Welcome to the podcast "Art Life Stories with Sarah Story." Story has spent over a decade working in art museums in order to enrich the lives of individuals and communities and is currently Executive Director of the Mississippi Arts Commission based in Jackson, MS. Art Life Stories is a podcast that explores the careers, contributions, discoveries and ideas across many creative disciplines. Sarah talks with leaders in a variety of creative fields to explore the unique skills needed to succeed, the rhythms of balancing work and life, and practical advice for anyone that is interested in pursuing similar paths. I hope that listeners are inspired to connect to their own creativity and learn how to engage with a variety of art forms in order to broaden their perspectives and enrich their lives. You can find out more at sarahstoryartlife.com and follow along on instagram @sarah_story_artlife. Episodes are available on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Thank you for tuning in!
Episode 26 - Ida Floreak is a painter living in New Orleans, LA. Her work deals with ecological anxieties paired with reverence for the natural world. She explores what it means to be human in a time of ecological disaster, where to find hope and our place in the recovery, as well as the universal human trait of worship. Humanity is an ancient and vital part of the planets ecology - our belief systems and rituals are an integral facet of nature. Drawing from a classical tradition with influences in the Italian Renaissance and medieval reliquaries, she examines the importance of acknowledging a world and systems greater than oneself, and finding the sacred in the smallest artifacts of nature.
Sarah catches up with the Mississippi Book Festival's Executive Director Ellen Daniels & Deputy Director Jordan Perry about the upcoming festival 8/20/22 in Jackson, MS! Having served as the festival's Literary Director for the past three years, Ellen continues to draw on her longtime love of books—and her extensive relationships with the publishing industry—in her new role as Executive Director. In addition to her prior work as a gallery assistant at Fischer Galleries and her own fine art photography training, Ellen also brings more than a decade of experience at Lemuria Books to her leadership position.Having spent most of her career in the non-profit sector, Jordan brings to the festival nearly a decade of experience in fundraising, capacity-building, and event logistics. Through her work with the Mississippi Museum of Art and the Mississippi Arts Commission, she's seen first-hand the breadth and impact of our state's rich cultural heritage and looks forward to building on the festival's success to broaden its reach even further.Follow along @msbookfestival for announcements of authors & panelists!
Veronica Roberts - the new Executive Director of the Cantor Arts Center at Stanford!Veronica has had an incredible curatorial career. She was working the Blanton in Austin since 2013 as the curator of modern and contemporary art. At the Blanton, she put on a number of notable exhibitions: national touring displays of “Nina Katchadourian: Curiouser” and “Converging Lines: Eva Hesse and Sol LeWitt”; work uplifting Texan artists like Vincent Valdez and Donald Moffett; and a collaboration with the UT Austin's Black Studies program to bring Charles White's work on campus. Roberts also worked with Ellsworth Kelly to create “Austin,” a 2,715-square-foot stone chapel-sculpture with colored glass windows that opened in early 2018. Before the Blanton Museum, Roberts held curatorial positions at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York, the Indianapolis Museum of Art and the Whitney Museum. She also served as Director of Research for the Sol LeWitt Wall Drawing Catalogue Raisonné. Roberts earned her master's from the University of California, Santa Barbara, and her bachelor's in art history from Williams College.
Joy Young, Ph.D. serves as the Vice President of Programs for South Arts and has more than 25 years of experience in the arts as an entrepreneurial performing artist, arts administrator, and academic. Joy's work as a performing artist included owning a successful music studio and performing as a recitalist, sanctuary soloist, and studio and background vocalist. Her 14-year tenure with the South Carolina Arts Commission was highlighted by serving on the executive leadership team as the agency Director of Administration, Human Resources, and Operations. Prior to joining South Arts, Joy served as the Executive Director of the Cultural Council of Greater Jacksonville.Joy enjoys sharing her experiences from the field in the classroom by preparing the next generation of arts administrators in the Master of Arts in Arts Administration at Winthrop University to be adaptive leaders. Joy holds a Bachelor of Arts in Music, Master of Arts in Voice Performance, and the Ph.D. in Organizational Leadership. Her research interests include arts leadership, program assessment and evaluation, and organization and leadership adaptations amid dynamic environmental paradigms.
