuer, tries to cut through red tape, to make art accessible, and to fight City Hall over unreasonable taxes on low income businesses of the sorts artists (and bloggers) have. Surprisingly enough, given city finances and his teeny baby budget, somehow he succeeds. That's what he told us, and we believe him. | 3/12/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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7 |
CleanMaiza Hixson talks and sings Dolly Parton, acappella, on artblog radio! | Delaware Center for Contemporary Art curator Maiza Hixson is also an artist, and she sees her curating as part of her art practice. You can see a video of hers in the People's Biennial at Haverford right now and you can see exhibits she's curated at the DCCA. Hixson lives in Philadelphia and commutes to Wilmington; she's a roommate of the Dufala Brothers in a sprawling Chinatown apartment. A few months back Hixson and Lauren Ruth, another roommate, created a new project space, The Shaft, in their building’s tiny elevator. Last First Friday, The Shaft became the restaurant Le Shaft. See a video on her website. Hixson is from Kentucky and has some great singing chops. In this clip, she sings a Dolly Parton song for us and says Parton could be an art critic! | 2/26/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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8 |
CleanErin Riley | Homeless, with a loom that she carries wherever she goes, artist Erin Riley is not on the street. Instead, she has figured out her own way of getting her contemporary narrative weavings done and surviving. The artist, who's part of a Fiber Philadelphia show in March at Space 1026, provides a window into her life, her thoughts and her methods. | 2/12/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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9 |
CleanTim Belknap on artblog radio | In early December Tim Belknap set up a small, brightly-lit open-walled cube inside Temple Gallery that was an almost-convincing replica of a space capsule. The cube, no longer there, was called the Destiny Module, a reference to the US Space Station's Science Lab, and was part of Belknap's project to beam Astronaut Tim via Skype video into a Philadelphia 4th grade classroom for a science talk. Tim -- who is not a scientist or astronaut but an artist and Fleisher Challenge winner with a mischievous sense of play -- harnessed himself to a cable attached to heavy metal beams he installed in the cube (in his day job he does custom steel fabrication) and hung suspended in front of a video camera as if he was floating in zero gravity. The students believed the ruse, at least at first, and asked him questions like Is the moon a cookie? and When will the earth explode? In this clip Tim talks about childhood innocence and his art as something about lost innocence. | 1/30/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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10 |
CleanJoshua Mosley on artblog radio | -- | 1/15/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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11 |
CleanMatt Kalasky on growing up with movies as your culture | Matt Kalasky graduated from Tyler with an MFA in sculpture in 2011. We’ve seen his work in several emerging artist shows in Philadelphia including Vox VI in 2010 and the Bambi Biennial, also 2010, which we juried. He was also in one of Rebekah Templeton’s emerging artist shows. His art is influenced by science fiction and fantasy movies of the Star Wars/Star Trek variety. Matt is the editor in chief of the newly launched online arts publication The Nicola Midnight St. Claire. One of his final projects in grad school was a multi-media performance called The Last Symposium, in which the subject was the end of the world. | 1/1/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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12 |
CleanJennifer Levonian's life stories--hers and ours. | -- | 12/11/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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13 |
CleanGrizzly Grizzly interview with Mike Ellyson and Jacque Liu | Grizzly Grizzly installed their first juried exhibit, "Other Possible Titles" this month in their small artist-run space in the old industrial building at 319 N. 11th St. The gallery is filled to bursting with 35 works from almost 250 submissions from all over the US and as far away as Ireland and Australia. We spoke with Mike Ellyson and Jacque Liu, two of the Grizzlies (the group is 8-members strong), who confessed to being thrilled with the response, and with the show. Viewers are encouraged to vote on their favorite piece and many have. The Grizzlies will award the top vote getter with a solo show at the gallery in 2012. The exhibit closed Nov. 26, (see installation pictures on their website). The Grizzlies are accepting proposals for exhibits for 2012. Send images, proposals, ideas, and/or links: 2xgrizzly@gmail.com | 11/27/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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CleanTim McFarlane | -- | 11/13/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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15 |
