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Have you ever wondered what exactly an artist residency is and whether it might be the missing piece in your creative journey? In this comprehensive guide, Ty Nathan Clark takes you through everything you need to know about these transformative opportunities.Artist residencies aren't just retreats—they're powerful creative accelerators that provide dedicated time, space, and freedom to focus exclusively on your work. From rural sanctuaries nestled in nature to dynamic urban studios, these programs offer artists the chance to step away from daily distractions and immerse themselves in their practice.The benefits extend far beyond a change of scenery. Residencies foster creative growth through uninterrupted studio time, expose you to new perspectives in unfamiliar environments, build valuable professional networks, provide access to specialized equipment and mentorship, and can significantly enhance your artistic credibility. As one resident reflected, "I left with the certainty that I'm an artist with a commitment to the creative life that I've never since questioned."Finding the right residency requires understanding what you need. Do you crave rural peace or urban energy? Are you seeking community or solitude? Can you self-fund, or do you need financial support? From fully-funded career-makers like Skowhegan and MacDowell to self-directed retreats, there's something for every artist at every career stage—you just need to know where to look and how to successfully apply.Ty shares insider tips for crafting winning applications: be specific about your plans, showcase your strongest recent work, explain why this moment and this particular residency are right for you, and always follow application guidelines meticulously. For those who secure a residency, he offers practical advice on preparing materials, absorbing your surroundings before diving into work, and documenting your experience.Whether you're considering your first residency application or looking to elevate your approach, this episode provides the knowledge and inspiration to take this meaningful step in your artistic journey. Ready to transform your practice through new experiences, connections, and creative freedom?Send us a message - we would love to hear from you!Make sure to follow us on Instagram here:@justmakeartpodcast @tynathanclark @nathanterborg
Herzlich willkommen zum deutschsprachigen Neuseeland-Podcast „Holy Sheep Neuseeland“! Mein Name ist Jenny Jakobeit, ich bin Fernseh-Autorin und habe vor 3,5 Jahren diesen Podcast ins Leben gerufen. Mittlerweile gibt es über 150 Episoden. Wenn ihr nach Neuseeland ausgewandert seid, eine Reise plant oder euch einfach zurückträumen wollt – seid ihr hier genau richtig.Macht's euch gemütlich, heute gibt's eine verhältnismäßig lange Folge – und eine Menge erste Male.Wir haben das erste Mal eine Künstlerin, genauer gesagt eine Musikerin, zu Gast: Nora. Wir haben das erste Mal jemanden, der unsere Titelmusik live auf verschiedenen Instrumenten einspielt. Wir reisen zum ersten Mal nach Northland. Und wir sprechen darüber, wie eine Artist Residency abläuft.So viel schon mal erklärt: Künstler:innen leben für eine bestimmte Zeit an einem Ort, widmen sich dort ihrer Kunst und präsentieren diese im Gegenzug für eine kostenlose Unterkunft der Öffentlichkeit.Nora, ihr Mann Jonas und die beiden Söhne Juri und Jelle leben für drei Monate in Kawakawa, einer kleinen Stadt im äußersten Norden der Nordinsel. Genau hier kaufte sich 1973 Hundertwasser ein vier Quadratkilometer großes Grundstück. Auf seiner „Insel der verlorenen Wünsche“ pflanzte er bis zu seinem Tod mehr als 100.000 Bäume.51 Jahre später kommen Nora und Jonas nach Kawakawa, um sich künstlerisch mit diesem besonderen Ort auseinanderzusetzen. Diese Episode ist für alle spannend, die sich für folgende Themen interessieren:Kunst, Familienauszeit, Maori-Kultur, das neuseeländische Schulsystem, Vanlife, Housesitting und Naturschutz in Neuseeland. Aber wir sprechen auch über die Lowlights im Alltag – denn nicht alles ist immer nur schön.Kontakt mit Nora & Jonas:Norawebsite: https://norahansen.deinsta: https://www.instagram.com/noralafagotistaJonaswebsite: https://pixelsix.netinsta: https://www.instagram.com/pixelsixnetmastodon: https://troet.burg-halle.de/@jonashansenHier könnt ihr den AUDIOWALK in Neuseeland hörenInteressante Links über Wetlands:https://www.stats.govt.nz/indicators/wetland-areahttps://climateandnature.org.nz/solutions/new-zealand-ecosystems/wetlandshttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HlZvDGQIEQg Themen aus der Sendung: Noras Mikrofon für die Audiowalks:Soundman OKM II Klassik Solo (binaural)360 Grad Kamera von Jonas: Insta 360 x 3(Affilate Link: Ein Weg unseren Podcast zu unterstützen. Wenn du über diesen Link einkaufst, bekommen wir eine kleine Provision, für dich ändert sich der Preis nicht)Hier hat die Familie „Housesitting“ gemacht. Die filzenden Zwillinge aus der Schweizin einer Doku vom SRF.Białowieża-Urwald in Polen Kawakawa – der Ort, in dem die Familie gelebt hat Romiromi Maori Massage Hundertwasser Artgallery Neuseeland Stachelrochen in Neuseeland Noch mehr Epsioden über "Familienauszeit in Neuseeland":Conny, Lars, Nele und Jakob: Familienauszeit in NelsonWebseite / Spotify / Apple PodcastEine Lehrerin aus Hamburg im Sabbaticalmit ihren zwei KindernWebseite / Spotify / Apple PodcastEin Schuljahr in Neuseeland mit CosmaWebseite / Spotify / Apple PodcastWiedersehen in Berlin - wie geht es Conny und Anke 1 Jahr nach der FamilienauszeitWebseite / Spotify / Apple Podcast Unser Werbepartner dieser Folge:Study Nelson. Eine Bildungsberatungsagentur in Nelson auf der Südinsel Neuseelands.Webseite Study NelsonInstagram Study NelsonWenn ihr im Antragsformular "Holy Sheep" eingebt, bekommt ihr 100 Euro Rabatt.
Barcelona – Costa Brava Artist ResidencyNeuroaesthetics, Art & the Mediterranean Spirit
Send us a textAnel Flores, a queer/lesbian Chicana story maker, discusses her inception and impact of La Otra Taller Nepantla Artist Residency, held February 2021 in Arroyo City, a town in the Rio Grande Valley. Inspired by Gloria Anzaldua's 1995 residency, Flores paid homage to the nurturing environment for artists to create freely. Anel re-created the residency to provide a safe, supportive space for queer, BIPOC artists. In this episode, residency fellows shared their experiences, highlighting the importance of community, feedback, and the healing power of nature.---Recorded and released 2022
In December, 28-year-old Moab resident Kara Bard bought the site of a former artist residency in Cisco, Utah, called Home of the Brave. The program was started by the previous owner Eileen Muza, who spent nearly a decade rebuilding old structures on the ghost town property. Today on the show, we talk to Muza about the history of Home of the Brave and the challenges they faced as a queer artist in rural Utah. And we talk to Bard about her plans to reopen the residency and more. - Show Notes - • KZMU's previous reporting about Home of the Brave: https://www.kzmu.org/best-of-2019-creatively-preserving-and-re-forming-cisco-utah/ • Photo: Eileen Muza touches up their junkyard "movie theater," a projector screen on the ghost town property they used to own in Cisco, Utah. By Emily Arntsen / KZMU
This episode of Big Blend Radio's 1st Friday "Toast to The Parks & Arts" Show features Tanya Ortega, photographer and founder of the National Parks Arts Foundation (NPAF). Hear about the organization's unique month-long artist residencies in locations like Chaco Canyon in New Mexico, Dry Tortugas National Park in Florida, and Hawai'i Volcano National Park. Plus, this year's opportunities for park destinations and artists of all genres to be part of their programming. NPAF is a non-profit offering unique Artist-in-Residence Programs, Museum In-Loan Programs, and Workshops inspired by our National Parks, National Monuments, and World Heritage Sites. NPAF has supported over 300 programs, over 120 artists, and been the conduit for over a million dollars in artwork donations. Watch for Big Blend Radio's NPAF Retrospective, a digital publication featuring 8 years of podcast interviews with artists and park representatives! Keep up with us by getting our newsletter at https://nationalparktraveling.com/listing/join-our-newsletter/ Learn more: https://www.nationalparksartsfoundation.org/
Today on LIVE! Daily News, the San Angelo Police Department has issued updates regarding a man killed after he was struck by a vehicle and the shooting on December 3rd.Also, some lane and ramp closures could cause delays starting next week. Then, Helen with the Lion's Club and Hector Guzman with the San Angelo Symphony Orchestra are in the studio. Today's Top Stories: Texas Man Allegedly Used Scissors in Black Friday Target Bathroom Attack (12/05/2024)Texas First-Graders Wet Themselves After Restroom Privileges Revoked (12/05/2024)WATCH: Heated Exchange Regarding 9/11 Happens at Secret Service hearing (12/05/2024)San Angelo Drivers Paying Highest Gas Prices in Texas This Week (12/05/2024)Abilene Man Named December's Most Wanted Sex Offender (12/05/2024)AAA: Exercise Caution To Prevent Parking Lot Crashes, Theft (12/05/2024)Big Bend Opens Applications for 2025 Artist Residency (12/05/2024)Jury Sentences Fort Worth Killer to Death in Case of Ritual 'Sacrifices' and Burned Bodies (12/05/2024)Major Crashes Cause Traffic Chaos on I-20 in Odessa (12/05/2024)Texas Inmates Charged with Exploiting Disabled Man in Jail (12/05/2024)Republican Lawmaker Proposes Bill to Seize Control of Austin (12/05/2024)Unranked Water Valley Crashing the Party in State Semifinals (12/05/2024)Cool Today, Rain Tomorrow (12/05/2024)Indecency with a Child and Drug Trafficking Top Booking Report (12/05/2024)Texas Bill Seeks to Ban All THC Products, Close Legal Loophole (12/04/2024)Trash Pit Fire Rekindles Near Highway 87 South, Prompting Multi-Agency Response (12/04/2024)VIDEO: One Hospitalized After Rollover Crash in San Angelo (12/04/2024)3 San Angelo Cowboys Set to Compete in National Finals Rodeo (12/04/2024)San Angelo Pedestrian Struck While Walking in Traffic Dies Days Later (12/04/2024)POLICE: Shooting Victim Declines to Pursue Charges, Investigation Ongoing (12/04/2024)Lane and Ramp Closures to Begin on Houston Harte Next Week (12/04/2024)
Sara Nolan is a doula, writer, editor, and a mother/stepmother who lives in New York. Kaitlin and Sara connected through the Artist Residency in Motherhood Facebook group which we've mentioned here before. Sara also runs a wonderful project and business of conducting birth story interviews, called Tell Your Birth Story. So, as the subject matter of this season came into focus, we realized- why not sit with Sara and record our own birth stories, and share them with you all? Kaitlin took the leap and recorded her three birth stories- one for each of her children- which we are so excited to share with you in a special 3-part series. Today we share with you the first story, the birth of Kaitlin's first child, who in this episode we'll call C for privacy's sake. We're releasing this episode on the day of her birth nine years ago.We won't give too many spoilers as they'll all be covered in this birth story, but we hope you'll check out Sara's work and consider sitting with her for a birth story yourself. She sits with birthing people in all manners of birth stories, including those that may be laced in trauma or loss, as well as those like this one that we're sharing today that felt more triumphant after many years of heartache and infertility.And the kicker of all this is that when we recorded these birth stories, Sara herself was pregnant, which she will share more about in her own writing and which you can find at tellyourbirthstory.com. Much love and gratitude to Kaitlin and C for sharing their beautiful story with us all. Please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.Visit our website: postpartumproduction.com Follow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com
