Branch of philosophy dealing with the nature of art, beauty, and taste
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Is genuine originality a realistic goal for artists?From fashion to fantasy, entertainment to enterprise, we seek the 'new' as the means to originality, change, and creativity. And for the most part, we imagine the new is always identifiable as a radical break from the past. But the nature of the new is more elusive and unknown than it first appears. Is the new an illusion, and the search for originality a mistake? Should creative endeavour be focussed on other goals, such as the timeless, the provocative, and the beautiful? Or is the new an essential part of life, creativity and action, without which we would have mere passive re-orderings of the known?Martin Puchner is a literary critic and philosopher. He is the Byron and Anita Wien Chair of Drama and of English and Comparative Literature at Harvard University. Claire Hynes is Associate Professor in Literature & Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia, and an author of fiction and creative non-fiction. Stanley Fish is a literary critic, legal scholar, and public intellectual. Renowned for his role in developing reader-response theory in literary studies, Fish has written on a wide range of topics including the poetry of John Milton, the distinction between free speech and academic freedom, and the doctrine of liberalism. And don't hesitate to email us at podcast@iai.tv with your thoughts or questions on the episode!To witness such debates live buy tickets for our upcoming festival: https://howthelightgetsin.org/festivals/And visit our website for many more articles, videos, and podcasts like this one: https://iai.tv/You can find everything we referenced here: https://linktr.ee/philosophyforourtimesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The crew from That Silverline Show on Tuesday discuss theories of art vs the practice of it! Originally aired May 07, 2024. Included in this episode are Tim TK, Kasisi Harris, and David Rios. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/silverlinecomics/support
In this episode of Icelandic Art Center's Out there podcast we spoke to the curator Heiðar Kári Rannversson who has been keeping busy with a few exhibitions recently opened locally in Iceland. We discuss the exhibition spring that has sprung in Iceland with a couple of exciting solo exhibitions having opened in Kling & Bang; Andri Björgvinsson and Tara & Silla and the National Gallery; Anna Rún Tryggvadóttir, Þóra Sigurðardóttir and the new iteration of Steina Vasulka's Borealis Installation from 1993 now on display. Heiðar Kári @hkrannversson is an independent curator, art historian and most recently he held a position at the Nordatlantens Brygge in Kobenhavn 2018 - 2022. He has curated multiple shows across Iceland; The Living Art Museum, the National Gallery and for the Icelandic Art Center. In the episode his most recent exhibitions and projects were discussed including: Sóley Ragnarsdóttir @soleygendary is a Danish/Icelandic artist that lives and works in Thy, Denmark. Ragnarsdóttir has a sculptural approach to painting, and her works, painted and ornamented with both synthetic and organic materials, hover between figuration and abstraction. She mixes acrylic and epoxy with shells, amber and sea-sanded shards of glass on surfaces of wood, canvas and napkins. Her solo exhibition “Queen of Hearts” curated by HK is now on display at Gerðarsafn. Þór Vigfússon @arslonga_djupivogur is an artist that lives and works in Iceland. He creates powerful objects with colour, texture, and reflection using prefabricated industrial materials. His deceptively simple works, primarily made of glass, plexiglass, mirrors, and Formica with monotone colour fields, push the boundaries between two- and three-dimensional works. Architecture and space play a vital role in their presentation.His solo exhibition “Numbers, Places” curated by HK is now on display at Gerðarsafn. Outside Looking In, Inside Looking Out is an exhibition that has been traveling around the world and will continue in the coming year with the stopa in Tokyo, Oslo and Paris this Autumn. The exhibition showcases works by established and emerging artists from Iceland. This exhibition project is a collaborative platform between the Icelandic Art Center, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs & Business Iceland, promoting visual art from Iceland abroad. This episode ends with the exhibition of the month segment which is dedicated to the one and only Venice Biennale and its 60th international art exhibition curated by Adriano Pedrosa. Special mentions from the main exhibition include Ahmed Umar's work “Talitin, The Third” (2023) and the Mataaho Collective's installation “Takapau” (2024). For the national pavilions Becky and Tinna briefly discussed the following; Pakui Hardware at the Lithuanian Pavilion, Eimear Walshe's installation at Ireland at Venice, the Nigerian Pavilion with a star-studded artist roaster, Canadian Pavilion's exhibition with Kapwani Kiwanga's installation, Archie Moore's installation at the Australian Pavilion curated by Ellie Buttrose and more! Listen in for a quick review of the cacophony at the Biennale. // 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 the bokasamlagid.