CleanHannah Price on photographing men in Philadelphia | Hannah Price is the youngest artist included in the Philadelphia Museum of Art’s exhibit exhibit of local artists, Here and Now. She graduated in 2009 with a BFA in photography from Rochester Institute of Technology. Right out of college she won an award in the Philadelphia Photo Art Center’s first emerging artist exhibit. After that, she’s been in group shows at Gallery 339 — remarkable for someone so young. Price’s color photos, shot in film and printed digitally, show people, usually alone, in somber moments of quietude, often outside on the streets of Philadelphia. Many of the works showcase the street scene as well as the person and seem less portrait-like than figure studies. We learned, among other things, that she deleted her Facebook page recently and never looked back. | 10/30/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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CleanPhotographer Zoe Strauss on artblog radio | -- | 10/16/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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17 |
CleanAndrew Jeffrey Wright on making it in the art world on $500 a month | Andrew Jeffrey Wright is known for his humorous drawings and prints, psychedelic pattern paintings, and most recently his stand-up comedy routine, which he performs regularly Tuesday nights at the Barbary. Wright, who is a founding and current member of Space 1026, made his first splash with The Manipulators, an animated film he co-produced with then-girlfriend, Clare Rojas. That fashion-lampoon, done with magazine pictures altered with whiteout, won Wright and Rojas the top prize for animation at the New York Underground Film Festival. In our talk with Wright we learned that he supported himself when in college by working as a security guard at Hog Island, and that some of his humor influences include Andy Kaufman, Steve Martin and Rodney Dangerfield. And while the focus of much of his work is on lampooning drug use, he’s never used drugs himself. He's 98% vegan, he says, and he's happy if he makes $500/month; all of his income is from art sales and performance fees. | 10/1/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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18 |
CleanAnnette Monnier on artblog radio | -- | 9/18/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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19 |
CleanIngrid Schaffner on artblog radio | Ingrid Schaffner came to Philadelphia ten years ago as an adjunct curator at ICA. She's now the Senior Curator at the Institute on the University of Pennsylvania campus, with a passel of contemporary art exhibits under he belt. Schaffner has a an easy smile, a ready laugh, and an interest in the absurd, from Dali and Dada to more contemporary artists like Richard Artschwager, for whom she worked as an archivist, pre-Philadelphia. The curator is an art omnivore whose shows range from conceptual artists Barry Le Va and Karen Kilimnik to the whimsical Maira Kalman. She also organized the Puppet Show, about the influence of puppetry in art, and Queer Voice, about the role of the "queered" or distorted voice in contemporary art. Her fall show, opening Sept. 7, is Bill Walton's Studio, in which the late Philadelphia artist's studio will be recreated in ICA's Project Space. Ingrid, who grew up in Pittsburgh, co-founded a zine in the 1990s, Pink. ICA's Director, Claudia Gould, just moved to the Jewish Museum in New York, but just in case you're wondering, Schaffner doesn't want to be a museum director, as she tells us in this podcast, recorded on Aug 3, well before the Gould anouncement was made. | 9/3/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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20 |
CleanMatt Savitsky hits the road--on artblog radio | -- | 8/21/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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21 |
Cleanartblog radio Talks with Jordan Griska | Jordan Griska grew up in Narberth in a household he says was not arty. His mom and dad are both physicians and in fact Jordan was pre-med in college for a while until he changed his mind, switched to art, and transferred to Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Griska makes sculptures and installations from found parts and re-used materials. He has accordian-pleated a real gasoline pump (he bought it on eBay) transforming it into a small, R2D2-like version of a functioning pump. Now, he is working on a big commission for a large temporary sculptural for Lenfest Plaza, the new public space at Broad and Cherry Sts. "Grumman Greenhouse" features a Grumman Cold War-era defense plane (he also bought that on eBay). The artist is altering into a sculpture-cum-greenhouse. It will be placed in the space nose-down and wings-up as if it landed accidentally and tragically. We spoke with Griska at the Philadelphia Traction Company, a huge shared studio space that used to be a trolley barn many years ago. Grumman Greenhouse is scheduled to arrive in Lenfest Plaza Sept. 15 and will be inaugurated Oct. 1, along with the Claes Oldenburg Paintbrush. | 8/7/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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22 |
CleanJoe Leroux and Stacey Lee Webber come to Philadelphia and hope to create a shared studio space with their friends | Joe Leroux and Stacey Lee Webber moved to Philadelphia from Madison, WI. The young couple lives in Port Richmond, where they also have a studio nearby. They both have MFA’s from the University of Wisconsin. Joe’s work combines performance, photography and sculpture, in which the artist is the featured figure – kind of like Matthew Barney, only without all the makeup. Stacey’s a metalsmith and recently she's been making use of found coins and paper money, which she transforms into new objects like a complete step ladder out of pennies. They both teach at local art schools and they’ve both had success showing work nationally. Stacey will be in the “40 under 40: Craft Futures” exhibit at the Smithsonian’s Renwick Gallery next year. | 7/24/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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23 |