Send us a textIn this Art Chat podcast interview, Linda discussed artist residencies and Robyn's atelier background. They explore how to discover the right residency for you, how residencies can break you out of your comfort zone, the different requirements, and how Robyn used her academic training in an atelier in her artist residency.Support the showBuy Linda a coffee here:https://www.buymeacoffee.com/LindaRFisler Visit our Youtube Channel at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8yE0wMMKlpgAOXJdIi2uIABe mentored by Linda-no yearly contract and lots of information, cool artist community and FUN! https://www.mastrius.com/linda-fisler-mentorship/Visit Linda's website: https://www.lindafisler.com/
In this episode we meet Krysti Keener, a student in the East-West Psychology/MFA Masters Program, and hear of how she came to cultivate a transformative and healing artistic practice through opening to the liminal power of found objects. We discuss the problem of how we conventionally frame artistic practice and identity in relation to the culture industries and share strategies of exit which aim to liberate the practitioner from artistic labour to artistic transformation. We discuss how such a change of milieu based upon spiritual and holistic world views can produce new forms of creativity and subjectivity which facilitate individual and collective transformation and wellbeing. Krysti ends the podcast by sharing her current EWP community building project based upon creating an artist in residency program for people with traumatic brain injuries. Bio: Krysti Keener's life changed instantly when she suffered a traumatic brain injury in her late forties. A portal opened, and her art practice slowly developed as her brain healed. She is the Founder and Executive Director of The Neuro: Community, Artist Residency & Mentorship, a non-profit founded to support the flourishing of neuro-disrupted individuals by providing services that connect them to community, art, and nature, with an emphasis on integrating these aspects into their lives. She is an artist, Spiritual Herbalist, founder of the herbal brand Soul Topophilia, hypnosis practitioner, and Hakomi certified coach working with people whose lives have been upended. She holds a dual MBA from Columbia University and the University of California, Berkeley. She is currently a student at CIIS in the joint Masters degree program in East-West Psychology and an MFA. Website: https://www.theneurocommunity.org/ Substack: https://theneurocommunity.substack.com/ IG: https://www.instagram.com/theneurocommunity/ Connect with Krysti: email: krysti@theneurocommunity.org - The Neuro: Community, Artist Residency & Mentorship https://www.instagram.com/krystik/ IG - Art and Soul Topophilia http://www.krystikeener.com/ - Art https://www.ohk.agency/ - Coaching and Soul Topophilia Teachers Mentioned: Empress Karen Rose - Sacred Vibes Apothecary Founder, Master Herbalist and Author Michelle Greene - Welder, Artist, Art and Welding Educator The EWP Podcast credits East-West Psychology Podcast Website Connect with EWP: Website • Youtube • Facebook Hosted by Stephen Julich (EWP Core Faculty) and Jonathan Kay (PhD candidate) Produced by: Stephen Julich and Jonathan Kay Edited and Mixed by: Jonathan Kay Introduction music: Mosaic, by Monsoon on the album Mandala Music at the end of the episode: Migration by Justin Gray's Synthesis Introduction Voiceover: Roche Wadehra Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Recently, Emily was invited to spend 2 weeks of uninterrupted time to conceptualise a show that will open at UCROSS Art Gallery in June, 2025. In this episode we go behind the scenes with Emily on the beautiful UCROSS Foundation ranch in Wyoming. Located on a 20,000-acre ranch in the wide open spaces of northeastern Wyoming, Ucross is a magical setting for individual creative work, reflection, innovation, and dreaming. Annie Proulx's The Shipping News, Elizabeth Gilbert's Eat Pray Love, Adam Guettel's The Light in the Piazza, Ricky Ian Gordon's operatic adaptation of The Grapes of Wrath – these are just a few of the acclaimed works that have been created in part during Ucross residencies. The UCROSS renowned residency program has been around for more than 40 years. In that time, UCROSS has served 2,700+ artists, and approximately 1,000 of those artists are in the visual arts. These artists come from all over the country, as well as many pockets around the world. The talented artists, writers, and musicians that accompanied Emily at Ucross: Diana Marie Delgado - poetry Megan Culhane Galbraith - non-fiction Nancy Y. Kim - mixed media Sarah Lass - Dance Linn Meyers - painting Nicky Sohn - music Tyler Stoll - mixed media Kate Sullivan - fiction Therese Workman - music Special thanks to: William Belcher, President Caitlin Addlesperger, Deputy Director Brittney Denham-Whisonant - Gallery Associate Tawni Shuler, Program Director Lacasa Michelena, Gallery & Events Associate Carl Largent, Program Coordinator Jackie Vitale, Chef
We're excited to share with you this conversation with Adrie Rose, a poet and trained folk herbalist who lives beside an orchard in Western Massachusetts. Adrie is the editor of Nine Syllables Press at Smith College. Her chapbook Rupture came out in January of 2024, and her micro chapbook I Will Write a Love Poem came out in 2023.In today's conversation, Kaitlin and Adrie discuss Adrie's writing and the connections between her personal experiences and her work on the page. Specifically, the way in which her wider personal history- one that has included everything from the creation of a bakery to investigations of folk herbalism- as well as a life threatening ectopic pregnancy, that all came together to inform her writing in unexpected and evocative ways.We know you'll enjoy this conversation with Adrie. We personally learned a lot about what it means to live in the world, and also to bring those lived experiences to the page in the form of some really, really meaningful and personal poetry.Find more of Adrie's work here: Website: https://www.adrierose.com/Instagram: @adrierose_Substack: https://adrie.substack.com/ Also mentioned in the podcast:Artist Residency in Motherhood (ARiM): https://www.artistresidencyinmotherhood.com/ Please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.For regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.com Follow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com
Those who watched to completion the hit Netflix competition series Blown Away 4, will no doubt remember Ryan Thompson's final gallery installation, Where You Are is Where You Need to Be. In all black glass, he created large vessel forms that served as sentinels to the recording of time. A blown glass pendulum in the center of the room recorded each moment in a footed reliquary of white sand below it. Its existential message spoke to the viewer silently. Permanently. Thompson states: “This installation was created to satisfy a need to slow down, contemplate, and analyze my artistic path and my creative process. The unnatural pace at which Blown Away required its competitors to conceptualize and create caused a mental fatigue unlike anything I had ever felt. As difficult as this experience was, my journey as an artist has never been a straight line, and whether an experience has been positive or negative in the moment, in the end, it was exactly what it was supposed to be. Where You Are is Where You Need to Be is a space created to meditate and reflect on my trajectory both as a person and as an artist.” Hailing from Sandusky, Ohio, near the shores of Lake Erie, Thompson and his sister Leah grew up with a love of the outdoors, sports, and all things creative. These interests were endlessly nurtured by their parents Jim and Kathy Thompson. Ryan's passion for music began in the 5th grade when a group of friends with a band needed a drummer. His love for music and percussion remains today. After completing high school, Thompson attended Bowling Green State University (BGSU), Bowling Green, Ohio, to study Visual Communication Technology, a degree program he found to be lacking in creative freedom and excitement. In his third year, he enrolled in an Intro to Glass Blowing course on the recommendation of a friend, and the trajectory of his life was altered forever. For the next 3 years, Thompson poured every ounce of his energy into learning to control his molten material. The example of excellence in this craft demonstrated by his peers and instructors such as Scott Darlington set the bar of achievement high. He focused on fundamental skills in the form of vessel and goblet making, utilizing the Venetian processes and techniques he found most exciting and inspirational. After graduation, Thompson began working at the Toledo Museum of Art Glass Pavilion as a studio artist and workshop instructor, as well as a production glassblower at many local glass shops in the birthplace of the Studio Glass Art movement. During his time in Toledo, the artist was fortunate to work with many world-renowned glass artists, honing his skills and expanding his network of colleagues in this community-orientated profession. In 2018, Thompson accepted a production glassblowing position at Greenfield Village (The Henry Ford Museum) in Dearborn, Michigan. The job allowed Ryan to continue to broaden his skill set and expand on his experience as a production glassmaker. In 2021, he was promoted to shop lead and began coordinating the team's production efforts, designing new product and maintaining the equipment that makes glass blowing possible. After participating in Blown Away 4, on May 1, Thompson relocated back to Toledo, Ohio, and became the new owner and operator of Gathered Glass, a public glass studio that offers hand-made glass, glassblowing workshops, and public events in the heart of The Glass City. This opportunity is something he has dreamt about for the last decade and is hard at work making the business his own. Thompson's partner, Kayla Kirk of Charmed Ceramics, is in the process of building a pottery studio on the second floor that will offer similar programming as well as hand crafted pottery for the home. The studio will be renamed Huron Street Studio and will celebrate its Grand Opening at 23 N. Huron St. in downtown Toledo, September 14, 2024. Thompson will also participate in an Artist Residency at the Museum of Glass Tacoma from October 9 – 13, 2024.
