Revolutionaries

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Revolutionaries is a podcast from Edinburgh College of Art at the University of Edinburgh about people who have changed our world.

Edinburgh College of Art


    • Apr 13, 2022 LATEST EPISODE
    • monthly NEW EPISODES
    • 18m AVG DURATION
    • 10 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from Revolutionaries

    In celebration of International Women: '5 women, 5 questions', episode 3 with Professor Catharine Ward Thompson.

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2022 7:09


    We're delighted to introduce the third podcast, by Prof. Catharine Ward Thompson. Professor Catharine Ward Thompson focuses their research through Open Space on inclusive access outdoors and is interested in links between people getting outdoors into the landscape; anything open to the sky. Read more about the series and view a full transcript on the ECA website.

    In celebration of International Women: '5 women, 5 questions', episode 5 with Professor Sarah Kettley.

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2022 8:36


    We're delighted to introduce the final podcast, by Prof. Sarah Kettley. Professor Kettley talks about about their research on the way design as a process can embody different attitudes and wearable technologies as an example of this. Read more about the series and view a full transcript on the ECA website.

    In celebration of International Women: '5 women, 5 questions', episode 4 with Professor Karen Forbes.

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2022 5:21


    We're delighted to introduce the fourth podcast, by Prof. Karen Forbes. Professor Karen Forbes talks about their research in contemporary fine art practice, working at the intersection of art and architecture. Read more about the series and view a full transcript on the ECA website.

    In celebration of International Women: '5 women, 5 questions', episode 2 with Dr Jenny Nex.

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2022 5:32


    Dr Jenny Nex (Musical Instrument Collection) talks about their research around musical instruments and musical instrument makers from 18th and 19th century Britain. Find more details and a full transcript on the ECA website.

    In celebration of International Women: '5 women, 5 questions', episode 1 with Professor Jill Burke.

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2022 6:26


    We're delighted to introduce the first podcast, by Prof. Jill Burke. Professor Burke talks about the historical pressure of beauty ideals for women, and her upcoming book, “How to Be a Renaissance woman”, due for publication in June 2023. Read more about the series and view a full transcript on the ECA website.

    Mario Praz

    Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2019 30:56


    On this episode we’re discussing Mario Praz, the Italian critic and academic who wrote on English literature and, the main topic of this episode, interior design and decoration. Born in Rome in 1896, Praz studied in Bolognia, Rome and Florence, and taught at, among other places, the University of Liverpool. Praz’s writings on interior design changed the way many people thought about the subject, raising the idea of furnishings and decorations being a reflection of the individual. Whether fitting or ironic, given his scholarly work, Mario Praz’s residence in Rome has been preserved as a museum. Our guest who’ll be arguing for Praz’s status as a revolutionary is Professor Ed Hollis, Personal Chair of Interior Design at Edinburgh College of Art. Having work with follies and ruins in Sri Lanka, modern interventions to historic buildings in Scotland, and in the discipline of Interiors, Hollis' research and theoretical thinking has moved towards building stories and narrative structures that connect time, folk tale, and the built environment. Revolutionaries is produced and recorded at Edinburgh College of Art, and is hosted by Ardie Collins from the Engagement and Communications Team. Music is Noahs Stark by krackatoa.

    Paul Durand-Ruel

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2019 30:38


    On this episode, we’re discussing the art dealer Paul Durand-Ruel. Born in Paris in 1831, Durand-Ruel took over his father’s business as an art dealer a few years before the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War, during which time he escaped to London. It was around this time that he became familiar with a new group of artists called the Impressionists. He became an advocate of their artistic work, seeing their potential for commercial success long before many others in the art world. He is credited with helping to establish some of the best-known artists of this period, including Degas, Manet, Monet, Pissarro and Renoir. Stating the case for Paul Durand-Ruel as a revolutionary is Professor Frances Fowle, Personal Chair of Nineteenth-Century Art at Edinburgh College of Art and Senior Curator of French Art at National Galleries Scotland. Her specialist area is European and American nineteenth-century art, with an emphasis on collecting, the art market, national identity, cultural revival and artistic networks. She is Senior Trustee of the Burrell Collection in Glasgow and sits on the Burrell Renaissance Board. She is also a founding Board member of the International Art Market Studies Association and is on the steering committee for the European Revivals Research Network, initiated by the Ateneum Art Museum in Helsinki. Revolutionaries is produced and recorded at Edinburgh College of Art, and is hosted by Ardie Collins from the Engagement and Communications team. Music is Noahs Stark by krackatoa.