CleanThe unstoppable Amber Dorko Stopper talks to artblog radio | Whether Amber Dorko Stopper is fighting to resurrect Nam Jun Paik's "Video Arbor" installation, on Franklin Town Blvd., for which the software has degraded and fallen out of date, or whether she is devouring Korean horror movies and textile traditions--all of which grew out of a quest to help one of her adopted child know something about his Korean background--Stopper doesn't do anything halfway. When she started publishing a literary magazine, she bought a printing press. She started the publication because she didn't like what was going on in literary fiction! She dives into each new subject, swimming deep before coming up for air. Yet she is eclectic in her creations, which range from knitted sculptures, to hand-printed Tarot cards, to adaptations of African knitting traditions (another adopted child is African-American). We talked to Stopper on May 15, shortly before she was headed with her knitted artwork to the Juneteenth Festival in Olean, NY, for her first solo show. When she picks up a subject or a project or a skill, she is unstoppable and fierce. Below is a short sample clip from our interview, and below that, the full 15-minute 31-second podcast. | 7/10/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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24 |
CleanTyler Kline's southern gothic viscera | Tyler Kline’s art is influenced by mythology, by community and by his childhood in the small town of Stone Mountain, GA, a magical place to grow up in, with lakes and a pine forest and lots of heavy flowering magnolias and weeping willows. A bit Southern Gothic to hear the young artist talk about it. Tyler graduated from PAFA with an MFA this spring. His work has been shown locally at Little Berlin, where he is a member, at Rebekah Templeton and Vox Populi and before that at the now-closed skateboard shop, Minnow. He has made installations using sheets of aluminum foil and string; and objects out of aluminum foil that look like demons or fanciful human skulls. His MFA show featured small fantasy mountains of painted cast bronze with what appear to be dentures half hidden in the mix. He doesn’t shy away from using “ugh” factor materials like fingernail clippings, hair and teeth, and by the way, his father was a dentist. | 6/26/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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25 |
CleanAmir Lyles finds his own route, on artblog radio | Amir Lyles has used the brick dust that falls off the cellar walls to give his paint texture. He has also used bits of his beard. His house and his family are essential parts of the identity that he pours into his paintings, many of them with themes of African identity--but also Rastafarianism, jazz, and hiphop to soul. This self-taught artist is finding original ways of keeping his artwork real. Lyles is in a show opening June 18 at photographer Ken White’s gallery at Sharktown Studios. Photographers R. Alexander Trejo and Nicole Fusco; and mixed media by Amir Lyles City Arts Salon at Sharktown 155 Cecil B. Moore Ave. Studio 3D opening reception June 18, 3-7 pm hours Tues. 4:30-7:30 pm, Thurs.-Fri., 4:30-7 pm, and Sun., 3-6 pm | 6/12/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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26 |
CleanSusan Myers' world of ornamental metals | Susan Myers makes beautiful objects out of discarded wedding presents like those engraved silver tea trays that wind up in thrift shops after years of sitting in a drawer or on a shelf gathering dust. She also makes exquisite bows (like gift package bows) out of aluminum roof flashing. Myers’ work questions values and life styles and employs a lit of humor along the way. Susan has an MFA from Syracuse University and her solo show at the Museum of Ornamental Metal in Memphis last year was called “potently witty” and full of ambiguity and ambivalence. The artist, whose highly-crafted conceptual sculptures sit on the cusp of the high art/craft divide, talks about how the art and craft landscape is changing and about future trends that involve digital tools to guide metals fabrication. | 5/29/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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27 |
CleanDeep thoughts at Extra Extra, on artblog radio | The triumvirate who run Extra Extra aim their exhibitions at fellow artists. For the gallery's team of Derek Frech, Joe Lacina and Daniel Wallace, success is not defined by sales. Rather, it's defined by ideas, the conversation and the buzz the exhibit generates in Philadelphia's alternative art community. They want to get people thinking, and they themselves do a lot of thinking. Here's what they had to say. | 5/15/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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28 |
CleanClaes Gabriel on totems, voodoo, and growing up the son of a famous Haitian artist | Claes Gabriel (Claes is pronounced "Clays") is an artist whose work we encountered at Sande Webster Gallery in last year's "5 under 40" exhibit. We love his bright-colored totemic shapes made of stretched canvas over wood armatures. The artist was born in Port au Prince, Haiti in 1977, the son of noted Haitian painter Jacques Gabriel. Claes, who is named for Claes Oldenburg, came to the US in 1989. He studied at Maryland Institute College of Art (BFA 1999) and while right now he's in Philadelphia, his long-range plans involve living in Europe. | 4/28/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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29 |