In this week's episode of the ArtTactic Podcast, host Adam Green is joined by Dexter Wimberly, the founder and director of the Hayama Artist Residency in Japan. Adam and Dexter delve into Dexter's journey to Japan and his motivations for establishing the Hayama Artist Residency. They discuss the residency's rapid growth and increasing popularity, highlighted by the impressive number of applicants this past year. Adam shares insights from his experience on the artist selection committee, and they explore what sets the Hayama Artist Residency apart from others. Dexter explains how his residency provides unique support to artists, making it a standout in the increasingly crowded field of artist residencies. The conversation also touches on the contemporary art scene in Japan, its recent developments, and the growing interest from galleries and art fairs. Dexter offers his perspective on the challenges and opportunities facing the Japanese contemporary art scene and where he sees it heading in the coming years.
This episode of Postpartum Production was recorded live at Blackbird Books Bookstore and Cafe in San Francisco, on a warm Spring day in the shop's back garden. This beautiful event was co-hosted by Recess Collective, a local San Francisco organization that builds inclusive community-centered spaces for families, particularly in the early years of parenting. A heartfelt thank you to both organizations for their efforts in uniting our community on that day, and every day.That day, Kaitlin joined author Nicole Haroutunian at Blackbird for a reading of her novel Choose This Now, published by Noemi Press this year, with conversation and questions from the audience about her process and inspiration for the book. In the audience were young children and parents wandering in and out; a mother nursing her child for most of the event sitting in the audience. We hope these kinds of readings and author events become more common ways that we can incorporate those whose schedules don't accommodate evening or late night events, but can fold into days when caregiving can, as we know, often feel like the only task.In addition to readings from Choose This Now, Kaitlin and Nicole discuss:How Nicole has chosen to navigate talking about experiences of early caregiving, friendship, and all the layers that she manages in the book, in a realistic wayThe experience of having given birth; what shifted in Nicoles life in terms of how she now creates literary worksHow Nicole relates to her work, and how that fed her characters experiences themselves as wellA special shout out to Artist Residency in Motherhood (ARiM), mentioned in this episode, and Cut + Paste, for bringing Kaitlin and Nicole- and so many other artist mothers- together. More on Nicole: Nicole is also the author of Speed Dreaming, which was published by Little A in 2015. Her work has appeared in the Georgia Review, Story, the Bennington Review, Joyland, Post Road, and Tin House's Open Bar, as well as many others. She lives with her family in Woodside, Queens in New York City. You can find more of her work at:http://nicoleharoutunian.com/@nicoleharoutunianwriterPlease subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.Visit our website: postpartumproduction.com Follow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com
Today I have the pleasure of speaking with the extremely talented illustrator, Eliza Williams of Doolittle Illustrations.Eliza is a multi-disciplinary creative who specialises in illustration, animation and design, bringing a bit of colour into people's lives.Her work takes on many different forms combining both digital and traditional mediums to create a colourful little world to escape to and explore.In this episode, Eliza shares her journey as an illustrator and talks about her experience going viral on Instagram, ending her up on the wrong side of the platform and having her account removed (don't worry - she got it back!).She shares her thoughts on creating a community, not a following, and why she believes that connection is at the core of all of her greatest successes.Eliza also shares her experience of doing an art residency in Japan, her collaboration with Spotify, and some awesome little nuggets of wisdom for creatives from her own experiences.Listen in for more on Eliza's journey and be sure to check her out on socials below. Connect with Eliza:Website: doolittleillustrations.comInstagram: @doolittleillustrationsTikTok: @lizadoolittlee–––––––––––––––––––––––Do you have a spare 2 minutes to answer a few quick questions to help make this podcast even MORE impactful? In return, I'll send you the entire first module of my signature brand strategy course, Map Your Brand Magic, as a big thank you!You can fill out the super quick form here ➡️bit.ly/passionpodfeedback–––––––––––––––––––––––Read the accompanying blog post.Tag me on Instagram @makerandmoxie and let me know you're listening.And sign up to the Moxie Musings newsletter for more goodness like this.–––––––––––––––––––––––Want to support the show & help me make the world a more creative place one brand at a time? You can pop something in my tip jar here.Any amount is appreciated, as is sharing the episodes or recommending the show to your creative friends!Want to sponsor the Brand Your Passion Podcast? You can view the options & book in here.
Der Portfolio-Podcast | Kreativ erfolgreich in Illustration und Design
In der Sommerpausen-Mini-Serie »Überzeugungen« erzähle ich in den Episoden #119, 120 und 121 drei Geschichten aus meinem persönlichen Leben – ohne Berufsbezug, aber zum Thema Überzeugungen und wie diese unsere Wahrnehmung steuern.