    Ruth Berghaus

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2019 29:14


    On this episode, we’re discussing the choreographer and opera and theatre director, Ruth Berghaus. Born in Dresden in 1927, Berghaus studied expressionist dance and dance direction at the German Academy of Arts in Berlin and went on to direct several major productions from the early 1960s to the early 90s. Her style of production was heavily influenced by the work of Bertolt Brecht, having worked as part of the Berliner Ensemble that Brecht co-founded with his wife Helene Weigel. Berghaus’ professional career was during an era when Germany was split in two shortly after the end of the second world war, a split that became more obvious as a physical barrier with the arrival of the Berlin Wall that ran through the capital from 1961 to 1989. Berghaus worked on both sides of the wall during her career, putting on productions that were funded by both governments and that often critiqued both the East and the West, as well as gender roles and the reverential treatment of canonical operas and plays. Stating the case for Ruth Berghaus as a revolutionary is Dr Elaine Kelly. Elaine is the Head of Music at Edinburgh College of Art where her teaching includes honours courses on “Music and State Socialism in the Twentieth Century” and “Wagner: Music, Philosophy, and Culture”. Her research interests span several broad themes including canon reception, music historiography, opera production, and Marxist aesthetics, many of which coalesce in her work on the German Democratic Republic. Revolutionaries is produced and recorded at Edinburgh College of Art, and is hosted by Ardie Collins from the Engagement and Communications team. Music is Noahs Stark by krackatoa.

    The Virgin Saints

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2019 29:37


    On this episode, we’re discussing the Virgin Saints. This grouping of early Christian saints pulls together stories of women from different corners of the world and spanning many centuries. They include tales of people rising from the dead, a woman whose eyes are gouged out either by someone else or herself (depending on who you ask), and a woman who came to symbolise French resistance against the English during the Hundred Years’ War. Many of the stories serve as a counterbalance to the focus on men’s stories in religious texts, and, given the nature of sainthood and patronage in the Catholic Church, are called upon daily by people to help them with all aspects of their lives. Stating the case for the Virgin Saints as revolutionaries is Lindy Richardson. Lindy is the Textiles Programme Director and curator of the historic Needlework Development Scheme embroidery collection at Edinburgh College of Art. Her curation work has included the gathering of oral histories across the UK to compliment the sample and archival collection. She is currently working on an exhibition of the collection which will take place in the Main Library in George Square from November 2019 - February 2020. Find out more about the St Clare project: http://www.eca.ed.ac.uk/st-clare-project Send your materials for the St Clare shroud: http://www.eca.ed.ac.uk/st-clare-submission Revolutionaries is produced and recorded at Edinburgh College of Art, and is hosted by Ardie Collins from the Engagement and Communications team. Music is Noahs Stark by krackatoa.

    Andy Warhol

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2019 29:52


    Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1928, Andy Warhol's early career began in advertising where he worked as a designer and illustrator. In the 1960s, he began exhibiting the iconic pop art work that we now associate with him, and he soon became one of the world's most famous artists. But what was it about him and his work that was revolutionary, and what effect does he continue to have to the present day? Our guest is Dr Glyn Davis, a Reader in Screen Studies at Edinburgh College of Art. Glyn has researched and written extensively about film and television and has a particular interest in experimental cinema and artists' film and video. He ran a Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) on Andy Warhol in 2014 and 2015 and was co-editor of "Warhol in Ten Takes", published by the BFI. He is currently the project leader of the Cruising the 1970s research project, a pan-European queer history project involving researchers from Germany, Spain, Poland and the UK. Revolutionaries is produced and recorded at Edinburgh College of Art, and is hosted by Ardie Collins from the Engagement and Communications team. Music is Noahs Stark by krackatoa.

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