Have you ever wondered how a title can curate your perception of a photograph? Well, buckle up! We're about to take you on a rollercoaster ride through the fascinating world of creative work titling. We exchange views on the process of naming work, the impact of specific words, and how titling can be a bridge between your current skill level and where you aspire to be. If you've ever grappled with the challenge of giving a name to your creative output, our musings on this topic might just shed some light. In the second act of our conversation, we move into the deep waters of art interpretation. We explore the notion of stepping back as artists and allowing viewers to find their own meaning, rather than spoon-feeding them a pre-determined explanation. Drawing from personal anecdotes of museum and gallery visits, we put forth the idea that an artist's interpretation can sometimes overshadow and limit the viewers' experience. We wrap up our conversation by delving into the challenge of crafting a title that resonates with truth while not limiting the visual metaphors it conveys. We stress the importance of clear and effective storytelling, even playing a fun exercise of titling our own podcast episode. So, if you're an artist, a creator, or simply an art enthusiast, this episode is packed with insightful discussions on the art and power of titling. Tune in and join our spirited exchange of thoughts! - aiIf you enjoyed this episode, please consider giving us a rating and/or a review. We read and appreciate all of them. Thanks for listening, and we'll see you in the next episode.Show Notes:Sunny Sixteen Podcast: https://bit.ly/46rFG0yWilliam Eggleston - The Democratic Forest: https://bit.ly/3rMNdYEWilliam Eggleston's Guide: https://bit.ly/3LUHXZSJoel Meyerowitz - Cape Light: https://www.joelmeyerowitz.com/cape-lightJoel Meyerowitz - Aftermath: https://www.joelmeyerowitz.com/aftermathMatthew's “Lone Surfer” photo: https://bit.ly/408stYlJackson Street Booksellers (used book store in Omaha): https://bit.ly/3PR10p3Alex's Photo Project “The Gates of the Garden”: https://www.alexccarter.com/photography/gotgPaper Moon: https://bit.ly/45udyZsGregory Crewdson: http://www.gregorycrewdsonmovie.com/Walt Whitman's Poetry: https://whitmanarchive.org/Alone Together by Aristotle Roufanis: https://aristotle.photography/Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep by Philip K. Dick: https://bit.ly/3 If you enjoyed this episode, please consider giving us a rating and/or a review. We read and appreciate all of them. Thanks for listening, and we'll see you in the next episode. Links To Everything: Video Version of The Podcast: https://geni.us/StudioSessionsYT Matt's YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/MatthewOBrienYT Matt's 2nd Channel: https://geni.us/PhotoVideosYT Alex's YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/AlexCarterYT Matt's Instagram: https://geni.us/MatthewIG Alex's Instagram: https://geni.us/AlexIG
Hal Foster is one of the most well-known thinkers about art today. In a career that spans several decades, he is known for important much-cited books including The Return of the Real from 1996, Design and Crime from 2002 and most recently, Brutal Aesthetics from 2020. He teaches at Princeton and writes for a broader audience at Artforum and the London Review of Books, among many other places. And anyone who has studied art theory or contemporary art is probably familiar with a masterful book he edited called The Anti Aesthetic. Put out by the Bay Press in 1983, the slim, purple, 150 page collection brought together nine essays by figures including Jürgen Habermas, Rosalind Krauss, Frederic Jameson, and Edward Said, plus an introduction by Foster himself, theorizing in exciting, contradictory, and new ways what it meant to write about, make, and see art. It set the tone for a lot of the criticism and reception of art theory in the 1980s and beyond, and helped make theory cool in art. Indeed, this small book has cast such a long shadow that Foster has just published a text for Artforum called The Anti Aesthetic at 40, where he assesses its legacy four decades on from its publication. The work reminds one of the sense of intellectual excitement and seriousness of purpose that drew many into writing about art in the first place. A sense that feels very embattled now. This week on the podcast, Hal Foster joins Artnet's chief art critic Ben Davis to discuss the recent past and present of art criticism.
Hal Foster is one of the most well-known thinkers about art today. In a career that spans several decades, he is known for important much-cited books including The Return of the Real from 1996, Design and Crime from 2002 and most recently, Brutal Aesthetics from 2020. He teaches at Princeton and writes for a broader audience at Artforum and the London Review of Books, among many other places. And anyone who has studied art theory or contemporary art is probably familiar with a masterful book he edited called The Anti Aesthetic. Put out by the Bay Press in 1983, the slim, purple, 150 page collection brought together nine essays by figures including Jürgen Habermas, Rosalind Krauss, Frederic Jameson, and Edward Said, plus an introduction by Foster himself, theorizing in exciting, contradictory, and new ways what it meant to write about, make, and see art. It set the tone for a lot of the criticism and reception of art theory in the 1980s and beyond, and helped make theory cool in art. Indeed, this small book has cast such a long shadow that Foster has just published a text for Artforum called The Anti Aesthetic at 40, where he assesses its legacy four decades on from its publication. The work reminds one of the sense of intellectual excitement and seriousness of purpose that drew many into writing about art in the first place. A sense that feels very embattled now. This week on the podcast, Hal Foster joins Artnet's chief art critic Ben Davis to discuss the recent past and present of art criticism.
Rachel Rose is known for her intricate video installations which investigate our changing understanding of the world - from labour in 17th-century England, to explorations of outer space. In this episode she connects with fellow artist Aria Dean, who uses film and sculpture to produce meditations on Blackness and artistic theory. Their conversation digs deep into the contemporary art world: their multidisciplinary practices - including film, sculpture, and installation, the use of memes as critique, and how the weight of history inspires them.
Story of failure: Getting my eye brows singed from lighting a bonfire.Sean Williams is an artist, standup comedian, carpenter, and future movie star and prop maker. He lives in Kansas City, MO with his wife Shelby, where he dreams, creates, and brings unique characters into the world. His work has been seen on The Pat Mcafee Show, and Undisputed, with Shannon Sharpe and Skip Bayless. Sean continues to dream up amazing creations and bring them to life. You can reach Sean though his Instagram @the.world.of.sean.In today's episode Sean talks about:doing test run podcasts with Seancousins-in-law?getting into art and sports growing upmom teaching third gradethere was always some sort of art in his lifehaving an artistic familyapplying competitive thinking to artstory of dad teaching him the shape of a facecomparing football with artwhere there's a will, there's a way!“How do I do that, rather than can I do that?”the original Mike Tyson pillow that lead to Mahomesthe process of coming up with a weird end gamegetting in front of Gracie Hunt and giving her a dealmaking Chief pillows for old and new team membersgetting into stand up comedyhis weird life plan laid outwanting to solve a problem by going on stagewriting and telling jokesgetting locked in and getting over insecurities“If you really want to do something, you just figure out how to do it.”telling standup by subject, instead of chronologicalnot having the experience, and getting past the early stagesNorm McDonald and his influence on his jokesavoiding the low hanging fruit and doing a little more workthe skill of failing wellthe philosophy of stoicism preparing yourself for the bad things to happenpreparing to frame cease and desist letterstricking your brain on enjoying the hard part“It's the journey, not the destination.”the old guys were on to something“Success is a byproduct of you doing what you enjoy.”the story of the mask of Skip Baylessart is literally constant failuredrawing in a weird sketching motiontrying to draw Tom Hardyme trying to paint Steph Curryart theory class in collegea photography of an apple isn't a real applecommunicating to someone through art with the right elements“Well, that didn't work. Try something else.”“Once you stop failing, you're not going to do anything.”not having the juice, or needing to get betterthe lesson of the dog gladiator sculpturelearning to mitigate loss and pivot easilywhy he thinks at some point that his art looks terriblebattling anxietygetting advice from knowledgable people to get to the finish linefirst getting out of college and getting ahead of himselfprocrastinating in school and getting away with itforming bad habits and having to break themthe story of Picasso in the marketpeople don't value your skills unless you value your own skillstrying to make a rod puppetthe intimidation of figuring out something new and making a careerthe caretaker in Harry Potterwanting to give the memorable line in a movieelements of people making up a mentorhis dad building draw bridges out of cardboardwhy he wants to tell himself, “It worked.”what kind of tea?Instagram - @the.world.of.sean---Learn more at www.professional-failure.com!