In this episode of "The Truth in This Art," host Rob Lee converses with Ti Malik Coleman, a multi-talented comedian, teacher, storyteller, improviser, and writer from Baltimore, Maryland. They explore Ti Malik's creative journey, emphasizing the importance of storytelling and comedy in fostering connections and community. Ti Malik shares his experiences with improv, filmmaking, and his one-man show "40-Year-Old Puberty," which delves into the challenges of adulthood. The discussion also touches on personal struggles, the significance of representation, and the power of humor in storytelling. The episode concludes with light-hearted banter and Ti Malik's upcoming projects.Episode Highlight:Introducing Ti Malik Coleman (00:01:06) Rob Lee introduces Ti Malik Coleman, a multi-talented comedian, teacher, storyteller, improviser, and writer.Ti Malik's Background and Artistic Journey (00:02:02) Ti Malik introduces himself, talks about his passion for storytelling, comedy, and fostering connections, and mentions his start in improv comedy and storytelling.Returning to Pursuing Creativity (00:08:47) Ti Malik discusses leaving his job as an insurance accounting supervisor to pursue improv comedy and storytelling, leading to his full dive into art.The Importance of Connection in Art (00:12:11) Ti Malik shares the impact of feeling disconnected in his life and how it led him to use art to foster connections and prevent others from facing similar consequences.The Power of Connection and Community Building (00:16:24) Rob and Ti Malik discuss the power of connection and community building through storytelling and personal conversations, facilitating healing and recognition of one's story and work.Using Comedy to Overcome Nervousness (00:27:18) The use of humor and comedy to overcome nervousness and connect with the audience during stage performances.40-Year-Old Puberty (00:32:24) A humorous storytelling adventure about navigating the challenges of being a grown man with youthful problems and experiences.Advice on storytelling and vulnerability (00:41:59) Ti Malik offers advice for individuals wanting to tell stories and be vulnerable, emphasizing the uniqueness of personal experiences and the importance of finding a safe space to share.Upcoming Shows and Events (00:54:30) Ti Malik shares information about their website, social media, upcoming gigs, and shows in Richmond and Baltimore.Key Takeaways:1. Authenticity Builds Trust: Sharing genuine experiences and emotions in your storytelling fosters deeper connections and trust within your community.2. Embrace Vulnerability: Being open and vulnerable in your stories can lead to personal growth and help others feel less alone in their struggles.3. Commit to the Creative Process: Dedicate time and effort to refining your work, and be open to feedback to improve and polish your material.4. Representation Matters: Creating inclusive spaces and sharing diverse perspectives in your art can help others feel seen and understood, fostering empathy and connection.Website and Socials:timalikpresents.comX: @tiologyInstagram: __tiologyFacebook: Ti Malik ColemanThank you for tuning in to this episode of The Truth in This Art featuring the incredible Ti Malik Coleman! To keep the conversation going and support our amazing guest, be sure to visit Ti Malik's website and follow him on social media. If you enjoyed this episode, please take a moment to rate and review it—it really helps us reach more listeners. And if you want to support the podcast further, consider joining our Patreon community. Your support means the world to us! Market Center Street FestCelebrate the arts and community at the first-ever Market Center Street Fest on June 29th from 12 - 8 pm at Lexington Market Plaza. This free outdoor festival aims to regenerate the Market Center neighborhood with a day of arts, food, fashion, culture, and music. All are welcome!For more details, visit: marketcenterbaltimore.org. ★ Support this podcast ★
Facing rejection is an inevitable part of an artist's journey, but it doesn't have to be a roadblock. In this insightful episode with Kathleen Beausoleil, we explore how to turn rejection into a stepping stone towards success, specifically focusing on the process of applying to art residencies with renewed confidence. Additionally, we'll discuss the art of painting crowds and how the global COVID-19 pandemic has influenced this genre. Learn how artists have adapted their techniques and the essence of crowds in a post-pandemic world. Join us as we cover: -Drawing inspiration and composition from art history -Effective techniques for handling rejection and using it as a growth tool -Crafting compelling residency applications -Insights into the selection process and what residency programs look for -Exploring the genre of painting crowds and its significance in contemporary https://www.kathleenbeausoleil.com https://www.instagram.com/kathleenbeausoleil/
6/7/24: MTA Pres Max Page w/ N'hmptn Assoc. of School Employees Pres Andrea Egitto & MTA Training Dir Ricardo Rosa: Northampton & other school budgets. Donnabelle Casis w/ Tori Lawrence, Founder, Atland Artist Residency in Chesterfield. Clare Higgins, Exec. Dir, Community Action & Comm'r, Mass. Poverty Commission. "Jesus Queen of Heaven" w/ playwright & actor Jo Clifford, Nurse Practitioner Rebecca Stewart, & First Churches Pastor Sarah Buteux.
Learn more at TheCityLife.org --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/citylifeorg/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/citylifeorg/support
Have you ever watched an artist wrestle with their inner demons as they try to capture something ethereal on the canvas? It's this very struggle between ego and insecurity that we unravel in our latest episode, where we uncover how artists balance confidence with vulnerability. We discuss the critical role of ego—not as a symbol of arrogance but as a beacon of assurance—and how this impacts an artist's interaction with the art world. Join us and a panel of artists as we share candid experiences of wrestling with self-doubt, all while boldly owning the title of 'artist' with pride and authenticity.This episode also peels back the layers of complex emotions tied to visibility and recognition in the art world. Imagine the double-edged sword of yearning for acclaim, while simultaneously standing naked to public critique—it's a vulnerability we all know too well, but one that can lead to growth. We navigate the art of celebrating personal achievements, leaning on the strength of a supportive community, and managing the green-eyed monster of jealousy with grace. Our guests open up about the transformative power of encouragement and how fostering connectivity elevates not just individual artists, but the entire creative ecosystem.Finally, we take you on a journey to the seclusion and inspiration of artist residencies like Pooch Cove, where the environment shapes spirit and practice. Through personal stories, we reflect on how spaces like these can catalyze profound shifts in artistic perspectives, illustrated by our own encounters with the vastness of nature and a community that feels like an instant family. We wrap up with heartfelt gratitude to the residencies that have rekindled our creative flames and tease the promise of upcoming museum visits and interviews. If you're an artist or just fascinated by the creative process, this episode is a palette of emotions and revelations not to be missed.Artists in the episode:@tynathanclark @Moksananda@francis.beaty@audreycha.art@jaclyn_gordyan@giannatesone@allisonhudsonart@bonny_thomassen_art (present but not in the episode)Send us a message - we would love to hear from you!Make sure to follow us on Instagram here:@justmakeartpodcast @tynathanclark @nathanterborg
Sara Stern is an interdisciplinary artist from New York City. Her recent projects prod histories of urban development with speculative fiction. Stern has exhibited and screened her work in the US and internationally, at venues including SculptureCenter (Long Island City, NY), Anthology Film Archives (New York, NY), the Museum of the Moving Image (New York, NY), The Jewish Museum (New York, NY), Ortega y Gasset Projects (Brooklyn, NY) and the Institute of Contemporary Arts Singapore (Singapore). Stern received a BA in Visual and Environmental Studies from Harvard College and an MFA in Visual Arts from Columbia University. She is the recipient of a Rema Hort Mann Emerging Artist Grant, the Fountainhead Fellowship in the Department of Sculpture + Extended Media at Virginia Commonwealth University, and several residencies at the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, MA. In recent years, Stern has participated in The Watermill Center Artist Residency Program (Water Mill, NY), the Art & Law Program, the Object Movement Residency at The Center at West Park (New York, NY), and the Artist Residency at the Carving Studio and Sculpture Center (West Rutland, VT). Installation view, Sara Stern, "Study for a Scene", 2024, Ortega y Gasset Projects, Brooklyn, NY, curated by Adam Liam Rose. (Center: “The window felt shattered,” 2024, two-channel video (rear and front projection, color/sound), mirror floor, windowed partition, 11:49 min, looped. Right: “Curtain Call,” 2024, Kiln-formed glass, single-channel spotlight video projection, pulley, custom mount, dimensions variable. Left: "Beckett's Chew (Where Credit is Due)," 2024, cast glass, single-channel rear projection (BW/silent), custom mount, 59 sec, looped.) Sara Stern, “Curtain Call,” 2024, Kiln-formed glass, single-channel spotlight video projection, pulley, custom mount, dimensions variable. The window felt shattered (2 min excerpt) from Sara Stern on Vimeo. Excerpt from "The window felt shattered": "The window felt shattered", 2024, single-channel version of two-channel video installation, color/sound, 11:49 min, looped. Credits for The window felt shattered: Director, Editor: Sara Stern, Mime: Bill Bowers, Violin & Viola: Pauline Kim Harris, Sound Design, Mix, Recording, Engineering, Mastering: Kevin Ramsay, Theremin: Sara Stern, Sound recording at Harvestworks - New York City, Excerpt from Dongmae by Pauline Kim Harris, Lauren Cauley, Violin, Annaliese Kowert, Violin, Pauline Kim Harris, Viola, Andrew Yee, Cello, John-Paul Norpoth, Bass, Recorded live at The Stone - New York City (2019). Several lines of text adapted from Naomi Klein's Doppelganger: A Trip Into the Mirror World. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2023.
It's a unique opportunity for a Hong Kong-based artist to immerse themselves in the life, culture and art of Fogo Island. Its called The Fog and Mist Residency and is the brainchild of Fogo Island Arts, The Museum of Contemporary Art Toronto and Para Site, a contemporary art centre in Hong Kong. Kitty Scott is the curator and strategic advisor for Fogo Islands Arts.
