POPULARITY
This series of conversations with art educators, practitioners and makers expands on the ideas presented by Visualise: The Runnymede Trust and Freelands Foundation 2024 report on Race & Inclusion in Secondary School Art Education. In this episode 'Art Outside the Classroom' we are joined by Dr Sadegh Aleahmad, an Iranian-born multi-disciplinary artist, facilitator and lecturer based in London. Sadegh's practice explores dynamics of his diasporic identity by experimenting with mirrors and voice. Today, we discuss Sadegh's art education work beyond the classroom, enabling new ways of thinking, creating and coming together in community.Freelands Foundation works to broaden access to art education and the visual arts across the UK. They work with teachers and educators to develop diverse and ambitious approaches to art education. Read the report Visualise report here. Executive producer and host Lou MensahShade Podcast InstagramShade Podcast WebsiteMusic King Henry IV original composition for Shade Podcast by Brian JacksonEdit & Mix by Tess DavidsonPodcast design Joel Antoine-WilkinsonShade Art Review Help support the work that goes into creating Shade Podcast. https://plus.acast.com/s/shadepodcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Art Outside is back for season 2. In this episode we're yarnbombing with crochet artist Nicole Nikolich, who goes by the name Lace in the Moon. We joined her in October of 2024 to put up a 7 foot tall drag queen in Love Park for her recent project for To the Polls. We'll talk about their journey with art and mental health, the realities of an artist slump and what it all has to do with Taylor Swift.
We're back with Season 2 of Art Outside, a podcast from WHYY about the art of our public spaces and the people who create it. We're taking you around Philly to learn about all kinds of art outside. From commissioned works in Love Park and the 9th Street Market. To more ephemeral works like wheatpasting on a shuttered UArts building. As multiple art institutions around the city close, the state of Philly's famed arts world feels particularly fragile. On this season of Art Outside we're thinking about where Philly goes from here as we explore this dynamic world.
Every city has its list of unspoken rules. No matter where you live in the city, there might be some things you just don't know. Host Trenae Nuri is joined by Conrad Benner, founder of StreetsDept.com, curator at Mural Arts and host of WHYY's Art Outside podcast and Nicole Phoenix, standup comedian and curator at Fringe Fest to create a list of essential rules of life in Philly. Want some more Philly news? Then make sure to sign up for our morning newsletter Hey Philly. We're also on Twitter and Instagram! Follow us @citycastphilly. Have a question or just want to share some thoughts with the team? Leave us a voicemail or send us a text at 215-259-8170. Interested in advertising with City Cast? Find more info here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode of Icelandic Art Center's Out there podcast we speak with artists Gunnhildur Hauksdóttir and Unnar Örn, who are board members at Safnasafnið, The Icelandic Folk and Outsider Art Museum. The Icelandic Folk and Outsider Art Museum was founded in 1995 by Níels Hafstein and Magnhildur Sigurðardóttir in Svalbardseyri, in north Iceland. For 30 years the founders and board of the museum have focused their attention on collecting work, and often extensive bodies of works, by artists whose contributions to art have existed outside the cultural mainstream and collections, and have been considered folk, naïve or outsider artworks. We discuss the role of the museum, some of the language around categorizing art and artists, and the summer exhibitions, including; Dark Deeds and the Light of Hope and Aesthetics of Senses and Delights curated by Níels Hafstein, Source by Nína Óskarsdóttir and Who Came Through by Jasa Baka curated by Gunnhildur Hauksdóttir, Sale by Arnar Herbertsson curated by Unnar Örn, Domestic Spirit by Svava Skúladóttir curated by Gunnhildur Hauksdóttir, Deities