Translation studies is an academic interdiscipline dealing with the systematic study of the theory, description and application of translation, interpreting, and localization. After I talked with Tierry Groensteen, whose work on comic theory was translated and introduced to the Anglophone world by Bart Beaty and Nick Nguyen, today I speak with these two translators who will share with us their experience and insights of translating theory.Recommended Reading:Ann Miller and Bart Beaty, The French Comics Theory Reader (2014)This podcast is sponsored by Riverside, the most efficient platform for video recording and editing for podcasters.Buzzsprout - Let's get your podcast launched! Start for FREEDisclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the show
This episode of the Weinberg in the World Podcast features a conversation with David Ngene '07 who is currently an Innovation Design Director at the NXT Space Kitchen at Nike after Graduating from Northwestern with an Art Theory & Practice Major. David Ngene shares tories about changing majors at Northwestern, the Art Theory & Practice Major, his first job after graduating, heading back to school, working at Nike, the value of an Arts & Sciences Degree, and the experience and memory of being a student athlete! Timestamps: 0:00: Insight Unpacked 2:30: Weinberg College Experience 4:30: Plans Heading into Northwestern 6:25: Changing Majors to Art Theory 11:55: Art Theory and Practice 16:50: After Graduation and First Job 20:20: Deciding to go to Grad School 23:55: Working at Nike 26:45: Learning Design at Weinberg College 30:05: The Impact of being a Student Athlete 33:10: Closing Advice for Students
Steve did not tell us we would need knowledge of the colour wheel for this boss fight. Check out our Patreon! Powered by CleanFeed. "Dark Skies and Other Disasters" by Dark Fantasy Studio ( http://darkfantasystudio.com/ ) Clash Defiant Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com ) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Future Gladiator by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3793-future-gladiator License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Ready Aim Fire by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/5001-ready-aim-fire License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
This week, Nadine Treister asks us about art theory & art history, is it helpful, how to absorb it, or ignore it.
Mary Mazurek is a GRAMMY-nominated recording engineer. Her nomination was awarded at the 61st Annual Grammy Awards in the category of Best Engineered Album, Classical. She is also a broadcaster and radio producer. Her work is regularly featured on WFMT Radio, WFMT.com, and through the European Broadcast Union. Her credits include Alec Baldwin, The Chicago Chorale, The Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Charles Earland, Michael Feinstein, International Music Foundation, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Kronos Quartet, LA Guitar Quartet, Howard Levy, Lyric Opera of Chicago, The New York Philharmonic, Yo-Yo Ma, Johnnie Hammond Smith, Dr. Lonny Smith, and many others. Her recordings appear on the Bellissima, Cannonball, Çedille, Delmark, Lyon & Healy, MSR, Naxos, Random House, Sheridan, and Sounds True labels. She began teaching in the Audio Arts and Acoustics Department of Columbia College in 1995 as an adjunct professor, and now also teaches at DePaul University. She received her MFA in Interdisciplinary Arts Columbia College in 2011 and her PhD in Philosophy, Aesthetics, and Art Theory from IDSVA in 2022 while maintaining an active recording career. Additionally, she is a sought-after educator and speaker who enjoys contributing in the classroom and on panels and committees within her industry and beyond. Dr. Mazurek serves as a role model and advocates for women in the recording industry, which presently is less than 5% female. She has served as a governor, and Classical Task Force Chairperson for the Chicago Chapter of the Recording Academy. She is currently the DEI Chairperson for the Audio Engineering Society. She loves sharing her sonic insights across disciplines. IN THIS EPISODE, YOU'LL LEARN ABOUT: - Finding your niche vs. it finding you - Recording classical music - Mixing through mic placement - Stereo micing techniques - Checking for phase issues with stereo micing - Using reverb to create depth vs. capturing the sound of the room - Mixing live-to-air performances - How to record a band with only two microphones - Creating a “meter-stick” mix through gainstaging - using parallel compression To learn more about Mary Mazurek, visit: https://www.marymazurek.com/ To learn more tips on how to improve your mixes, visit https://masteryourmix.com/ Download your FREE copy of the Ultimate Mixing Blueprint: https://masteryourmix.com/blueprint/ Get your copy of the #1 Amazon bestselling book, The Mixing Mindset – The Step-By-Step Formula For Creating Professional Rock Mixes From Your Home Studio: https://masteryourmix.com/mixingmindsetbook/ Join the FREE MasterYourMix Facebook community: https://links.masteryourmix.com/community To make sure that you don't miss an episode, make sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes or on Android. Have your questions answered on the show. Send them to questions@masteryourmix.com Thanks for listening! Please leave a rating and review on iTunes!
