Hello podcast listeners, you've found our podcast archive! You'll now find all the latest podcasts from the RA on SoundCloud (https://soundcloud.com/royalacademy) , on iTunes (https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/royal-academy-of-arts/id1081046026) or on S
With public space being eroded in our cities and the internet subject to near pervasive surveillance, our panel explore whether spaces of freedom still exist, and if so, where.
In this podcast, Reinier de Graaf, partner at OMA, reflects on architecture's different roles in today's globalized world.
Tony Fretton and Ellis Woodman discuss the powerful, yet often overlooked contribution of James Gowan to twentieth-century British architecture.
In this podcast, part of our ‘Architecture and Freedom' season, newly elected Royal Academician, Farshid Moussavi, discusses architecture's function as an agent in shaping everyday life.
When Liotard travelled to London, his reputation was at its summit. This podcast with curator William Hauptman examines Liotard's astonishing portrait work while there, his impact on the London art scene and his connections with the Royal Academy between 1773 and 1774.
In this podcast, Tate conservator Rosie Freemantle and conservation curator Jo Crook discuss the development of the medium of pastel in the 18th century, the medium in which Jean-Etienne Liotard was an expert.
In this podcast, potter and writer Edmund de Waal and Scottish composer Martin Suckling discuss their recent collaboration, a piece of music played by Aurora Orchestra – and explore the meaning of the colour white across music, poetry and the visual arts.
In this podcast, our expert panel consider what architecture's responsibilities should be to the public good and whether it is time for architects to adopt a new code of ethics.
In this podcast, two distinguished Royal Academicians discuss what it is to draw, and why the process is so important for their work.
In this podcast, curator MaryAnne Stevens gives an introduction to the work of the artist Jean-Etienne Liotard. Travelling across Europe to Constantinople, patronised by rulers, aristocrats and the professional middle class, Liotard was internationally acclaimed for his mastery of pastel and his unflinching observation of reality, which he brought to his portraits, genre scenes and exceptional trompe l'oeil compositions.
In this podcast, art historian Professor Craig Clunas looks at the cultural role of materials in the art of Ai Weiwei.
Architect and theorist, Patrik Schumacher, considers the various parameters for architectural practice today, in the second lecture of our ‘Architecture and Freedom' season.
In this podcast, architect Niall McLaughlin and landscape architect Kim Wilkie discuss the history of the world and everything in between, as part of our ‘Dialogues' series.
In this podcast, curator Philip Tinari and architects Daniel Rosbottom and Simon Hartmann explore Ai Weiwei's wide-ranging and lesser known Architectural practice.
In the first lecture in our ‘Architecture and Freedom' season, German architect, Jürgen Mayer H discusses how architecture can facilitate social interactivity.
In partnership with Pin Drop, the RA hosted an exceptional evening of fiction and storytelling during Ai Weiwei's landmark exhibition with the highly acclaimed and award-winning author, Will Self.
This extract from the audioguide for the RA's blockbuster exhibition of the work of Ai Weiwei examines his work 'Fragments' (2005), in which the artist salvaged pillars and beams of “tieli”, Chinese ironwood, from demolished Qing dynasty temples, and worked with carpenters to create a structure of poles with linking arms.
Internationally acclaimed artist William Kentridge joins Tim Marlow, the RA's Director of Artistic Programmes, to discuss his career and work.
Artists Christian Marclay and Cornelia Parker RA discuss the impact of the ‘readymade' and the destructive process in art, as seen in the work of Ai Weiwei.
Curator Annette Wickham explores the story behind this epic drawing by Daniel Maclise and considers why such a remarkable work has been hidden from public view for almost a century.
Exhibition curator Adrian Locke introduces the work of Ai Weiwei and explains how the artist has used his art to comment on contemporary Chinese society.
Joseph Cornell has often been referred to as an ‘outsider' but he was accepted into the art market as a partial Surrealist at a time when the art of the self-taught had no name or definition. If he had been defined as an outsider, would he have had difficulty being accepted into the canon of 20th century art history? How would this definition change our approach to the display, interpretation and market for his work? This panel discussion considers what the new spaces are for outsider art and what the responsibilities are for those involved in the interpretation, collection, curation and sale of these works within the context of today's art world.
Joseph Cornell is one of the most famous yet mystifying characters in modern American art. Cornell scholar Lynda Roscoe Hartigan explores what recent studies in creativity and cognition have contributed to understanding his distinctive constructions, collages and films.
Exhibition curator Sarah Lea introduces ‘Joseph Cornell: Wanderlust', the first solo exhibition of this artist's groundbreaking collage and assemblage art in the UK for almost 35 years, and talks about the preparations involved in such an exhibition.
Art historian Professor Dawn Ades discusses Joseph Cornell's relationship with Surrealism, his engagement with the concept of time and the ongoing dialogue in his work between the ephemeral and the eternal.