by Bimala Dutta curated by Gunnhildur Hauksdóttir and Assortments by Örn Karlsson curated by Níels Hafstein. There are over 13 exhibitions and hangs on display now so to read more about the variety visit the museum's website. The Icelandic Folk and Outsider Art Museum was founded in 1995 by Níels Hafstein and Magnhildur Sigurðardóttir. For over 30 years the museum's founders have been passionately committed to collecting artworks by artists who have hitherto been seen as outside the cultural mainstream, often also called naïve or outsider artists who have a real and direct connection to an original creative spirit; true, unspoiled and free. The museum is unique in Iceland, initially collecting artworks by all major contemporary folk artists and autodidacts in Iceland, forming the core of the collection, while also gradually acquiring an excellent collection of art by professional artists, whose works cohere with exhibition and collection policies. It is of importance that all the artworks presented are on an equal footing, in exhibitions as well as the collections. The core collection consists today of thousands of artworks and sketches by over 300 artists, dating from the mid19th century to the present. https://safnasafnid.is/exhibitions-2024/ @gunnitune @unnar.orn at @safnasafnid @ninaoskarsdottir @jasa.baka // Created and produced by the Icelandic Art Center, Out There brings co-hosts Becky Forsythe @beforsythe and Þórhildur Tinna Sigurðardóttir @tindilfaetta in conversation with artists, curators and art professionals at Borgarbókasafn. #OutTherePodcast #IcelandicArtCenter #IcelandicArt #IcelandicArtist #Iceland #VisualArt #ContemporaryArt #InspiredByIceland #IcelandicArt
It's the Friday News Roundup! Today's topics include the University of the Arts closure, where the city should put the intercity bus station, and the mystery behind Old City's cloud billboard. Host Trenae Nuri is joined by Inga Saffron, architecture columnist at The Philadelphia Inquirer, and Conrad Benner, founder of StreetsDept.com, curator at Mural Arts and host of WHYY's Art Outside podcast. Our Friday news roundups are powered by great local journalism: University of the Arts closure coverage from the Inquirer It's time for Philly to build a proper bus station. Here are six possible locations. Overbrook Night Market Summer of Wonder Want some more Philly news? Then make sure to sign up for our morning newsletter Hey Philly. We're also on Twitter and Instagram! Follow us @citycastphilly. Have a question or just want to share some thoughts with the team? Leave us a voicemail at 215-259-8170. Interested in advertising with City Cast? Find more info here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This will be super expansive for anyone who finds themselves piling on the pressure with their Art, and stalling out because of it. Design Director for Deloitte Digital, Sean Brennan, has a very demanding day job, and yet he does not let that stop him from making his own personal art on the side. The thing that is most beautiful about this conversation is Sean's outlook on his personal work - his complete detachment from the outcome is something so many of us aspire to have. Get ready to be inspired!Sean Brennan on Instagram: @dirtypixelsAwaken, Channel & Create 100 Epic Days - (Summer 2024)Program BundleEpic Start - Self-led Course- - -*Rate & review my podcast and get $200 OFF any offer in my world (excluding private coaching). Just take a screenshot of your review and email it to assistant@leeannebrennan.com (make sure to take a screenshot before you hit send because it takes a few days to populate in the podcast platforms)Leeanne on Instagram: @createwithleeanne
Conrad Benner is the Founder/Editor of StreetsDept.com. A Fishtown, Philadelphia born-and-raised photo-blogger on Instagram and X, curator (Streets Dept Walls and Mural Arts Philadelphia), and podcaster (WHYY's Art Outside), Conrad's work explores the art of our public spaces and the artists who create it. He spoke to host Michael Schweisheimer on this and a wide range of topics on the podcast.