Learning how to draw is not just a matter of shapes and shades. Our delightful guest today, Inshal Chenet, will invite us to consider Drawing with Art Theory. You can find Inshal Chenet and his courses at https://homeschoolconnections.com/instructors/inshal-chenet/ Register for Summer and Fall courses, here: https://homeschoolconnections.gosignmeup.com/Public/Course/ Thomas Cole: The Voyage of Life: Youth https://www.nga.gov/collection/art-object-page.52451.html Today's Short Feature: Dave Palmer, Aquinas for Everyone Contact: Dave's Facebook page for A Way a Day: https://www.facebook.com/groups/830025461271708 Dave's Facebook page for St. Thomas for Everyone: https://www.facebook.com/staforeveryone/ Thank you to the following contributors who made this podcast possible: Our Sponsor HomeschoolConnections.com Homeschooling Saints Theme Music Composed by Taylor Kirkwood Intro voice Dave Palmer radio personality and author of St. Thomas Aquinas for Everyone Our host Lisa Mladinich
After Dinner Mints - Episode 30 - 21.12.15Interview with Darien BritoArt Blocks home website: www.artblocks.ioJoin us on discord: discord.gg/artblocksSubscribe to our weekly newsletter: https://artblocksinc.eo.page/subscribeReferences=============================* Working conditions (unpublished statement) by Hans Haacke https://app.koofr.net/content/links/6...*What is Generative Art? Complexity Theory as a Context for Art Theory by Phillip Galanterhttps://www.philipgalanter.com/downlo...Early generative work=============================* An additive Streamhttps://vimeo.com/manage/videos/65210262* Generative Music Etude (2014)https://soundcloud.com/darien-brito/s...* Vsig~ (2014)https://vimeo.com/92750954Suggested books and resources=============================* Complexity: a Guided Tour by Melanie Mitchell* Chaos: Making a New Science by James Gleick* The Computational Beauty of Nature by Gary William Flake* Gödel, Escher, Bach: an Eternal Golden Braid by Douglas Hofstaedter* The Algorithmic Beauty of Plants by Przemyslaw Prusinkiewicz and Aristid LindenmayerMicrosound by Curtis Roads * The Evolutionary Dynamics of Complex Systems by Charles Dyke* What is Generative Art? Complexity Theory as Context for Art Theory by Phillip GalanterOn Growth and Form by D'Arcy Wentworth ThompsonThe Book of Shaders by Patricio Gonzales Vivo and Jen LowePretty much every single article by Inigo Quilez
In the final episode of Series Three, Joe speaks with Essex University historian Lucy Noakes and Chicago-based artist Michael Rakowitz on the creation of cultural memories around war and conflict. They cover a wide array of topics, including the Churchillian turn of British World War II narratives and how the words monument and demonstrate are linked by their roots in Latin. Their discussion beautifully encapsulates a number of topics covered across the series and explores more radical ways of remembering - or remembering better. Lucy Noakes is a social and cultural historian with specific interests in war, memory and gender. She is co-editor of the book British Cultural Memory and the Second World War, sits on the Academic Advisory Board of the Imperial War Museum's Second World War Galleries redevelopment project, and is a series editor for the Social History Society book series New Directions in Social and Cultural History. Michael Rakowitz is an Iraqi-American artist working at the intersection of problem-solving and troublemaking. His anti-war statue April is the Cruellest Month formed part of the Turney Contemporary for the English coast series in 2021. Michael is also Professor of Art Theory and Practice at Northwestern University.As always, the show was presented by our very own Joe Glenton. If you'd like to learn more about Joe's new book Veteranhood (as mentioned in the podcast by Michael) then head over to his publisher Repeater.ForcesWatch is a small organisation funded by grants and donations. All contributions - no matter the size - can make a huge difference. If you want to support our work then please follow the link below.Support the show (https://www.forceswatch.net/support-our-work)
Será que a programação pode atingir pessoas de várias idades e de diferentes maneiras? O que acontece se a gente misturar código com arte, história e coisas lúdicas? Neste episódio vamos falar sobre programação criativa e algumas de suas possibilidades. Participantes: Paulo Silveira, o host que faz podcast criativoGuilherme Silveira, líder de inovação da Alura, mágico e irmão do hostAlexandre Villares, educador de tecnologia e arte e professorAndré Breves, especialista em tecnologia no Banco do BrasilRoberta Arcoverde, a co-host que super indica o ScratchMaurício Linhares, o co-host que gostava de fazer jogos no RPG Maker Links: Livro Creative Code - John MaedaExposição Georg Nees: Computergrafik (1965) de Georg Nees com curadoria do Max Bense que inventou o termo Estética GerativaVera MolnárObra Derivadas de uma Imagem (1969) de Waldemar Cordeiro / Giorgio MoscatiMonica TavaresThe Aesthetics and Computation Group - John Maeda e Desigb By NumbersProcessingp5.js"What is Generative Art? Complexity Theory as a Context for Art Theory" - Philip GalanterLogoTatyana ZabanovaLivro The Algorithmic Beauty of Plants sobre L SystemLinguagem de programação Hedypyp5jsLivro Arte feita em código - Patrícia OakimKeynote Jake Vanderplas falando de Python e astronomiaCinderOpenFrameworksScratchArduinoBBC micro:bitMicropythonCode GolfComputerCraftEduHau Kun e tweet ProcessingRobloxScratchJrDevArt Hipsters.Tech - Episódio Arte generativaInscreva-se no YouTube da AluraNewsletter Imersão, Aprendizagem e Tecnologia Produção e conteúdo: Alura Cursos de Tecnologia - https://www.alura.com.br === Caelum Escola de Tecnologia - https://www.caelum.com.br/ Edição e sonorização: Radiofobia Podcast e Multimídia
Será que a programação pode atingir pessoas de várias idades e de diferentes maneiras? O que acontece se a gente misturar código com arte, história e coisas lúdicas? Neste episódio vamos falar sobre programação criativa e algumas de suas possibilidades. Participantes: Paulo Silveira, o host que faz podcast criativoGuilherme Silveira, líder de inovação da Alura, mágico e irmão do hostAlexandre Villares, educador de tecnologia e arte e professorAndré Breves, especialista em tecnologia no Banco do BrasilRoberta Arcoverde, a co-host que super indica o ScratchMaurício Linhares, o co-host que gostava de fazer jogos no RPG Maker Links: Livro Creative Code - John MaedaExposição Georg Nees: Computergrafik (1965) de Georg Nees com curadoria do Max Bense que inventou o termo Estética GerativaVera MolnárObra Derivadas de uma Imagem (1969) de Waldemar Cordeiro / Giorgio MoscatiMonica TavaresThe Aesthetics and Computation Group - John Maeda e Desigb By NumbersProcessingp5.js"What is Generative Art? Complexity Theory as a Context for Art Theory" - Philip GalanterLogoTatyana ZabanovaLivro The Algorithmic Beauty of Plants sobre L SystemLinguagem de programação Hedypyp5jsLivro Arte feita em código - Patrícia OakimKeynote Jake Vanderplas falando de Python e astronomiaCinderOpenFrameworksScratchArduinoBBC micro:bitMicropythonCode GolfComputerCraftEduHau Kun e tweet ProcessingRobloxScratchJrDevArt Hipsters.Tech - Episódio Arte generativaInscreva-se no YouTube da AluraNewsletter Imersão, Aprendizagem e Tecnologia Produção e conteúdo: Alura Cursos de Tecnologia - https://www.alura.com.br === Caelum Escola de Tecnologia - https://www.caelum.com.br/ Edição e sonorização: Radiofobia Podcast e Multimídia