My guest this week is the Irish artist and painter Kevin McSherry. Kevin and I met for the first time on the Greek island of Skopelos a couple of years ago during an artist residency. We caught up for an in depth chat about artist residencies, illustration vs fine art, how teaching art informs Kevin's own work, and we even ended up agreeing to start a 30 day sketchbook challenge together. Find Kevin's work hereFind Georgie hereLinksDavid Hockney: The Arrival of Spring, Normandy, 2020Cill Rialaig Artist Residency, County KerryThe Skopelos Foundation for the ArtsGolden acrylic paints Mary SwanzyRubicon by Tom Holland Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Anxious artists Bea and Molly chat about artist residencies as Molly has just returned from one in North Wales. The anxiety scale is based on one of Bea's favourite foods.Purchase Our Enamel Pin BadgeSend your questions and thoughts to outofinkpodcast@gmail.com | Find us on Instagram: @outofinkpod @beatheillustrator @mollylemonart | Music © Alex Baranowskihttps://www.mawddachresidency.com/https://www.ellisoconnor.com/Our Sponsor:https://www.magicmind.com/OUTOFINK20Use our code OUTOFINK20 to get 20% off
Full Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLfofppTiRUZza7kewuD4rnI8hvhfQ4_IN Also available in audio only formats at https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/theartprofessorspodcast Original art available on Etsy https://www.etsy.com/shop/studiotwelvehundred Commissions available via PayPal, Venmo, DM or Email for more Information Thumbnail Photo by: Emily Kunkel Support: Tip Link - https://streamlabs.com/thezimvideo1/tip YouTube Member - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAR6uQrYhN8_aUrP65g0H5A/join Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/thezim Paypal - https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/creatorzim Venmo - https://venmo.com/thezim Etsy - https://www.etsy.com/shop/studiotwelvehundred Amazon Wish List - https://www.amazon.com/registries/custom/2C50ZFHURWBGS/guest-view Donate Ethereum - 0x34814104Bb1d6579569Ef7463CeFaa94Ec2cDe44 NFT's - https://rarible.com/thezim Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/thezimvideo Twitch - https://www.twitch.tv/thezimvideo TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@thezim Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/_theZim/ Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/creatorzim Discord - https://discord.gg/7wbUFVxJ8f Stream my music: Now All No Wall EP Spotify: https://found.ee/UCKKd Apple Music: https://found.ee/cHRkR Channel Merch: https://www.etsy.com/listing/1402151936/zim-2023-exclusive-t-shirt https://www.amazon.com/s?rh=n%3A7141123011%2Cp_4%3AtheZim http://thezim.com/ #art #podcast
Mentioned in the episode:Handkerchief project: https://www.instagram.com/winnievanderrijn/ Symposium: https://marthacashman.com/international-symposiums/ Dada show: http://www.allisonbeda.com/fakegalleryFind Beulah online:https://www.instagram.com/beulahvanrensburghttps://www.instagram.com/atelier_chateau_orquevaux/ https://www.chateauorquevaux.com/ Beulah van Rensburg's Artist Statement: Since 2019 Beulah van Rensburg has been The Residency Director at Chateau d'Orquevaux. Beulah is a practicing artist herself and as Director she uses her vast experience working with artists for over 20 years to conduct studio visits with the artists at the residency which includes discussing career, direction and to offer critiques. Prior to joining The Chateau team, Beulah founded the Van Rensburg Galleries in Hong Kong and Australia. In 2012 Beulah opened a Gallery in Hong Kong and while representing 35 International artists, she started exhibiting at the Affordable Art Fair worldwide all the while curating collectors on an international level. Following the success of the art fairs, Van Rensburg Galleries established a regular Popup gallery in New York City followed by a gallery in Australia. Since 2021 Van Rensburg Galleries continues to operate under new ownership. In 2022 Beulah was invited to join the curatorial board at Artfinder, the leading online art platform. As a board member Beulah curates shows on the platform and finds appropriate artists to be represented. Host and artist Stephanie Scott breaks down the practicality of the art career with topics including: sustainable creative practices, social media skills, and the mindsets that keep it all together. New episodes every Tuesday!Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/stephaniescott.art/ Website: http://www.stephaniescott.art/brushwork Music by @winepot https://www.instagram.com/thewinepot/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@stephaniescottart Podcast Cover photo by Maryna Blumqvist https://instagram.com/picturemaryna
The thirteen stories in Rebecca Turkewitz's debut collection, Here in the Night (Black Lawrence Press, 2023), are engrossing, strange, eerie, and emotionally nuanced. With psychological insight and finely crafted prose, Here in the Night investigates the joys and constraints of womanhood, of queerness, and of intimacy. Preoccupied with all manner of hauntings, these stories traverse a boarding school in the Vermont woods, the jagged coast of Maine, an attic in suburban Massachusetts, an elevator stuck between floors, and the side of an unlit highway in rural South Carolina. At the center of almost every story is the landscape of night, with all its tantalizing and terrifying potential. After dark, the familiar becomes unfamiliar, boundaries loosen, expectations fall away, and even the greatest skeptics believe-at least fleetingly-that anything could happen. These stories will stay with you. Rebecca Turkewitz is a writer and high school English teacher living in Portland, Maine. She is the author of Here in the Night (Black Lawrence Press, July 2023), a collection of thirteen spooky literary stories. Her fiction and humor writing have appeared in The Normal School, Chicago Quarterly Review, Electric Literature's Recommended Reading, SmokeLong Quarterly, The New Yorker's Daily Shouts, and elsewhere. She holds an MFA in fiction from The Ohio State University. She has been a resident at Hewn oaks Artist Residency and won a 2020 Maine Literary Award in the short works category. She loves cats, the ocean, and ghost stories. Recommended Books: NANA KWAME ADJEI-BRENYAH, Chain Gang All-Stars Talia Lakshmi Kolluri, What We Fed to the Manticore Gabrielle Zevin, Tomorrow, Tomorrow, Tomorrow Chris Holmes is Chair of Literatures in English and Associate Professor at Ithaca College. He writes criticism on contemporary global literatures. His book, Kazuo Ishiguro as World Literature, is under contract with Bloomsbury Publishing. He is the co-director of The New Voices Festival, a celebration of work in poetry, prose, and playwriting by up-and-coming young writers. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The thirteen stories in Rebecca Turkewitz's debut collection, Here in the Night (Black Lawrence Press, 2023), are engrossing, strange, eerie, and emotionally nuanced. With psychological insight and finely crafted prose, Here in the Night investigates the joys and constraints of womanhood, of queerness, and of intimacy. Preoccupied with all manner of hauntings, these stories traverse a boarding school in the Vermont woods, the jagged coast of Maine, an attic in suburban Massachusetts, an elevator stuck between floors, and the side of an unlit highway in rural South Carolina. At the center of almost every story is the landscape of night, with all its tantalizing and terrifying potential. After dark, the familiar becomes unfamiliar, boundaries loosen, expectations fall away, and even the greatest skeptics believe-at least fleetingly-that anything could happen. These stories will stay with you. Rebecca Turkewitz is a writer and high school English teacher living in Portland, Maine. She is the author of Here in the Night (Black Lawrence Press, July 2023), a collection of thirteen spooky literary stories. Her fiction and humor writing have appeared in The Normal School, Chicago Quarterly Review, Electric Literature's Recommended Reading, SmokeLong Quarterly, The New Yorker's Daily Shouts, and elsewhere. She holds an MFA in fiction from The Ohio State University. She has been a resident at Hewn oaks Artist Residency and won a 2020 Maine Literary Award in the short works category. She loves cats, the ocean, and ghost stories. Recommended Books: NANA KWAME ADJEI-BRENYAH, Chain Gang All-Stars Talia Lakshmi Kolluri, What We Fed to the Manticore Gabrielle Zevin, Tomorrow, Tomorrow, Tomorrow Chris Holmes is Chair of Literatures in English and Associate Professor at Ithaca College. He writes criticism on contemporary global literatures. His book, Kazuo Ishiguro as World Literature, is under contract with Bloomsbury Publishing. He is the co-director of The New Voices Festival, a celebration of work in poetry, prose, and playwriting by up-and-coming young writers. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