Sarah talks with Nell Knox, the Deputy Director at Visit Mississippi & Kamel L. King, the Bureau Manager for the Tourism Development Bureau at Visit Mississippi, our state tourism agency.Kamel King was born and raised in Jackson, MS. Kamel attended American University (Washington, D.C.) and Tougaloo College (Jackson, MS) and graduated with honors from Tougaloo College earning a bachelor's degree in Political Science/International Relations. Kamel was accepted and graduated from Mississippi College School of Law earning a law degree with emphasis on intellectual property/entertainment law. Kamel spent 10 years as the Attorney on the Road for a 9 time GRAMMY nominated group, was a Director of Operations for both Blackberry Records, Inc. and Terminal Recording Studios (a GRAMMY award winning studio) and has had many years of experience in booking and event production. Kamel has since been Ass. Producer in the Recording Academy© endorsed “Mississippi…Celebrates Its GRAMMY© Legacy ” events, “Mississippi Night” at the L.A. GRAMMY© Museum and other tourism conferences. Kamel also is a contributing author in the American Bar Association released book "Entertainment Law: For The General Practitioner" and has been an adjunct professor of Entertainment Law with the Mississippi College School of Law. He is a practicing veteran entertainment attorney. Kamel is most proud and passionate to currently work for Visit Mississippi as the Bureau Manager for the Tourism Development Bureau. His bureau manages the Mississippi Blues Trail, Country Music Trail, Freedom Trail, Writers Trail and the state's rich music and cultural branding at many trade shows and festivals. Nell Knox is the Deputy Director at Visit Mississippi. Nell believes you cannot understand American history without understanding Mississippi's stories, and you cannot understand Mississippi's stories unless you visit in person. Supporting Mississippi's tourism industry is central to her career. Nell has worked in public service for more than a decade. She began at the Mississippi Department of Archives & History as a graduate intern in marketing and joined the MDAH public relations team during the completion and grand opening of the Museum of Mississippi History and Mississippi Civil Rights Museum. She went on to serve as Marketing Director for the entire agency, promoting the thirteen museums and cultural attractions the department administers. Nell is a passionate volunteer. She has chaired events and led fundraising initiatives for the Junior League of Jackson, Briarwood Pool, the Mississippi Heritage Trust, and St. Andrews Episcopal School, and served on the board of the Mississippi Tourism Association. She presently serves on the board of directors for the Southeast Tourism Society.
Chad Mars grew up in Jackson Mississippi, and attended the University of Mississippi where he earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts with an emphasis in Painting in 2004. He began working as a full time painter in 2012 and has painted out of his Studio in Ridgeland for the last decade. His work captures improvised gestures, and makes the material the subject. Mars works with large homemade squeegees, paint scrapers, taping knives, and palette knives to make a web of kaleidoscopic and ribbon like strokes that constantly shift and blend into on another.
Nina Parikh has been with the Mississippi Film Office for 23 years, currently serving as the director. Established in 1973, the Film Office is one of the oldest of its kind in the world. The office's mission is to foster the growth of the film industry in Mississippi, connect filmmakers with necessary resources and to cultivate and promote filmmaking by, for and about Mississippians.She studied filmmaking at the University of Southern Mississippi and New York University, began her career as a freelance camera assistant, worked in the industry as a producer, and teaches a film production class at Millsaps College. She produced the Mississippi made film “Ballast” which won two awards at Sundance Film Festival in 2009. She serves on the boards of 3 college-level institutions, advising on film & media curriculum development; developed the curriculum and served as director for the Canton Young Filmmakers Summer Program; and co-wrote a book about digital video for the amateur.Nina is a co-founder and board member of the Crossroads Film Festival & Society and Mississippi Film Alliance, a non-profit supporting indigenous filmmaking. Additionally, she serves on the boards of the Association of Film Commissioners International, South Arts, Mississippi Book Festival, Creative Mississippi, and is a producer of TEDxJackson.Most importantly, she's a wife and a mom to their 12 year old son.