In the season finale of Art Outside, we're talking to the graffiti artist, BUSTA. We learn how he took his craft from a sketchbook in Colombia, to art school, then into the streets of Philly, and why he thinks non-commissioned public art is actually healthy for cities. SHOW NOTES Chía, Colombia Busta's Instagram BUSTA's website Streets Dept. Oral History with Busta
It's been quite a year, hasn't it? City Cast Philly takes a look back at the most chaotic news events, influential Philadelphians, and biggest city improvements of 2023. Host Trenae Nuri is joined by Afea Tucker, Philadelphia community engagement reporter for The Trace, a nonprofit focusing on gun violence reporting, and Conrad Benner, founder of Streets Dept – a local art blog, and host of WHYY's "Art Outside" podcast. Want some more Philly news? Then make sure to sign up for our morning newsletter Hey Philly. We're also on Twitter and Instagram! Follow us @citycastphilly. Have a question or just want to share some thoughts with the team? Leave us a voicemail or send us a text at 215-259-8170. Interested in advertising with City Cast? Find more info here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Why do we create on the walls around us? From French cave paintings created some 17,000 years ago to political graffiti on the streets of Pompeii, humanity has always longed to make art for everyone to see. Whether commissioned or not, the art we share is essential to who we are. There's no better place to see this in practice than in Philadelphia. It's the birthplace of the modern-day graffiti movement, home to the largest public arts program in the nation, and is often called the “Mural Capital of the World.” Join host Conrad Benner, founder of the Streets Dept blog, as he speaks with some of the most prolific street artists in the city about why their work is so vital to their lives, and ours.
‘The Peaks’ are Salt Lake City Airport’s new gateway welcome for visitors. Most large airports across the nation have an entry feature that serves as a gateway for those traveling to and from the city and now, our own Salt Lake City International Airport has 2! Artist Gordon Huether joins the show to discuss how this art piece was created.
The 20th Annual Art Outside Festival sponsored by Schlafly is this weekend and today we were joined by John Elafros of Schlafly and one of the artists at the event Svein Staaby.
Chalk artist David Zinn is known for leaving anonymous work on sidewalks, under rocks, and in other unexpected places. He walks around Ann Arbor, Michigan with a little wooden box of brightly colored chalk. As David strolls the neighborhood, he looks for features of the streetscape– oddly shaped cracks in the pavement or chunks of brick missing from retaining walls– to use in his drawings of whimsical, mischievous little creatures. The lines of the sidewalk become a tightrope for a rabbit to balance on, a sprinkler head becomes the eye of a frog, a pine cone becomes the tail of a cat. Connect with David:Website InstagramTikTokFacebookSponsor: Sonos
This episode, we speak to Tina Kukielski, the Executive Director and Chief Curator of Art21, one of the leading global producers of films and content about contemporary artists. Each month, more than 300,000 people from around the world tune in to Art21 to watch their Peabody Award Winning films with artists including Zanele Muholi, Theaster Gates, Luchita Hurtado, Jordan Casteel, and Pedro Reyes. In addition to leading Art21, Tina is also an active and widely respected curator. She was a co-curator of the acclaimed 2013 Carnegie International, bringing together 35 established and emerging artists from 19 different countries, including Sarah Lucas, Phyllida Barlow, Mark Leckey, and Nicole Eisenman. During her time at the Whitney Museum of American Art from 2002–2010, she worked to acquire and mount exhibitions by a wide range of celebrated contemporary artists. As lead curator on the Hillman Photography Initiative at the Carnegie Museum of Art, Kukielski launched a number of digital initiatives and films series. In 2014, Kukielski co-produced a documentary film about Andy Warhol in partnership with artist Cory Arcangel documenting a digital conservation project which brought renewed attention to nearly forgotten artworks that Warhol made on an Amiga personal computer in 1985. She is now working on the upcoming Front Triennial in Cleveland Ohio, which will open slightly delayed in 2022. The Triennial's title, Oh, Gods of Dust and Rainbows, is derived from a Langston Hughes poem. Some artists covered in this episode: Pedro Reyes Song Dong and Yin Xiuzhen Xu Bing Phyllida Barlow Postcommodity