"This week Kimberly spoke with Pasadena-based painter Willis Stork. Throughout the conversation they talk about Willis' interest in materiality, music and art theory and the purpose and function of the artist in today's world. All images courtesy of the artist 00:00 - Podcast Introduction 00:33 - Episode Introduction 00:56 - The Moment - Human Barbie 01:58 - Interview with Willis Stork (pt 1) 21:51 - Mic Break 22:21 - Be Careful What You Wish For - Human Barbie 23:20 - Interview with Willis Stork (pt 2) 35:41 - Outro 36:05 - The Truth is Coming - Human Barbie 36:51 - Finish "
***** This podcast is sponsored by BetterHelp. I've Got Scars Baby listeners get 10% off their first month at: http://betterhelp.com/IveGotScarsBaby It's always a good time to invest in yourself. Turn your scars into your superpower! ***** Truly Austin-Bennett (Dance Educator, Choreographer, and Scholar) Truly discusses her experience with Imposter Syndrome and the impact it has had on her career, relationships. and self-esteem. ABOUT TRULY: Originally from Detroit, Truly A. Austin-Bennett is a Dancer, Educator, Choreographer. She has taught workshops and set pieces at various institutions throughout Maryland, Virginia, Washington, D.C., Japan, and Costa Rica. Focusing on a blend of modern and improvisation techniques, Austin-Bennett strives to create works that provoke discomfort and discussion. She is also fond of multi-generational casts, seeking to provide opportunities for older dancers to remain active in the dance community, and for younger dancers to learn firsthand from those of prior generations. Austin-Bennett received her BFA in Dance Education from East Carolina University and her MFA in Dance from Hollins University. Austin-Bennett is currently serving as adjunct Dance Professor at Bowie State University and St. Mary's College of Maryland while pursuing her PhD in Visual Arts: Philosophy, Aesthetics, and Art Theory with a concentration in Dance. CONNECT WITH TRULY: https://www.instagram.com/dancetalkrealness/ ******** CONNECT WITH AUDRA: https://www.instagram.com/audraabryant/ https://www.audrabryant.com/ Coming Soon!!! Audra's New Book: "I've Got Scars Baby! How to Embrace Your Scars and Power Your Purpose Get on the Pre-Order List Here: https://www.audrabryant.com/bookpreorder
We had a really interesting chat with Emma-Kate Wilson about her journey into art writing through an Arts theory degree, writing art statements, and the importance for artists to be professionals. Thanks for speaking to us Emma-Kate. After volunteering at a little ARI gallery in the Rocks, Emma-Kate decided to immerse herself in the visual language of Australia. In 2015, she embarked on a degree in Art Theory at UNSW and Art & Design in Paddington, Sydney, graduating in June 2018. Since then she has been published extensively in print and digital media, as well as working at some of Sydney's most prominent cultural institutions.Today, she can happily say, she is working full time as a freelance art and design journalist— including copywriting for renowned artists, designers, and publications.Emma-Kate writes regularly for Art Almanac, Artist Profile, Hunter & Folk, Est Living, Habitus Living, Domain Living, Ocula, MutualArt. She has also written for The Local Project, Vault, Articulate PR ( & The Golden Mean), Running Dog, un Projects, Art + Australia Online, Urban List, Art Monthly, ABC Arts, Lovatt's Media: Mindful Parenting & Audrey Daybook, Broadsheet, Concrete Playground, and Time Out. She also provides an awesome service for artists, writing copy for websites, statements etc. Get in touch with Emma through her website.
Aristotle said “Pleasure in the job, puts passion in the work.” It’s clear Heather Catania is passionate about her work. Her experience and unique point of view has made Heather one of the most in demand social media innovators and digital content producers in LA. Heather is the founder of Social Fleur, which offer digital content production and services, and With Honors that features online digital marketing education from industry leaders. Before that, Heather launched her career as NYLON Magazine’s first Bookings Editor. There she drew on her academic training in Visual Communication and Art Theory to strategize cover shoots and produce fashion editorials and executed NYOLN’s first video platform, NYLON TV. Heather recognized the opportunities in digital media early. While still working in publishing she established herself as an authority in digital content and social media marketing by producing branded advertising and viral digital campaigns for the world’s most prestigious celebrities, fashion magazines, Fortune 500 companies, start-ups, media moguls, and wellness brands. Happy clients include: Harper’s Bazaar, Italian Vogue, GQ, Alexander Wang, Elle, Google Play, Samsung, H&M, Steve Madden, Nike, Marc Jacobs, Pepsi, M.A.C. Cosmetics and many more. On today’s show Heather explains how to meaningfully engage your consumer on social media by creating content that serves them. And while we didn’t expect the conversation to go here, Heather walked us through establishing a healthy relationship with social media through setting appropriate and effective boundaries that still allow meaningful and effective connection. It’s a great show and we’re so excited for you to meet Heather!
Today our guest is Julia Fae. A Honolulu Native, University of Utah Alumna, actor, model, clown, and artist. We discuss how to break down a character/script, insecurities, and finding our inner clown. Check out her Instagram and website: @juliafae http://www.juliafae.com/ Check out my guests and latest projects on Instagram: @empersico
"New perspectives can spring up from within the most insignificant everyday moments. A private photograph, a newspaper article or even a still frame of a movie can be the medium for another dimension. All these are raw materials for me, which I gradually release from any unnecessary feature that traps them into the optically compatible world. My aim is for my images to have a universality that goes beyond the context of a particular place, time or person." Kiki Kolympari was born 1974 in Nuremberg where she lived and worked for many years. She studied Visual Arts at the School of Fine Arts in Athens from 2012 to 2017. During her studies she also completed the following courses: Byzantine Iconography, Fresco painting, Encaustic, Ceramic sculpturing and Art Theory. She graduated with an MFA Honours Degree. She currently lives and works in Athens.