The thirteen stories in Rebecca Turkewitz's debut collection, Here in the Night (Black Lawrence Press, 2023), are engrossing, strange, eerie, and emotionally nuanced. With psychological insight and finely crafted prose, Here in the Night investigates the joys and constraints of womanhood, of queerness, and of intimacy. Preoccupied with all manner of hauntings, these stories traverse a boarding school in the Vermont woods, the jagged coast of Maine, an attic in suburban Massachusetts, an elevator stuck between floors, and the side of an unlit highway in rural South Carolina. At the center of almost every story is the landscape of night, with all its tantalizing and terrifying potential. After dark, the familiar becomes unfamiliar, boundaries loosen, expectations fall away, and even the greatest skeptics believe-at least fleetingly-that anything could happen. These stories will stay with you. Rebecca Turkewitz is a writer and high school English teacher living in Portland, Maine. She is the author of Here in the Night (Black Lawrence Press, July 2023), a collection of thirteen spooky literary stories. Her fiction and humor writing have appeared in The Normal School, Chicago Quarterly Review, Electric Literature's Recommended Reading, SmokeLong Quarterly, The New Yorker's Daily Shouts, and elsewhere. She holds an MFA in fiction from The Ohio State University. She has been a resident at Hewn oaks Artist Residency and won a 2020 Maine Literary Award in the short works category. She loves cats, the ocean, and ghost stories. Recommended Books: NANA KWAME ADJEI-BRENYAH, Chain Gang All-Stars Talia Lakshmi Kolluri, What We Fed to the Manticore Gabrielle Zevin, Tomorrow, Tomorrow, Tomorrow Chris Holmes is Chair of Literatures in English and Associate Professor at Ithaca College. He writes criticism on contemporary global literatures. His book, Kazuo Ishiguro as World Literature, is under contract with Bloomsbury Publishing. He is the co-director of The New Voices Festival, a celebration of work in poetry, prose, and playwriting by up-and-coming young writers. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/literary-studies
The thirteen stories in Rebecca Turkewitz's debut collection, Here in the Night (Black Lawrence Press, 2023), are engrossing, strange, eerie, and emotionally nuanced. With psychological insight and finely crafted prose, Here in the Night investigates the joys and constraints of womanhood, of queerness, and of intimacy. Preoccupied with all manner of hauntings, these stories traverse a boarding school in the Vermont woods, the jagged coast of Maine, an attic in suburban Massachusetts, an elevator stuck between floors, and the side of an unlit highway in rural South Carolina. At the center of almost every story is the landscape of night, with all its tantalizing and terrifying potential. After dark, the familiar becomes unfamiliar, boundaries loosen, expectations fall away, and even the greatest skeptics believe-at least fleetingly-that anything could happen. These stories will stay with you. Rebecca Turkewitz is a writer and high school English teacher living in Portland, Maine. She is the author of Here in the Night (Black Lawrence Press, July 2023), a collection of thirteen spooky literary stories. Her fiction and humor writing have appeared in The Normal School, Chicago Quarterly Review, Electric Literature's Recommended Reading, SmokeLong Quarterly, The New Yorker's Daily Shouts, and elsewhere. She holds an MFA in fiction from The Ohio State University. She has been a resident at Hewn oaks Artist Residency and won a 2020 Maine Literary Award in the short works category. She loves cats, the ocean, and ghost stories. Recommended Books: NANA KWAME ADJEI-BRENYAH, Chain Gang All-Stars Talia Lakshmi Kolluri, What We Fed to the Manticore Gabrielle Zevin, Tomorrow, Tomorrow, Tomorrow Chris Holmes is Chair of Literatures in English and Associate Professor at Ithaca College. He writes criticism on contemporary global literatures. His book, Kazuo Ishiguro as World Literature, is under contract with Bloomsbury Publishing. He is the co-director of The New Voices Festival, a celebration of work in poetry, prose, and playwriting by up-and-coming young writers. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/literature
In part 1 of my conversation with Arthur Haywood, I interview the painter, muralist and artist about his career, including his time at the Philadelphia Mural Arts, artist residencies in Paris and Tulsa, creating immersive murals in schools, and winning the Illustrators of the Future Award. In this first part of the interview, we talk about his origins of interest with his art, his time at the Grand Central Atelier, and building up his portfolio while working with Mural Arts. We also discuss literature and its impact on the mind and creativity! See Arthur's work: https://www.arthurhaywood.com/ Follow Arthur on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/arthurhaywood Explore my patreon (The Patron's Palace) here: https://patreon.com/jessicalibor Follow me on Instagram at @jessicaliborstudio for my art and @thecreativeheroines for creative community and coaching. See my artwork and collect at www.jessicalibor.com. Reach out to me for inquiries to collect my art or work with me in a creative coaching capacity at jlibor@jessicalibor.com --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thecreativeheroine/support
On today's show, a new project in Springdale aims to make art more accessible by bringing it to the neighborhood. Also, preparing for an increasing population living in Arkansas with Alzheimer's. Plus, Randy Wilburn's latest episode of “I Am Northwest Arkansas” explores the world of bladesmithing with Kenneth Webb.
Mi'jan Celie Tho-Biaz is with me today to share how she's traveled the world for the last 15 years by utilizing artist residencies. You may be surprised to discover that these opportunities aren't just for artists in the usual sense but creatives like writers, scientists, and even psychoanalysts! Mi'Jan is a Kennedy Center Citizen Artist, an expert speaker with the U.S. Department of State, and a current Fulbright awardee. She moves between the realms of oral history, art, media, and ritual to produce large-scale cultural projects & live events. In this episode, Mi'Jan gives us the breakdown on artist and creative residencies, fellowships, and how to find these kinds of opportunities within our own niche. We also talk about her experience as a professional speaker and actionable advice on the topic, how to stay grounded at home and on the road, the story behind why traveling with her children was the best decision she's made as a parent, and so much more. What programs or residencies could be available to you? I'd love to hear your thoughts and hope you'll share them by sending me an audio message. Premium Passport: Want access to the private Zero To Travel podcast feed, a monthly bonus episode (decided on by YOU), exclusive content, direct access to me to answer your questions, and more? Click here to try Premium Passport for only $1. Tune In To Learn: Mi'Jan's work with cultural projects and nonprofits and how that led to traveling the world Why travel can be the best gift for your children and a lesson on having accountability and support What a burlesque dancer taught her about grounding practices (and advice for public speaking) How ritual and daily activities can help you while traveling How artist residencies can help you travel and who they're right for (it's broader than you think!) The four questions she asks herself every year for clear vision Pro tips for researching residencies, finding programs that work with your intentions and goals, and preparing for residency requirements Advice for leveraging your skills and interests to travel The impact that her work in oral history has had on her life And so much more Resources: Join Zero To Travel Premium Passport Subscribe to our FREE newsletter Today's Sponsors - Airbnb, US Bank, Holafly Visit Mi'Jan's website Connect with Mi'Jan on Instagram, LinkedIn Residency resources: Artist Communities, Res Artis, TransArtists Want More? Following Inspiration Towards A Life Of Travel with Mark and Steffi (The World's Only Chapman Stick Duo) The Vagabond's Way: Meditations on Wanderlust, Discovery, and the Art of Travel w/ Rolf Potts The Spiritual Journey + Travel and Creativity with Karan Bajaj Thanks To Our Sponsors Sometimes, it just makes more sense. Book your next group stay with Airbnb! This episode is also sponsored by US Bank's Altitude Connect Visa Signature Card, with the ability to earn up to 5x the points on travel-related expenses like hotels, and rental cars, this card will get you the most return on your next trip. Stay connected wherever you go with Holafly's eSIM. Get 5% off when you go to https://esim.holafly.com/ and use the promo code ZEROTOTRAVEL.
Do you really need an artist residency? You know it helps a CV, but how much? Will it help other aspects of your career? In this episode, I talk about how to determine if you need a residency and how to find the residencies best suited to your needs. If you've been stressing over whether you should spend time at a residency or how to find one, this podcast will provide an answer to many of those anxieties.
William Sarradet talks with Eric Schnell about what it's like to live, work, and run a ten-month residency program in Galveston. "Galveston is exactly the right size, where you can hold the whole island in your brain at one time. If it were bigger, that wouldn't be possible." See related readings here: https://glasstire.com/2023/10/22/art-dirt-talking-with-artist-galveston-artist-residency-director-eric-schnell If you enjoy Glasstire and would like to support our work, please consider donating. As a nonprofit, all of the money we receive goes back into our coverage of Texas art. You can make a one-time donation or become a sustaining, monthly donor here: https://glasstire.com/donate
In this episode of Art & Cocktails, Kat shares valuable tips to help you build a sustainable art career by selling directly from the studio. Discover how to release shame, simplify your sales process, and relish the joy of sharing your art with collectors. Get ready for the holidays with a holiday sales checklist: https://www.createmagazine.com/blog/holiday-sale-checklist-for-artists. Learn the step-by-step way of selling affordable original art from the studio: https://www.theartqueens.com/sell-from-the-studio.