Deborah Griffing, artist and studio manager for the Goodwill Art Studio and Gallery, talks with mixed-media artist and therapist Mehri Davis. Davis is the founder of Art Outside the Lines and now works for the Goodwill Art Studio and Gallery.. More information about Mehri can be found at https://healingmehri.art Reese Brothers Productions and Nicolettecinemagraphics bring you Art Tells a Story, Let it Tell Yours, a live show featuring artist interviews from four arts groups around Columbus. Tune in every Thursday at 4:30 to see the videos live on facebook or YouTube. Look for previous and upcoming interviews by: Columbus College of Art & Design Columbus Moving Image Art Review Columbus Museum of Art Donte Woods-Spikes Goodwill Art Studio & Gallery Greater Columbus Arts Council Hammond Harkins Galleries Not Sheep Gallery Ohio Arts Council Ohio Art League Sharon Weiss Gallery Wild Goose Creative
In this episode we speak with triple-threat Kyle Caress. Discussion topics range from the fluctuating process of creating art, the BLM movement, how to show up as an ally, the future of musical theatre in NYC, and much more. Find Kyle: @kyle_caress Resources & References The Artist’s Way - Julia Cameron https://juliacameronlive.com/books-by-julia/ Broadway Advocacy Coalition https://www.bwayadvocacycoalition.org/ So You Want to Talk About Race - Ijeoma Oluo https://www.hachettebookgroup.com/titles/ijeoma-oluo/so-you-want-to-talk-about-race/9781580056779/ Black Lives Matter https://blacklivesmatter.com/ The Bail Project https://bailproject.org/ Tutting Video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TbBqtuYvags Being A Twin https://www.instagram.com/tv/B6d_-uOHntk/ Instagram: @areweallmet Twitter: @areweallmet Facebook: Are We All Met? areweallmetpodcast@gmail.com Cover art by Lucy Sharpe @lucypiperart (@peaceful_lucifer) *All music used in this episode was created by Anna Atkinson on GarageBand. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/areweallmet/support
Today we’re discussing how to break our own patterns, WORK and CREATE outside the box! P.S. I mistakenly say it’s the “weekly” podcast
Phil is a performance artist, activist, teacher and documentarian who's work challenges the concept of borders and boundaries - inviting communities to engage with experiences beyond their own and pushing them to ask difficult questions about belonging and control. In this episode Ethan and Phil discuss his Unauthorized Gallery series as a series of investigations and learnings from living amongst Transit Graffiti Artists, in Thai and Burmese slums, being incarcerated, living with houseless populations in California and with Berber Nomads in North Africa. Phil has a breadth of perspectives on love, art and activism that he shares from his life abroad, immersed in cultures beyond his origin and close to home. Find Phil at http://www.philamerica.com and on Instagram at http://www.instagram.com/philamerica Find Ethan at http://www.extremist.love and on Instagram at http://www.instagram.com/ethanlipsitz
รีวิวหนังสือรวมบทความวิจารณ์ศิลปะร่วมสมัย ของ ภานะ บุญพิพัฒนาพงศ์ Inside Art, Outside Art โดยสำนักพิมพ์ Salmon EP นี้สนับสนุนโดย สำนักงานกองทุนสนับสนุนการสร้างเสริมสุขภาพ Change Fusion ศูนย์ข้อมูล & ข่าวสืบสวนเพื่อสิทธิพลเมือง (TCIJ Thai) ติดตามเราได้ที่ Facebook: http://facebook.com/bangkoknoibookreview https://bknbookreview.podbean.com Apple Podcast https://itunes.apple.com/th/podcast/bangkoknoi-book-review/id1097434420?mt=2 ฟังบน Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/7cUJ3aZFS5PhSiYd4mwU9s
Sophomore neuroscience and cognitive science student Alexia Sambrano draws from mental health, sexuality and femininity for her paintings and prints featured in Divine Femininity, a student-curated art exhibition. Arts and Entertainment Editor Isa Uggetti sat down with Sambrano to talk about her process for the season premiere of Rhythm and News. Music by Joakim Karud.