Have you been feeling tired from your daily dose of news chronicling the ineptitude of our administration, but finding it hard to look away? Well, feel free to pop this episode on and let your eyes keep watching the tire fire. As part of Constructing the Real, a course that focuses on how aesthetics and … Continue reading "READING – Intro to Art and (Bare) Life"
Have you been feeling tired from your daily dose of news chronicling the ineptitude of our administration, but finding it hard to look away? Well, feel free to pop this episode on and let your eyes keep watching the tire fire. As part of Constructing the Real, a course that focuses on how aesthetics and … Continue reading "READING – Intro to Art and (Bare) Life"
In this episode of pine|copper|lime Miranda speaks with Dr. Tony Curran a lecturer at the Centre for Art History & Art Theory at Australian National University. Curran's practice explores humans' interaction with technology as well as human's interaction with each other in our post-humanist age. Primarily an artist working in painting and drawing, Curran experiences printmaking through a collaborative lens of various residencies and print studios throughout Australia. In this episode we talk about philosophy, psychology, pixels, portraiture, and what it means to live a good life. Curran's interview also marks the first ever episode of PCL recorded in person thanks to new equipment purchased through the generosity of our Patreon supporters. [more information] Tony Curran's Website www.tonycurran.net pine|copper|lime website www.pinecopperlime.com pine|copper|lime instagram www.instagram.com/pine.copper.lime pine|copper|lime print gallery www.pinecopperlime.com/print-gallery ✨pine|copper|lime patreon✨ www.patreon.com/pinecopperlime
Join award-winning author Helen Ennis as she shares her experience with Alex Sloan about writing the moving and powerful biography of modernist photographer, Olive Cotton. Olive Cotton was a significant artist and pioneer whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband's, Max Dupain. Olive and Max could have been Australia's answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, but in the early 1940s, Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio lifestyle to live with second husband, Ross McInerney and raised their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra. Despite the barriers of this new lifestyle and not having access to a dark room, Olive continued her photography away from the public eye until she was shot back to fame in 1985 by a landmark exhibition in Sydney, and a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. A moving story about talent and creativity, Emeritus Professor Ennis explores the life of Olive Cotton and what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family. Helen Ennis won the Victorian Premier's Literary Award for Non-Fiction for her biography Margaret Michaelis: Love, loss and photography, which was also judged Best Book by the Art Association of Australia and New Zealand. Her research on Olive Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board, a Peter Blazey Fellowship, and the ABR/George Hicks Foundation Fellowship. Formerly Curator of Photography at the National Gallery of Australia, Helen went on to become Director of the Centre for Art History and Art Theory and Sir William Dobell Chair of Art History at ANU School of Art & Design. Since 2000 she has curated eight major exhibitions for the National Library of Australia, National Portrait Gallery, National Gallery of Australia and other cultural exhibitions. Now Emeritus Professor, Helen is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Humanities. Alex Sloan AM has been a journalist for 30 years, including over 27 years as a broadcaster with the ABC. An award-winning journalist, Alex is highly regarded as an MC, interviewer and facilitator including: The ANU Meet The Author events, The National Library, National Museum of Australia, National Gallery of Australia and National Portrait Gallery. In 2017 Alex was named Canberra Citizen of the Year and is a member of the ACT Architects Board. At the national level, Alex is a director of The Australia Institute and The Winston Churchill Memorial Trust.
*Come to OK’s panel on Sunday!* Welcome to the episode on Mehrwert aka the Marxist concept of Surplus Value. We read an essay by Diederich Diederichsen, it’s super useful for determining the differing placement of art and artists within the class framework. Read it yourself here, and let us know what you think! If you … Continue reading "READING – On (Surplus) Value in Art"
My guest today is Kalia Brooks. Kalia is a curator, exhibition maker, and educator. As an exhibition maker, Kalia is dedicated to bringing people closer to the creative process, while bringing the creative process closer to people. She creates exhibitions that are community engaged, making cultural, social and political statements, that tap the healing power of art. Kalia has been or is currently an adjunct professor at Columbia University, New York University, Parsons School of Design, Pratt Institute of Fine Arts, and Cooper Union, integrating art history, sociology, culture, race and art into her courses. 2017 held huge milestones for Kalia: she moved to a new community, completed her dissertation for her PhD. in Aesthetics and Art Theory, planned her wedding, and discovered her mom was diagnosed with cancer. Kalia appreciates all the lessons learned in these transitional years, which helped set in motion all that she is manifesting now. I am so inspired by Kalia’s wisdom, creativity, and dedication to social justice. Follow the link below for Kalia’s website to explore recent exhibits, exciting upcoming exhibits, and how to sign up for her newsletter. I encourage you to join me for Kalia’s next project in the Fall of 2019, when The Institute for Research in African American Studies at Columbia University will hold a Symposium, commemorating the 400 year anniversary when Africans first landed in Jamestown. It’s fascinating that the early seeds of democracy and the early seeds of slavery happened at the same time. Enjoy the podcast! Links: www.kaliabrooksstudio.com
Subscribe to Kingdom To Kingdom on YouTube! www.youtube.com/channel/UCz-lQid-SbvWihBs2MZXEHQ All the latest Disney parks news and hottest takes from podcasting's premier Disney expert duo, who also happen to be brothers. Each week Jacob and David run down Disney theme parks news, rumors, and wild reckless speculation from around the world. KingdomToKingdompod@gmail.com Patreon.com/kingdomtokingdom @K2KPodcast
Positive Space speaks with Libby McFalls, Professor of Art and Foundations Coordinator at Columbus State UNiversity. She discusses how to change a foundations curriculum by asking "What are we good at?" how to balance life, art and teaching and her role on the board of ITI.