New Art Life Stories Episode 18: Today I catch up with Hattie Sparks Collins - a creative entrepreneur with a new interior design firm Hattie Sparks where she is the owner, creative, and decorator!She is also known for her former, beautifully curated stores Hattie Sparks in New Orleans. We discuss her influences such as art history and the places she has lived. She shares the hustle it takes to learn and create new businesses, and the many lessons she has learned along the way.
Sarah and Chris discuss a few absurd recent NFT news items. Melania's auction fails to hit its minimum due to the crypto crash, Bieber shows off his newest NFT, and a famous Klimt is “digitally divided” into 1,000 pieces to purchase for Valentine's Day gifts.
Episode 16: I talk with David & Mike about the re-envisioning of the planetarium in Jackson, MS! I grew up going to the planetarium so it was fun to contemplate how our view of planetariums have changed so drastically with access to new technology, new documentation of space from the newly launched James Webb Space Telescope Launch, and private citizens access to space travel. Mike Williams: Director of Russell C. Davis PlanetariumMike Williams, Jackson native and a staunch space science education advocate and self-avowed cosmic nerd. After studying Mass Communications and Graphic Design at Jackson State, Mike embarked upon a career in music production and engineering, training at Malaco records and eventually going on to work on Grammy-nominated musical projects. Along the way his professional range grew to include web development, marketing, and video and film production, including years-long creative and marketing stints with Sean “P. Diddy” Combs Global Enterprises, production on MPB's Emmy-winning children's show Ed Said, projects with the Bravo!, OWN, and BET networks, Random House and Penguin Publishing, and a host of other media entities. After living in six different states and two countries, Mike arrived back in Jackson at its planetarium as a production technician, where he would 4 years later become its director. It was then that his new mission of advocacy began to crystallize, and his vision of revitalizing the planetarium began to take shape.David Lewis: Deputy Director of the Department of Human and Cultural Services for the City of Jackson, overseeing the Cultural Division.Born and raised in Belhaven, David is undeniably passionate about the city of Jackson. His commitment to finding creative ways to bring life, energy, and awareness to the great places, spaces, and people of Jackson is unwavering. A 2015 graduate of Mississippi State University, David earned a Bachelor's Degree in Architecture. From 2016-2018, David pursued a Master's Degree in Urban and Regional Planning at Jackson State University while he also worked as a Project Specialist for the Greater Jackson Arts Council. David is also a member of the Advisory Council for Downtown Jackson Partners. In his role as Deputy Director, he works with the Arts Center of Mississippi, the Russell C. Davis Planetarium, the Smith Robertson Museum, the Municipal Art Gallery, and serves as Manager of Thalia Mara Hall, where he helped usher in a 35% increase in revenue during the 2018-2019 fiscal year. David received the AIA “Friend of Architecture” award in 2018 and Visit Jackson's SUMMIT “Friend of Tourism” award in 2020. David and his wife, Mary Lee, attend church at Redeemer Jackson and reside in Belhaven with their dogs, Sam and Jack.
Episode 13: New & LAST episode of “Art Life Stories” for 2021! Kara Tucina Olidge, PhD is a scholar and arts and educational administrator. She serves as the executive director of the Amistad Research Center at Tulane University in New Orleans, LA and is the former deputy director of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, a branch of the New York Public Library based in Harlem.