CleanMichael Konrad reinvents a broken society on artblog radio | Artist Michael Konrad is a bit of a pessimist, using a semi-permanent material--plastic bags--to explore the end of a great civilization. Konrad's mournful installation was in the January 2011 Wind Challenge 2. His meticulously handcrafted mummy style sleeping bag and an American flag, his use of letters that lose their words, and words that lose their sentences, become artifacts of the city in post-industrial collapse. More than that, they become strategies for reinventing life. Konrad himself moved here with his young family from New York, taught himself to sew and iron, and his reinvented his own life in the process. | 4/18/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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30 |
CleanJennie Thwing on painting, video, humor and her religious background | Jennie Thwing‘s whimsical stop-action animations have tickled our visual funnybone for years — at the same time that they’ve made us think about issues like the environment and our culture of waste. The artist and educator (she teaches at Rowan University in New Jersey) is also a member of Nexus, one of Philly’s oldest alternative membership spaces. Thwing tells us about her religious upbringing and about starting out as a painter but never being satisfied with her paintings. Her videos are imbued with humor as well as a abashed sense of awe about the world. We recorded this podcast at WHYY studios on Independence Mall. | 4/3/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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31 |
CleanCarl Marin, Moby Dick and the end of hunting on artblog radio | Carl Marin's art, which includes sculpture, installation, photography and taxidermy, will be on exhibit at FLUXspace in June. The son of a hunter and taxidermist, Marin's puts animals in his work in surprising ways to explore man's changing relationship with the natural world. Marin's day job is making bikes at Bilenky Cycles. | 3/20/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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32 |
CleanCurators Jill and Sheldon Bonovitz on collecting art by self-taught artists | Collecting came early in the marriage of Jill and Sheldon Bonovitz. She’s a respected artist and he’s a high-powered lawyer and emeritus chairman of Duane Morris LLP and together they’ve amassed a collection of work by lesser known self-taught artists as well as those well-known in the genre – James Castle, Martin Ramirez, William Edmondson. The Bonovitzes live with the art they collect but will donate their collection to the Philadelphia Museum of Art in the future. Five years ago they created a foundation to educate people about self-taught American artists. Foundation STAART’s documentary movie about James Castle, directed by Jeffery Wolfe debuted at the 2008 Philadelphia International Film Festival. | 3/6/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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33 |
CleanAmze Emmons' shaky cityscapes--on artblog radio | Artist Amze Emmons' forlorn cityscapes of shaky, provisional dwellings seem ever more pertinent as we view on the news the tent cities in the center of Cairo. For his Refugee Reading Room exhibit at Space 1026 now in its last week, he curated in about 90 artists to contribute prints and zines. The work is free for the taking. He showed in 13 shows last year, from Philadelphia to Seattle to Osaka, Japan. And Emmons, who teaches at Muhlenberg College, is heavily involved in Printeresting, an amazing blog/art project all about printing (look for a Printeresting-curated show at this year's Southern Graphics Conference event in St. Louis). The dude is heavily networked! | 2/20/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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34 |
CleanDaniel Traub on photographing the interstices in Philadelphia and China | Daniel Traub's photographs of overgrown lots in North Philadelphia where rowhouses once stood have a mournful feel. While indomitable nature grows up tall where people once lived, these works are not so much about the man-nature struggle in the built environment. They're more about the way things are, the crumbling of the city. | 2/13/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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CleanJayson Scott Musson breaks the rules | -- | 2/6/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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36 |
CleanLeah Bailis on film and longing | Leah Bailis is known for her architecture fragments, which she makes, painstakingly, out of paper and cardboard. Her recent solo show at Vox Populi, where she is a member, took a new turn, into the realm of film and longing. Sculptures of a couple kissing, where it looks like one person is consuming the other and photos of herself dressed like Gustav von Auchenbach in the last scene from the movie Death in Venice. While she can't quite put her finger on why she's made the change or what it means, Bailis tells us she's obsessed with film and interested in the idea of longing. | 1/20/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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37 |
CleanAngel O - is there life after art school? | -- | 1/9/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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38 |
CleanKristen Taylor talks about landscape, Little Berlin and her own glass art | Kristen Taylor, co-founder of Little Berlin, an alternative space in Philadelphia, talks about curating "Landscape Techne" a show that delves into cyber-landscapes to discuss what's important about where we live and how we relate to space around us. | 12/19/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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39 |