Heyo ear buds! This week we talk Koons, kitsch and outsourcing, Rafael interrupts Jeremy WAY less and we end the show with a good point we can both agree on: kitsch ain’t crass, it’s the acceptance of self! Ernest goes to camp https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Je3jfepymQM Kim Dotcom http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/21/kim-dotcom_n_1221586.html Jikji, the first printing press https://bangnangja.wordpress.com/2011/10/19/the-gutenberg-bible-vs-the-jikji/ Brutally Early Club http://www.brutallyearlyclub.org/ Saul Bass http://www.artofthetitle.com/designer/saul-bass/ David Ogilvy https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Ogilvy_(businessman) Seth Godin http://www.sethgodin.com/sg/ Karim Rashid http://www.karimrashid.com/ Jeff Koons’ gift to Paris a ‘Poisoned Chalice’ https://news.artnet.com/art-world/rubin-letter-koons-gift-paris-posioned-chalice-1038512 Art in Theory 1900-2000 https://www.amazon.com/Art-Theory-1900-Anthology-Changing/dp/0631227083 Clement Greenberg http://www.theartstory.org/critic-greenberg-clement.htm The Avant-Garde and Kitsch, 1939 http://arthistoryunstuffed.com/the-avant-garde-and-kitsch-1939/ Jeff Koons Play-Doh http://www.jeffkoons.com/artwork/celebration/play-doh-0 Neo-Dada http://www.theartstory.org/movement-neo-dada.htm Koons’ search for the perfect reflective surface http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/27/arts/design/27fink.html Koons’ retrospective http://whitney.org/Education/ForTeachers/TeacherGuides/JeffKoons Stack https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stack_(abstract_data_type) Bauhaus https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bauhaus Donald Judd http://juddfoundation.org/ Piet Mondrian http://www.piet-mondrian.org/ Koons porn http://www.widewalls.ch/jeff-koons-made-in-heaven-most-expensive-pieces/ Toulouse-Lautrec posters https://www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/1450 Lovebot https://lovebot.com/ Murakami, Louis Vuitton collaboration http://www.highsnobiety.com/2015/07/17/louis-vuitton-murakami-pieces/ Koons ballerina at Rockefeller Center https://news.artnet.com/exhibitions/jeff-koons-seated-ballerina-rockefeller-center-891545 Hummel Figurines http://www.ebay.com/bhp/goebel-hummel-figurines Ad: Neato File Share http://chriseugenemills.com/library/ Constant Dullaart http://constantdullaart.com Acute Art http://www.acuteart.com/ Marina Abramovic https://art21.org/artist/marina-abramovic/ Chromophobia http://www.reaktionbooks.co.uk/display.asp?ISB=9781861890740 Why We Need to Start Seeing the Classical World in Color https://hyperallergic.com/383776/why-we-need-to-start-seeing-the-classical-world-in-color/ Calvinism https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calvinism
Thoughts on Positive Space. Last October, we had the opportunity to attend the SECAC conference in Virginia as well as the Mid-America College Art Association conference in Ohio and asked participants at the FATE affiliate sessions to consider what positive space means to them. Special thanks to Lily Kounen and Guen Montgomery for inviting us to gather these thoughtful reflections on positive space.
Hello and welcome to episode 21! This week I had the absolutely privilege of sitting down with Spanish artist Maria Gil Ulldemolins who lives and works in Brussels. Maria's creative practice is a very process-oriented and heavily influenced by her experiences with meditation. Her work explores the themes of embracing mistakes, letting go, flow, compassion, control, variations and time. In this episode we really dive into Maria's journey of studying the visual arts in Swaziland at a young age to owning her own studio, her belief that life is like google maps and it finds a way of redirecting you to where you should be and how we all need to stop hating ourselves for hating ourselves when we're in a shitty place. This is a great episode is you want to hear a really honest discussion about integrity, honesty and pity parties, if you want to hear a really frank conversation about the pressure to make six figures online and how it affects creatives, and if you want to feel really inspired like you have the world on your side. I absolutely loved talking with Maria, she is such a breath of fresh air and I can't tell you how much of a laugh we had, both on air and off air. I know you're going to love Maria and this episode! Enjoy the show! About Maria Maria is a Spanish artist living and working in Brussels, Belgium. Maria's creative practice is a very process-oriented and heavily influenced by her experiences with meditation. Broad themes explored include embracing mistakes, letting go, flow, compassion, control, variations and time. Before committing to her painting practice, she worked in innovation. Maria is trained in Product Design, Art History and Art Theory. You can connect with Maria here: Website | Instagram Things we talked about during today's show Maria's story of studying in Swaziland at a young age and how this helped her find herself as a person and as an artist Debunking myths of easy six figure incomes online and how we're all supposed to be grateful for any employment opportunities How Maria is inspired by making accidents happen and her advice on how to take a similar approach with your creativity How Maria doesn't believe in faking it until you make it How we all need to stop hating ourselves for hating ourselves. Books/Resources etc mentioned during today's show Headspace Find out more and download the Couragemakers Manifesto here If you have any question about today's episode, any comments or would like to be a guest on Couragemakers, get in touch: meg@thathummingbirdlife.com About Meg & That Hummingbird Life I'm Meg and I'm the host of Couragemakers and founder of That Hummingbird Life. I started this podcast because I wanted to create a platform for passionate and unconventional women to have honest conversations and to share their stories, struggles and dreams. The intention behind this podcast is to inspire and encourage creative and mission-driven women to live a wholehearted life and follow the beat of their drum. When I'm not recording episodes and making new friends with the wonderful guests, you can find me working on all manners of magic over at That Hummingbird Life, sending free self care checks ins to hundreds of women every Sunday and helping my clients build brands they love as a graphic designer. I'm currently based in London, and getting ready for my round the world adventure with Mr. Meg starting August 2016. Don't worry the podcast isn't going anywhere! That Hummingbird Life | Twitter | Pinterest |
Helen Ennis, director, Centre for Art History and Art Theory, Australian National University School of Art At first glance it might seem that art museums and galleries in Australia have opened themselves up to different kinds of photographies in recent decades. There have been important exhibitions involving anthropological, fashion, forensic and vernacular photographs to name some of the most obvious. But how free is the flow of historical and contemporary photographs into art museums and galleries? What kinds of photographs are being collected and exhibited? Why, for example, are anthropological photographs from the nineteenth century widely collected but those from the present are not? This paper argues that there are some significant blockages affecting the traffic of photographs into institutions that predate the arrival of digital photography and the internet. These blockages have their origins in the 1970s and 1980s when photography was being legitimised and institutionalised in many parts of the world. Ennis draws on her curatorial practice at the National Gallery of Australia and her own role in what Vince Aletti has described as the institutionalised and categorical delimiting of photography. While such efforts were undertaken in good faith by historians and curators of photography they belonged to a particular historical moment whose distortions are still with us, arresting the flow of vibrant, compelling photographs and blocking the view of photography’s extraordinary polymorphousness.