NEW EPISODE with Sarah Frances Hardy, Children's author/illustrator! ⚖️
NEW “Art Life Stories” episode! Heidi Anderson is the CEO of The Trail Foundation, the nonprofit organization that works to protect, enhance, and connect the Ann and Roy Butler Hike-and-Bike Trail for the benefit of all.
Monique currently works as the Managing Director for the Center for Art and Public Exchange (CAPE) at the Mississippi Museum of Art (MMA) and also serves at the Chief Equity and Inclusion Officer. CAPE is a Kellogg funded initiative that uses artwork, exhibitions, engagement with artists, and programming as a vehicle to have conversations about race and equity. Monique is responsible for creating brave spaces that expand visitor's perspectives and reveal our shared humanity. Monique is deeply committed to the belief that art has the power to transform and inform us. Monique is a CPA, and a graduate of Howard University. Prior to her tenure at the Museum, Monique served as the Senior Program Manager for Parents for Public Schools of Jackson. Her primary responsibility was teaching parents how to be effective advocates for their children. This was accomplished by creating workshops that helped parents navigate bureaucratic, and often dehumanizing systems. Her career has been a winding path that has resulted in her owning and operating a restaurant, advocating for homeless veterans at the federal level, and creating safe spaces for nursing mothers.
New episode “Art Life Stories” podcast! Erin Austen Abbott is a woman of many talents: a photographer, writer, content creator, curator, & interior designer!We discuss:
In this episode I speak with Jessie Haynes, Managing Director of The Helis Foundation in New Orleans, LA. We discuss:The role of a foundation Transitioning from being an attorney to running a foundation The role of art and public art and the projects around New Orleans they fund such as Art for All: The Helis Foundation Free Days; the Poydras Corridor Sculpture Exhibition presented by The Helis Foundation; and Unframed, the first multi-mural exhibition of large scale artwork in Downtown New OrleansHer experience as a board member for organizations such as Ogden, PRC, Arts Council of New OrleansJessie received her B.A. from Newcomb College of Tulane University, majoring in English and Art History, and her J.D. from Loyola University College of Law. After serving as a judicial law clerk, practicing law in the private sector, and directing programs on the staff of a statewide public policy organization, she joined The Helis Foundation in 2014. Jessie received Gambit Weekly's “40 Under 40” honor in 2017, was a CityBusiness Women of the Year in 2017 and one of New Orleans Magazine's “People to Watch” in 2015 and Adore Magazine's “Most Influential New Orleanians” in 2020. Listen to this episode on sarahstoryartlife.com, Spotify, or apple podcast. You can follow us on instagram @sarah_story_artlife, @jhaynes1979, @poydrascorridor, and TheHelisFoundation.org. Thank you for tuning in! Please DM any questions or comments on my instagram.
In this episode, Sarah Talks with Elizabeth Abston, a fine art appraiser and art consultant based in Jackson, MS. They discuss the role of an art consultant and how to start collecting. Elizabeth shares how art values are determined and the purpose of an appraisal. She also shares her experience working in visual arts museums, galleries, teaching middle school, and managing arts residencies in San Antonio and Jackson. There is also an exciting upcoming project with the estate of artist Andrew Bucci that she is organizing for venues around the state of Mississippi. Elizabeth was employed as the Curator of American Art for over four years at the Mississippi Museum of Art in Jackson before founding her own business in 2019. In her professional capacity, she appraises fine art for a variety of estate, federal, and insurance purposes, works with clients on building and managing their art collections, and participates in curatorial projects with museums and nonprofits.Abston has a MA in art history from the University of Texas, San Antonio and a BA from Rhodes College in Memphis, TN. She studied art in Siena and Florence, Italy through the Richmond University of London. Her previous experience includes time at the contemporary artist residency and gallery Artpace as an arts educator and two years in collections management at the McNay Art Museum, both in San Antonio, Texas. A member of the International Society of Appraisers since 2019, Abston has been a longtime member of professional organizations including the Southeastern Museum Conference (SEMC) and the Association of Art Museum Curators (AAMC).You can find Elizabeth on instagram @eafineart_ms and www.eafineart.com