In a keynote debate for the London Festival of Architecture, we debate how creativity can be nurtured and sustained in a global city like London.
In this podcast, celebrated British artist, Sir Peter Blake CBE, is in conversation with the RA's artistic director Tim Marlow, to discover why the work of Joseph Cornell has fascinated him throughout his career.
Peter Beard_LANDROOM's project for opening Rainham Marsh to public access received a special mention in the 2014 European Prize for Urban Public Space awards. To mark the opening of a new exhibition about the prize, this podcast offers an opportunity to hear from Beard and other architects who have been working in Rainham within the context of a strategy to improve the town's public infrastructure.
The RA hosted the inaugural RA and Pin Drop Short Story Award. In this podcast, Stephen Fry narrated the winning story, 'Ms. Featherstone and The Beast' by Bethan Roberts.
Sculptor Conrad Shawcross RA joined writer and Coordinating Chaplain at Nottingham Trent University, Revd Dr Richard Davey to discuss his courtyard installation for this year's Summer Exhibition, and the way his sculptures explore geometry, philosophy, physics and metaphysics.
Celebrated artist, influential teacher, Royal Academician and this year's Summer Exhibition Coordinator, Michael Craig-Martin CBE RA joins Tim Marlow to reflect on his career and discuss some of the ideas and events that have shaped his achievements as an artist and teacher.
Eileen Cooper RA discusses with art writer Anna McNay the role of drawing in her practice, and why she considers it to be neither just a preliminary or secondary art form.
Coinciding with the publication of Catherine Lampert's ‘Frank Auerbach: Speaking and Painting', Tim Marlow talks to the painter Frank Auerbach
Listen to Man Booker Prize-winning British author Howard Jacobson speak at the Royal Academy's Annual Dinner 2015. The subject of his talk is art, in all its guises, and what he calls "the urgent necessity of play" - for Jacobson, the heart of the creative act.
Since the housing crisis, the concept of home ownership has changed beyond recognition. Due to spiralling prices, a significant amount of our young population look forward to a lifetime of renting, while the wealthy buy property for financial investment, rather than actual living. Our eclectic panel of experts addresses these issues from a variety of different perspectives.
Garden cities? Loosen the green belt? With a panel including a surveyor, an academic, an urban design expert and the head of a charity, this talk tackles the issue of where to build new housing. (295850)
In this event, a range of speakers examine the characteristics of places where people enjoy living and communities thrive, and discuss whether these can be applied in the future. The discussion shies away from abstract theory, in favour of concrete models taken from real life experience.
Together with the academic and writer Jacques Gubler, architect Bernard Tschumi discusses the work of his father, Jean Tschumi, an important figure in the Modern Movement. This talk forms part of a series reconsidering forgotten or overlooked figures in the history of architecture.
Continuing with our Future of Housing season, a panel of experts discuss how we might design homes that are appropriate and beneficial places to live. Drawing on both politics and aesthetics, this talk interrogates the housing crisis from a social point of view.
Famous for his letter to the then Secretary of State for Education, Michael Gove, the artist talks about the value of art in the school curriculum and the importance of visual communication since the beginning of civilisation.
Professor Robert Meyrick, co-curator of the RA's ‘Stanley Anderson' exhibition, introduces this printmaker, best known for his series of engravings memorialising England's vanishing rural crafts.
A lecture by Winy Mass, the founder of MVRDV, one of world's most innovative architectural practices. In this talk, Maas focuses on numerous housing projects, including the just completed Markthal in Rotterdam. He explores how the practice creates housing of consistent ingenuity, warmth and conceptual integrity for a variety of clients all over the world.
Artist Whitney McVeigh discusses an excerpt of her film-based artwork that asks women at the end of their life to talk about their experience and memories of birth.
Curator Edith Devaney explores the RA's exhibition of Richard Diebenkorn, giving an overview of his career and considers why one of America's most celebrated 20th century artists hasn't been shown to a UK audience for more than 20 years.
As the RA celebrated International Women's Day on 8 March, this panel of female artists explores what it is like to be a woman in today's art world.
In this podcast, Professor Lord Richard Harries of Pentregarth, former Bishop of Oxford, speaks to Tim Marlow, Director of Artistic Programmes at the RA about the way modern and contemporary art responds to the visual narratives of Christianity.
In this discussion, part of a series of events called ‘The Future of Housing', a panel considers the effects and implications of the UK's housing crisis.
Gretchen Diebenkorn Grant discusses the life and work of artist Richard Diebenkorn, her father.
In this podcast, a choreographer, an architect and an historian explore how our perception and comprehension of the world is shaped by the body and movement.
Art historian and curator MaryAnne Stevens explores the impact of Rubens on the Impressionists.
Would Lady Mary really have said that Lady Sybil was "banging on about her new frock", in 1912? British linguist David Crystal discusses his new book, 'Words in Time and Place'.