"I think about rage as containing information. I talk about anger as a weathervane pointing you towards the places that need attention and healing. So I think rage can be useful in that way of teaching you what needs to change in your life. And it might be that you need more support or you need to not be in charge of bedtime every night or whatever.Rage is also useful in giving you the energy to create change larger than just your little home." ~ Minna DubinWe are really excited to share with you this illuminating and enlightening conversation with Minna Dubin. Kaitlin and Minna had the great privilege to meet by way of the Artist Residency in Motherhood group, which she's mentioned on the podcast in the past.Minna is the author of the book, Mom Rage: The Everyday Crisis of Modern Motherhood, which is out from Seal Press the very week that this episode is released this September, 2023.Her writing has been featured in the New York Times, Salon, Parents, The Philadelphia Inquirer, Romper, The Forward, Hobart, MUTHA Magazine, and Literary Mama. As a leading feminist voice on mom rage, Minna has appeared on MSNBC, Good Morning America, The Tamron Hall Show, NBC10 Boston, and NPR.“Modern motherhood is a setup for anger.” ~ Minna DubinShe lives in Berkeley, California with her husband, her two children, and no pets, she clarifies because, as she says, enough is enough.Minna and Kaitlin talk about:How Minna came to writing, particularly how she came to the writing structure she uses in writing Mom Rage.The different facets of mom rage, and how rage can look different for each individual.The individual and the institution and how the interplay of both come to highlight where rage and power structures intersect.How Minna finds community now that she has a clear understanding of those power structures and how they impact her experience of motherhoodHow family structures in other cultures and parts of the world differ, and how the individual experiences of motherhood are impacted when you have these structures.Parenting neurodivergent children and how the lack of societal support structures for them interplays with mom rage.More about Minna:Website: www.minnadubin.comTwitter: www.twitter.com/minnadubinInstagram: www.instagram.com/minnadubinPre-order your copy of Mom Rage here: https://bookshop.org/a/86159/9781541601307Please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.For regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.comFollow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack:
“The way that we think about art, about care work or housework or maintenance labor is interconnected in the sense that these are spheres of society that are often deemed unproductive. Obviously, first and foremost, we need to resist that notion because it's the most important work that we do. I do think of writing as a kind of care work in that sense. It's like a tending. It's tending to our narratives and our cultural understandings of things. I think it's very easy, especially in the motherhood/parenting sphere, to get wrapped up in our demands and the policies that we need –and absolutely, we need all of that. But there's a reason that that's not happening. I think it's because we need a bigger shift of understanding. We need new language for articulating the way in which women's bodies are exploited and used from a young age through and beyond parenthood.” - Amanda MonteiWe're so grateful to share this conversation with Amanda Montei whose book Touched Out: Motherhood, Misogyny, Consent, and Control lands on bookshelves on September 12th, 2023. Kaitlin and Amanda have had the pleasure of being connected through Amanda's writing workshops and also through the Artist Residency in Motherhood community where they've staged their own collective residencies alongside other mother-writer-artists in the Bay Area.Amanda is also the author of Two Memoirs, published by Jaded Ibis Press, and a collection of prose, The Failure Age, as well as co-author of Dinner Poems. Her writing and criticism explore literary and cultural representations of gender, work, care, sexuality, feminism, creativity, and the body. If you're eager to connect with her, she also teaches creative writing at organizations such as Catapult, Corporeal Writing, Hugo House, Writing Workshops, and Write or Die.Amanda and Kaitlin talk about:Amanda's trajectory as a writer, where it intersects with her postpartum experience, and how this postpartum experience impacted her creative work, including her latest book.Exploring the question of the representation of home and our bodies, particularly women's bodies in connection to the home.How writing, art, and care work can be a social justice practice, and how narrative can disrupt the false narratives that we unconsciously carry around.How Amanda is able to practice and sustain creativity as a practice of connection.More about Amanda:Website: https://www.amandamontei.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/amanda.montei/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/amontei/Pre-order Amanda's book Touched Out: Motherhood, Misogyny, Consent, and Control: https://bookshop.org/a/86159/9780807013274Please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.For regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.comFollow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcastSubscribe to
Margo is joined by contemporary visual artist and illustrator Melissa Lakey. Melissa is based in Joshua Tree, California, where the windows of her art studio look out into the Mojave Desert. Her colorful work celebrates the landscape and animals of the American Southwest and her love of cowboys, road trips, and summer vacations. Melissa shares on observing others and how it can inspire our own creative processes, the concept of using sketchbooks with specific themes and approaching journaling, overcoming creative obstacles and more. Topics discussed: [01:32] An introduction to Melissa [05:12] Her unique art journey: finding passions and discovering new possibilities [12:25] Exploring different techniques and materials in vibrant art [13:13] Her love for art supplies and some of her favorite tools [20:21] Her first residency experience and the inspiration and motivation she found in attending [26:29] First show in Joshua Tree and the feedback she received [35:39] Thoughts on self-identification and artistic work [39:20] Her sketchbook practice and how it aids in her projects and bigger works [42:42] The value she finds in exploring other artists methods [47:59] Thoughts on teaching Margo and Melissa also discuss why she took a break from creating and the fears that come up when taking a break, her number one tip for 100-day projects, why social media friends have been pivotal in her career and why she doesn't live post her work but rather waits a month or so to post. Mentioned in this episode: Sarah Dyer (https://www.sarahdyer.com/) Sou'wester Lodge Artist Residency (https://www.souwesterlodge.com/art/artist-residency/) Hey There Projects (https://www.heythereprojects.com/) Wyatt Hersey (https://www.wyatthersey.com/) Emma Carslile (https://www.emmacarlisle.com/) Natalie Lundeen (https://natlundeen.myportfolio.com/) Connect with Melissa: https://www.melissalakey.com https://www.instagram.com/melissa.lakey "Colors of the Sun, Songs of the Moon" in Taos, NM from August 19th - September 20th (https://www.instagram.com/lunojo_gallery/) Sketchbook Workshop (https://inkygoodness.samcart.com/products/sketchbook-workshop-melissa-lakey/) Connect with Margo: www.instagram.com/windowsillchats www.windowsillchats.com www.patreon.com/inthewindowsill
Welcome to this magical, free flowing episode where I take you on a journey to Normandy, France to dance with the Muses at a unique artist residency and then to the historic and captivating rock island of Mont Saint Michel. Stay tuned next time where I'll talk about my solo show in Paris! Links mentioned: Enroll in The Luminary Artist Academy: EXPLORE THE COURSE AND ENROLL TODAY. Book a single Artist Guidance session with Jessica: BOOK A SINGLE SESSION Learn more about Jessica Libor's solo show QUEST in Philadelphia: QUEST SOLO SHOW Enter your work in Titania's Ball group exhibition with Steven Assael, Kerry Dunn, Teresa Oaxaca, and Kristy Gordon: TITANIA'S BALL OPEN CALL Learn more about Jessica's artwork here: https://www.jessicalibor.com ~ Explore courses and coaching for artists here: https://www.thevisionaryartistssalon.com ~ Explore and enroll for the Luminary Artist Academy here: https://www.thevisionaryartistssalon.com/luminary-artist-academy Contact Jessica at jlibor@jessicalibor.com or on Instagram at @jessicaliborstudio and @thevisionaryartistssalon --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/inspiredpainter/support
In this episode of The Living Artist, Preston interviews the one and only Brett Kaufman. Brett is the Founder and CEO of Kaufman Development, the founder of Gravity, and the host and creator of the Gravity podcast. He is also an investor, mentor, public speaker, creator and works to help people to heal themselves, so they can focus on the projects that matter most in their lives, work and creative pursuits. Brett has earned the prestigious titles of Developer and Entrepreneur of the Year from both the Building Industry Association and Ernst & Young. Kaufman Development has been responsible for over 10,000 homes as well as various commercial projects - all designed with intention to positively impact the world we share, one community at a time. Brett sits down with Preston to talk about creating "conscious communities", overcoming childhood trauma, creating Gravity and what it means to him, Kaufman Development and the Gravity Project, working with artist on his Gravity Mural Festival and Artist Residency project, hosting the Gravity podcast and its mission, daily routines and mindfulness, embracing what is, and so much more. Enjoy this wide-ranging and inspirational conversation with Brett Kaufman! If you would like to read more about Brett, you can visit: https://brett-kaufman.com. Learn more about the Gravity Project: https://gravityproject.com You can also check out his work and projects on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brettkaufman For more information on Preston M. Smith and his artwork, visit https://www.pmsartwork.com, or follow him on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/pmsartwork (social media everywhere @pmsartwork). You can also now subscribe to his YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/c/pmsartwork. The Living Artist makes the top of the Audible Blog's List of the Best Art Podcasts to listen to For Artists! Check it! Thrilled to announce that Artwork Archive just included The Living Artist on their list of the The Best Art Podcasts of 2021! Check it out. Excited that Agora Group International Fine Art included The Living Artist on its list of The Best Art Podcasts To Listen To (coming in at #5). Huge thank you to Feedspot for choosing The Living Artist for their list of the Top 70 Art Podcasts You Must Follow in 2023. It is a huge honor to have made this amazing list (coming in at #8) with so many other wonderful podcasts. Big thank you to Feedspot! You can check out this list and more of Feedspot at https://blog.feedspot.com/art_podcasts. Podcast theme music: "Music by Jason Shaw on Audionautix.com"