Professor Winston from the Red Lodge podcast stops in to school the boys on Art. Winston crams hundreds of years of art concept into 45 mins of talk Patrick and Dennis try to keep up also Rap, Lovecraft, Cold War propag
Dr. Antoni Picazo discusses "Father Junípero Serra's Education and Ideology". Dr. Picazo is Associate Professor of Historical Sciences and Art Theory at the Universitat de les Illes Balears. This discussion was included in the conference session topic, “Mallorca”.
BRENT LOUGHLIN IS A TALENTED MUSIC PRODUCER, SONGWRITER & RAPPER....HE WILL IN TO SHARE HIS MUSIC WITH US.......RAYMOND SANDERS AKA FANTASY ART COMICS WILL BE IN THE HOUSE TO TALK ABOUT THE COMICS HE IS DEVELOPING ALONG WITH OTHER MEMBERS OF THE COMPANY INCLUDING YOUR'S TRUELY WHO HAS A COMIC BOOK COMING OUT THRU FANTASY ART COMICS....
Sabeth Buchmann is an art historian and critic. She is professor for modern and postmodern art at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna and Chair of the Institute for Art Theory and Cultural Studies. She writes contributions for books, magazines and catalogues regularly and is a member of the Advisory board of the Berlin based magazine ‘Texte zur Kunst’. She is the author of Denken gegen das Denken. Produktion – Technologie – Subjektivität bei Sol LeWitt, Hélio Oiticica und Yvonne Rainer 2007 and Co-editor with Alexander Alberro of Art After Conceptual Art 2006. Recorded May 6, 2010 in Magasin 3, Stockholm Language: English
Sabeth Buchmann is an art historian and critic. She is professor for modern and postmodern art at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna and Chair of the Institute for Art Theory and Cultural Studies. She writes contributions for books, magazines and catalogues regularly and is a member of the Advisory board of the Berlin based magazine ‘Texte zur Kunst’. She is the author of Denken gegen das Denken. Produktion – Technologie – Subjektivität bei Sol LeWitt, Hélio Oiticica und Yvonne Rainer 2007 and Co-editor with Alexander Alberro of Art After Conceptual Art 2006. Recorded May 6, 2010 in Magasin 3, Stockholm Language: English
This week we bring you a wonderful selection of modern classical and experimental pieces as compiled by Cole Pierce. Later was originally produced in a unique edition of 60 CDs, featuring a poem by Tyler Carter and packaged with the playlist printed on found paper and were distributed to Cole Pierce’s mix CD mailing list in January of 2010. The ongoing multiples project (since 2004) consists of mixed CDs produced and mailed about twice a year. Cole Pierce is a Chicago based artist making paintings and video installations, holds an MFA in Art Theory and Practice from Northwestern (2007). Check out his work and download more of his mixes at colepierce.com and also at his blog – prestosamo.blogspot.com. For full track listing and more information about this mix, please visit headphonecommute.com
Mr. Dan Ondra knows what it takes to troupe a large, traveling, gospel variety show (and has the bad back to prove it). But even though the semi-load of equipment & props have been retired, one thing has remained the same - Dan's eagerness to assist chalkers everywhere and help their ministries flourish. As he often says: "There's no competition here - we're all on the same team." Dan is one of the most selfless chalk artists I know and has been a personal blessing to me.Dan is not just a veteran chalk artist. His resume also includes being a teacher, author, magician, designer, inventor...well, too much to list here. Did I also mention that he is generous? Listen to a streaming version here.Running time: 63 minutes.Right-click HERE to download the mp3 (audio) file.These books are currently available as e-books from Dan's web site. Click on the book covers or titles to order.Chalk Art Workbook A web-based chalk art training program. Learn to draw 7 different pictures step-by-step. 43 pages. Fine Art Painting with Chalk (aka Art Theory & Therapy) A course consisting of 8 modules. 100 pages.- Chalk Art Newsletter Archives- Read this July 2009 edition of Chalk Art News featuring Dan Ondra.See 17 more of Dan's chalk art concepts at DanOndra.comCopyright protected under a Creative Commons License by Kerry Kistler and ChalkedAndAmazed.com
Michal Bortnik came to AdNectar from Microsoft where he spent 6 years as a Product Manager in the consumer-products group. At Microsoft he was responsible for designing the features for XBox live —winner of the Emmy award for outstanding technological achievement—an online video game community with an industry-leading customer satisfaction rate and five million subscribers. Michal co-invented eighteen patent pending technologies enabling social interactions between Xbox players. Michal has an MBA from Stanford and a BA in Computer Science from Harvard. Vlada comes to AdNectar having spent 2 years working with a handful of social networking start ups. Prior, Vlada spent 5 years as a program manager on high profile projects at Microsoft. She was responsible for providing leadership to the cross-discipline teams involved in the design, build, and launch of Windows Live. Vlada designed features of the content publishing platform for Office Online, reducing content delivery time hundredfold and helping drive site traffic from 100 thousand to 65 million unique customers per month. Prior to this, she served as a software engineer at Sprint. Vlada has a BS in Engineering from Northwestern with a double major in Computer Engineering and Art Theory and Practice.
Michal Bortnik came to AdNectar from Microsoft where he spent 6 years as a Product Manager in the consumer-products group. At Microsoft he was responsible for designing the features for XBox live —winner of the Emmy award for outstanding technological achievement—an online video game community with an industry-leading customer satisfaction rate and five million subscribers. Michal co-invented eighteen patent pending technologies enabling social interactions between Xbox players. Michal has an MBA from Stanford and a BA in Computer Science from Harvard. Vlada comes to AdNectar having spent 2 years working with a handful of social networking start ups. Prior, Vlada spent 5 years as a program manager on high profile projects at Microsoft. She was responsible for providing leadership to the cross-discipline teams involved in the design, build, and launch of Windows Live. Vlada designed features of the content publishing platform for Office Online, reducing content delivery time hundredfold and helping drive site traffic from 100 thousand to 65 million unique customers per month. Prior to this, she served as a software engineer at Sprint. Vlada has a BS in Engineering from Northwestern with a double major in Computer Engineering and Art Theory and Practice.