Hosting a craft night can help you unwind, reflect with friends, make some art and have some great conversation. Listen as Cassie talks about the usual suspects on her invite list, the best time to host a craft night, and the best activities that can get everyone involved. Resources and Links A Simple Craft Night Idea Get Crafty and Try Something New Ideas for Art Outside the Classroom Making Time for Making Art
William Close is an installation artist and musician who has developed over 100 new types of musical instruments including the Earth Harp, the world’s largest playable musical instrument. He is the leader of the Earth Harp Collective, an internationally renowned ensemble that combines the creative forces of artists, musicians, composers, and choreographers. He is also the Founder and Artistic Director of MASS Ensemble -- music architecture sound and sculpture – a group that works with Close’s designs to create music based stage shows that push the envelope of the musical experience. Close’s installations and performances have been experienced throughout the world, including the Kennedy Center in Washington DC, Lincoln Center in New York, to the Coliseum in Rome, The Grand Theater in Macau and Hong Kong just to name a few. The Austin based band Trouble in The Streets has dubbed their signature sound “Electro Tribe,” a vibe that blends electronic music, international sounds, with hip-hop, rock and R&B. Led by Nnedi Agbaroji, the band fuels crowds with interactive calls-to-action and smoothly transfers the energy to recordings. Their debut EP Electro Tribe, released October 6, 2017 is exactly that. The trio has supported such acts like Rebirth Brass Band, Sting Cheese Incident, and George Clinton and P Funk, and have been invited to perform at Joshua Tree Music Festival, Quantum Flux, UtopiaFest, Black Fret Official SXSW, and Art Outside. In 2015, The Austin Chronicle named them in the top five of the Best New Bands in Austin. They will be touring this Fall in support of the physical CD release and it is in the live shows where Trouble in The Streets shines with improvised jam sessions, guest performers, and high energy audience participation .
Judith Supine joins me via skype from his studio in New York. We talk Richmond, Selective Mutism, Athleticism, Antagonism, Masculine vs. Feminine Roles, Transgression, Land Lady Anxiety, Intuitive Response, Loosing Appeal, Evolution of Art Outside, The First Follower, White Judicial System, and Being True To Ones Self.
Wes interviews Austin awesome comedian Eric Nagurney (@enagurney)! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rCwn1NTK-50 And catch Eric at Art Outside!
You don't have to go inside a museum to experience great art. We look at some of the ways Europeans love to embellish their every-day scene. Also, Robert Edsel shares stories of the people who helped rescue the masterpieces of Western art from the Nazis, during and after World War Two, and how their work continues today. For more information on Travel with Rick Steves - including episode descriptions, program archives and related details - visit www.ricksteves.com.
Rick explores art found outside museums in the everyday scene of Europe and author Robert Edsel shares stories of the "Monuments Men" who helped rescue masterpieces of Western art from the Nazis during and after World War Two and whose work continues even today. For more information on Travel with Rick Steves - including episode descriptions, program archives and related details - visit www.ricksteves.com.
Come listen to Laura Lea! This week is all about art: art and burn events, art and life, even art's relation to art. Fortunately, Laura Lea is up to the task. Herself an artist in a variety of media, Laura Lee has created pieces such as the Greenhouse Project, an installation that's been at Burning Man as well as Art Outside here in Austin. Laura Lea was actually one of the curators of Art Outside 2008. She's currently studying at the Chinati foundation, and you can find out more about her work by visiting http://www.lauraleanalle.com/ To contact Flipp'd OUT, drop us an e-mail at flippdout@gmail.com.
Art Outside is Coming! Now, here's your change to hear a primary force behind Art Outside, Tyler Hansen, explain what has driven him to get the art in the trees. The Credits: All images and audio by Lance Hunter. To contact Flipp'd OUT, drop us an e-mail at flippdout@gmail.com.