Kristen Ley is the founder & creative director of Thimblepress®. Thimblepress® loves to create products to help elevate & showcase personal style, make memories, fill a room with color, create smiles & deliver happiness. Kristen & Thimblepress has worked or collaborated with Anthropologie, Urban Outfitters, Nordstrom, Paper Source, Target, Hallmark, Moon & Lola, Glitter Guide, Speak Wines, Eccolo, Calypso Cards, Avanti Linens, Prima, Enchante, Homegoods, T.J. Maxx, Dillard's, Staples, Barnes & Noble, Altar'd State, Keds, & many more licensing partners & retailers.One of Kristen's biggest passions is encouraging others. She launched KristenLey.com in 2018 & offers monthly mentoring, creative calls, resource guides & templates to help an individual or brand take next steps in developing products, marketing plans, new revenue streams, or levering artwork for licensing.In Kristen's free time, she enjoys traveling, & hanging out with her fiancé Bill Allen and her two pups, Willow & Henry.Listen to this episode on sarahstoryartlife.com, Spotify, or apple podcast. You can follow us on instagram @sarah_story_artlife, @Thimblepress, @Kristen_ley, Thimblepress.com, and KristenLey.com . Hope you enjoy! Please DM any questions or comments on my instagram.
In this episode, Sarah speaks with Jaclyn Bethany, an actress and Emmy award winning filmmaker. Called "fast rising" and "one to watch" by Variety Magazine, she is a recent graduate of the prestigious American Film Institute Conservatory with an M.F.A. in Directing. She has written, produced and directed numerous short films which have played festivals worldwide. Her AFI Thesis Film The Delta Girl starring Isabelle Fuhrman and Caitlin Carver premiered at HollyShorts in 2018. Jaclyn's work focuses on complex women, stories rooted in her Southern upbringing, complex female protagonists and LGBTQ stories from the female gaze.In addition to AFI, Ms. Bethany holds a B.A. in Acting from Fordham University, an M.A. in Screenwriting from The London Film School. The Rehearsal, her digital series in which she created and stars, won a 2020 Emmy Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Digital Drama for actress Tina Benko. Her first feature film Indigo Valley was released by Giant Pictures and is available via Amazon and Apple TV. You can find out more on https://www.imdb.com/name/nm5794274/ ! Follow along her instagram @Jaclyn_bethany
LIVE FROM ISTANBUL! I get to catch up with my friend Alan, who has a career in private banking in New York City and is an Ambassador for Contemporary Istanbul Art Fair. Alan became fascinated with a Jackson Pollock painting which led him on a path to learn more about art, collecting, art fairs, and art galleries. He explains how he is constantly developing his appreciation and understanding for the visual arts and how it enriches his life. Tune in to learn more about how to become involved in the arts without necessarily pursuing it as a career. Please check out this episode on sarahstoryartlife.com, Spotify, or apple podcast. You can follow us on instagram @sarah_story_artlife, @alanrios27, @contemporaryistanbul. Hope you enjoy! Please leave any questions or comments on my instagram.
Sarah is interviewed by her husband, Chris Ragland, to talk about her career path of working in three art museums in three states to running a statewide arts agency. Instagram @Sarah_story_artlife
Sarah speaks with Mary Sanders Ferriss, Owner and Founder, and Elizabeth Fowler, Operations Director, of Ferriss & Company, a interdisciplinary design studio that helps companies with everything from branding, interior design to customer service. Learn more at https://www.ferrissandco.com or on Instagram @Ferissandcompany
Sarah speaks with Gallery Founder + Director Claire Thriffiley about the joys and frustrations of running a gallery in New Orleans during a pandemic and after Hurricane Ida. You can learn more about Claire and her gallery http://www.claireelizabethgallery.com or on instagram @ClaireElizabethGallery.