CleanA return to printing by young artists is the subject of a talk with John Caperton, curator at The Print Center | Young artists are bringing new ideas to old printmaking methods. John Caperton, the curator of The Print Center, shares some history and talks about the success of Philagrafika, which brought in new excitement and a new audience to his institution. | 12/6/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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40 |
CleanTalk about art zines with founders of Machete and Possible Press | It's a great time for art zines in Philadelphia. Two new publications, Machete and Possible Press, expand the writing about art with critical commentary (Machete) and art writing by artists (Possible Press). We talk with Rachel and Trevor Reese of PP and David Dempewolf and Yuka Yokayama of Machete, who use the same publisher in Long Island City, Linco. Both couples also run project spaces where they show edgy interesting art. | 11/20/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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41 |
CleanMan Bartlett talks about a shaman in the jungle, a performance in Best Buy, and obsessive drawings | Man Bartlett traded in performing in front of a live audience for performing via social media. In our interview, he ponders the archiving of Twitter tweets and shopping at Best Buy. The son of painter Bo Bartlett, is showing a video--one of 124, all derived from television commercials--through Jan. 15 in the open-call COMVIDEO show at apexart, in New York. | 11/7/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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42 |
CleanLeslie Rogers on the female body in performance art - now on artblog radio | Leslie Rogers sews like a dream and makes costumes she wears in performances that are gender bending -- or about gender roles. She talks about her role in Puppetyranny, doing puppet shows in her mouth in which a male collaborator inserts a variety of tiny objects into her mouth and she interacts with them (chewing, spitting out, etc). Exhibitionism, voyeurism and creepy are all on the table for Leslie, who also has a great laugh and sense of humor about it all. | 10/24/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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43 |
CleanDennis Scholl on the Knight Challenge for Philadelphia | Vice President for Arts of the Knight Foundation, Dennis Scholl spoke in Philadelphia about how any great idea for the arts in Philadelphia has an equal chance of being funded. Scholl and his wife Debra are major art collectors in Miami and he talks about being a collector and about Miami's 5 private museums housing 5 private collections. | 10/17/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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44 |
CleanDiedra Krieger | Artist Diedra Krieger's videos are about the relationship between the camera and the subject, and they feature herself usually as her favorite subject, taking on identities that unsettle. She also has created interactive installations with repurposed water bottles embedded in geodesic domes in public spaces. Like her videos, these installations are about relationships, but the relationships here are between her and the public, and between humans and the environment. Krieger's most recent work is part of The Philadelphia Underground, in which Krieger and seven other artists project videos onto the walls and sculpture of the subway concourse the evenings of Oct. 8 to 11, 2010. | 10/10/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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45 |
CleanDufala Brothers | Brothers Steven and Billy Blaise Dufala grew up making art and music together. They still make objects and drawings, together and separately, and they compose music and Billy plays in a band (Stephen helped create the band but doesn't play in it anymore). Intense and funny, the classically trained brothers graduated from Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Recently they won a major prize for their works (the West Prize). And they are represented by the blue-chip Fleisher-Ollman Gallery in Philadelphia. | 9/26/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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46 |
CleanCurators Bob Cozzolino and Sid Sachs talk about public art | Is there too much public art in Philadelphia? What constitutes good public art? Curators Bob Cozzolino of Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and Sid Sachs of Rosenwald-Wolf Gallery of University of the Arts talk about these issues and more. | 9/10/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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47 |
CleanSande Webster | Center City gallery owner Sande Webster has some yarns to tell. She shares some personal history as she talks to us about art prices, selling (and refusing to sell) art, and how she makes the gallery business work for her. | 9/1/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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48 |
CleanJongKyuKim | The new exhibitions coordinator of Fleisher Art Memorial goes by Dave, but as a performance artist he’s been calling himself Jong Kyu Kim. He talks to us about celebrities, identity and living up to his family’s expectations. | 9/1/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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49 |
CleanPowhida&Dalton | New York art darlings William Powhida and Jennifer Dalton speak with us about jurying Vox VI and art politics. | 9/1/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| Total: 49 Episodes |
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