This is a guided Meditation from Jennie Lee who is a 3 times Author, certified yoga therapist and spiritual coach, who has counseled private clients worldwide for over 20 years. I interviewed Jennie on Episode #179. There is another guided meditation on Episode #180. ==================== Please consider donating so I may continue to create free content https://www.podpage.com/speaking-podcast/support/ Speaking Podcast Social Media / Coaching My Other Podcasts https://bio.link/podcaster ==================== Bio of Jennie Lee Jennie Lee is the award-winning author of three books: SPARK CHANGE: 108 Provocative Questions for Spiritual Evolution; TRUE YOGA: Practicing with the Yoga Sutras for Happiness & Spiritual Fulfillment; and BREATHING LOVE: Meditation in Action. She From her studies in yoga philosophy and spiritual psychology Jennie has a large toolbox of practices that promote optimal wellbeing and purposeful living. When she is not writing or coaching, she enjoys surfing with her husband near their home in Hawai'i. ==================== How to Contact Jennie Lee: https://jennieleeyogatherapy.com/ Essere Writer & Artist Residency https://www.essereresidency.org https://www.facebook.com/JennieLeeYogaTherapy.StillnessInMotion/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/jennieleeyogatherapy/ Preferred Social Media https://www.instagram.com/jennielee_author/ https://twitter.com/JennieLeeYoga =============== Speaking Podcast Social Media / Coaching My Other Podcasts + Donations https://bio.link/podcaster Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/speakingpodcast/ Store https://www.podpage.com/speaking-podcast/store/ Donations https://www.podpage.com/speaking-podcast/support/
Artist residencies, in whatever form they take, are invaluable to an artist's growth. But there are barriers to doing residencies—primarily the time commitment and cost. In this episode, I talk with Shannon Amidon, an artist who has created a residency especially for artists who might be parents or caretakers and can't commit to a month or more that some residencies require. In my research on artist residencies, I have discovered how helpful it is when the residency involves some kind of travel, during which you are slowly transitioning away from your daily life and toward a different mental and emotional space that opens up your creativity. The longer the travel, the better. Another plus is that the residency environment contrasts with your familiar surroundings. Shannon's residency is The Verdancy Project and while it's easy driving distance from Portland, Oregon, it's far enough out that you step into a new world. It's especially for artists who want to be close to nature. As you will hear, it provides an experience distinctly different from the one most artists are used to. We discuss: How The Verdancy Project is set up What the facilities are like What she looks for in her artists Some of the mistakes artists make on their applications How she learned the nuts and bolts of managing an artist residency Shannon also reveals how she manages to run the residency while maintaining the commitment to her studio practice. To read more, see images, and leave a comment, visit https://artbizsuccess.com/amidon-residency Connect with Shannon and see more of her art: https://shannonamidon.com Get more info about The Verdancy Project: https://verdancyproject.com Related: The Traveling Artist: Residencies with Amy Clay (#149) https://artbizsuccess.com/amy-clay-residencies/ Sponsored by The Art Biz Accelerator * a coaching group to support and remind you that you're part of a global artist community. https://artbizsuccess.com/accelerator
This is a guided Meditation from Jennie Lee who is a 3 times Author, certified yoga therapist and spiritual coach, who has counseled private clients worldwide for over 20 years. I interviewed Jennie on Episode #179 ==================== Please consider donating so I may continue to create free content https://www.podpage.com/speaking-podcast/support/ Speaking Podcast Social Media / Coaching My Other Podcasts https://bio.link/podcaster ==================== Bio of Jennie Lee Jennie Lee is the award-winning author of three books: SPARK CHANGE: 108 Provocative Questions for Spiritual Evolution; TRUE YOGA: Practicing with the Yoga Sutras for Happiness & Spiritual Fulfillment; and BREATHING LOVE: Meditation in Action. She From her studies in yoga philosophy and spiritual psychology Jennie has a large toolbox of practices that promote optimal wellbeing and purposeful living. When she is not writing or coaching, she enjoys surfing with her husband near their home in Hawai'i. ==================== How to Contact Jennie Lee: https://jennieleeyogatherapy.com/ Essere Writer & Artist Residency https://www.essereresidency.org https://www.facebook.com/JennieLeeYogaTherapy.StillnessInMotion/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/jennieleeyogatherapy/ Preferred Social Media https://www.instagram.com/jennielee_author/ https://twitter.com/JennieLeeYoga =============== Speaking Podcast Social Media / Coaching My Other Podcasts + Donations https://bio.link/podcaster Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/speakingpodcast/ Store https://www.podpage.com/speaking-podcast/store/ Donations https://www.podpage.com/speaking-podcast/support/
Lisa Samia joins Matt to talk about her latest book "The NAMELESS & the FACELESS of the CIVIL WAR, Gettysburg, Manassas and More: BOOK THREE: A Collection of Poems, Essays and Photos". BOOK THREE / A collection of poems & essays by Award Winning Author, Lisa G. Samia. Includes 28 poems and 28 essays with photos. This collection is for the men, women, and soldiers who witnessed the Civil War but their lives and experiences were lost and forgotten in the pages of history. Step back in time and listen as the voices of the silent past come back to life. LISA G. SAMIA is an award-winning Poet, Author, and Speaker. She is the recipient of two National Park Service Artist in Residence Awards. The first in September 2020 from Gettysburg, Pennsylvania for Poetry. The second from Manassas, Virginia for Poetry in Fall 2021. Many of the photos in this collection were taken by Lisa during her Artist Residency. Available now! Get your copy here Listen to the rest of this episode, support the show and receive early access to special events by becoming a Patron. www.patreon.com/addressinggettysburg
Jennie Lee is a 3 times Author, certified yoga therapist and spiritual coach, who has counseled private clients worldwide for over 20 years. ==================== Please consider donating so I may continue to create free content https://www.podpage.com/speaking-podcast/support/ Speaking Podcast Social Media / Coaching My Other Podcasts https://bio.link/podcaster ==================== Bio of Jennie Lee Jennie Lee is the award-winning author of three books: SPARK CHANGE: 108 Provocative Questions for Spiritual Evolution; TRUE YOGA: Practicing with the Yoga Sutras for Happiness & Spiritual Fulfillment; and BREATHING LOVE: Meditation in Action. She From her studies in yoga philosophy and spiritual psychology Jennie has a large toolbox of practices that promote optimal wellbeing and purposeful living. When she is not writing or coaching, she enjoys surfing with her husband near their home in Hawai'i. ==================== Please consider donating so I may continue to create free content https://www.podpage.com/speaking-podcast/support/ Speaking Podcast Social Media / Coaching My Other Podcasts https://bio.link/podcaster ==================== What we Discussed: - Her 3 Books - If you are not standing at the edge you are taking up too much room - Her own Yoga & Meditation Journey - Focus like Fishing and Surfing is a form of Meditation - Certifications and thoughts on this - Greater Awareness in recent years - Different Types of Yoga - Cancer care Continum and other articles - Helping people on their end of life journey - Learn to speak about death - Dealing with the loss of a loved one - Jennie's Retreats - Her Online Courses - What gives your life more meaning and more How to Contact Jennie Lee: https://jennieleeyogatherapy.com/ Essere Writer & Artist Residency https://www.essereresidency.org https://www.facebook.com/JennieLeeYogaTherapy.StillnessInMotion/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/jennieleeyogatherapy/ Preferred Social Media https://www.instagram.com/jennielee_author/ https://twitter.com/JennieLeeYoga =============== Speaking Podcast Social Media / Coaching My Other Podcasts + Donations https://bio.link/podcaster Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/speakingpodcast/ Store https://www.podpage.com/speaking-podcast/store/ Donations https://www.podpage.com/speaking-podcast/support/
If you are an artist who loves to travel and explore new places, this episode is for you. I've been wanting to dig into the subject of artist residencies for a long time now. Fate put me in touch with Amy Clay. In this episode, Amy and I talk about her life as a professional artist-in-residence. She's gone anywhere from 4 to 6 months at a time, stringing together one artist residency after another to fulfill her lust for travel and build what she calls her visual library. We discuss: How this lifestyle started for her The various formats of artist residencies What she looks for in a location How residencies have made her feel part of a global artist community. To read more, see images, and leave a comment, visit https://artbizsuccess.com/amy-clay-residencies Sponsored by The Art Biz Accelerator, a coaching group to support and remind you that you're part of a global artist community. https://artbizsuccess.com/accelerator
Margo is joined by cultural leader, oral historian and documentarian Mi'Jan Celie Tho-Biaz, Ed.D. who shares narratives of personal transformation and community change.To say this historian's own history is distinguished is an understatement: Mi'Jan curated and hosted Unfinished Network's first 2022 public salon on the theme of multiracial democracy, with CNN's Van Jones and MSNBC's Maria Teresa Kumar. She also designed and led the Gloria Steinem Initiative's public policy digital storytelling pilot at Smith College, and served as a New Mexico Humanities Council Scholar. Mi'Jan has held Visiting Scholar appointments at Columbia University and New York University and served as faculty in the Cultural Leadership program at The Banff Centre in Canada. Currently Mi'Jan serves as faculty with Omega Institute, co-host for the National Art Education Association's podcast, as well as principal oral historian and public art curator for Policy Link's California BIPOC Liberation Stories Project. She works with communities across the themes of sovereignty, transformation, liberation, healing and love. Margo and Mi'Jan discuss: What it means to be an oral historian What her work and creative practice looks like California BIPOC liberation stories How she designs her year Out of body experiences she would have during keynote storytelling The art of slowing down and why it became critical to her practice The intersectionality of creative and spiritual practices Mi'Jan is best known for connecting with audiences through her visionary, story-rich talks at a range of institutions, from Carnegie Hall to the Institute of American Indian Arts to SXSW. Her goal? To make the historical contemporary and personal, while surfacing the marginalized stories that need to be heard. Connect with Mi'Jan: www.mijancelie.comakers/mijan-celie-tho-biaz/ Mi'jan's Monthly Newsletter Bimonthly Professional Development Interview Series: National Art Education Association's Connected Arts Networks 8-part podcast series: www.freshspeakers.com/spe https://www.eomega.org/people/mijan-celie-tho-biaz