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Prevention of Blindness Society of Metropolitan Washington Event Replay Channel
Losing vision can make completing everyday activities, such as those we do for fun, more difficult. The good news is, there are many adaptations that can be done! Listen in to learn more!
Chris Bors was born in Ithaca, New York and received his MFA from School of Visual Arts. Solo shows include Randall Scott Projects in Washington, D.C. and Art During the Occupation in New York City. His art has also been exhibited at PS1 MoMA, Freight+Volume, Arts+Leisure, Kustera Projects, White Columns, and the Bronx Museum of the Arts in New York, Casino Luxembourg in Luxembourg, Bahnwarterhaus in Esslingen, Germany and Bongoût in Berlin. His work has been reviewed in the New York Times, Time Out New York, and the Brooklyn Rail and featured in Vogue Italia, K48 and zingmagazine. He has written for Artforum.com, ArtReview, and Art in America, among many other publications. Books mentioned in the interview were, J.G Ballard, Kingdom Come and Michael Craig-Martin, On Being an Artist. Chris Bors, Orange, Acrylic, vinyl paint and griptape on cloth, 20 x 24 inches Chris Bors, Born Low 2, 2019, Acrylic on canvas, 45.5 x 34 inches
Emilia Olsen was born in South Africa and now she is based out of Brooklyn, New York. She got her BFA from the Corcoran College of Art & Design in Washington, DC. She’s had solo shows at Arts & Leisure and Doppelganger Studio both in NY and at Anaba Project in Maryland. She’s had group shows at the Spring Break Art Show, Smoke the Moon in LA, Patrick Parrish in NYC, Juxtapoz Projects at Mana Contemporary, the Independant Art Book Fair, Greenpoint Terminal Gallery, Trestle Gallery in Brooklyn, Elephant Gallery in Nashville amongst many others. Her work has been covered in Two Coats of Paint, Art Maze, Hyperallergic, the Nashville Scene, Art F City and more. She has work up in a new group show that just opened SPF32 which is open on weekends for view between 2-6pm through July 6th at the old William Ulmer Brewery, 81 Beaver st. in Brooklyn curated by Madeleine Mermall.
Episode 42 is reading the Arts & Leisure section of Parade magazine. We take the measure of morality in media, deconstruct the dad joke, and vote for the Rock 'n Roll HOF. The OT features a home invasion! Prologue: Halloween candy S1: Moralizing in media S2: Deconstructing the Dad Joke S3: R&R HOF Overtime: NFL Pick 'em; repelling a home invader Follow the show on Twitter: @2on3pod See all our shows: www.2on3pod.com Email the show: holler@2on3pod.com Your hosts: @seatjk @cdvillasenor Music: "Quittin' Time" by Pat Lee
Walter Martin and I keep getting kicked out of coffee shops. It’s a strange thing. Over the course of the 50 minute interview, we close out two places in Manhattan. But as romantic as getting kicked out of two New York City establishments in under an hour with an indie rock star looks on paper, the whole thing is slightly mundane. Turns out the coffee shops in midtown like to shut their doors before eight. And Martin, for his part, doesn’t appear to be embracing the rock and roll lifestyle these days. The Walkman multi-instrumentalist has settled down a bit, starting a family and taking a step back from the heavy touring. In 2014, Martin issued his post-Walkman debut, We’re All Young Together, a delightfully catchy collection of all-ages kids tunes recorded with members of bands like the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Clap Your Hands Say Yeah. The followup, Arts & Leisure, is due out next week. The songs are a joyful celebration of Martin’s love of fine art, filtered through the youthful passion of singer-songrwriters like Jonathan Richman. Coffee shop shut downs aside, we managed to have a fascinating conversation about rock band politics, playing solo and what it means to grow up.