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Episode No. 689 is a holiday clips episode featuring artist B. Ingrid Olson. Olson's work is included in "Descending the Staircase" at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago. The exhibition considers novel artistic approaches to representing the human body. The exhibition is curated by Jadine Collingwood, Associate Curator, and Jack Schneider, Assistant Curator and is on view through July 6. This episode was recorded in 2022 on the occasion of the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts at Harvard University's presentation of two concurrent B. Ingrid Olson exhibitions, “History Mother,” and “Little Sister.” Each exhibition was on a separate floor of CCVA's building. Olson's exhibitions feature site-specific presentations that engage with doubling and mirroring, gendered forms, the interplay between photography and sculpture, and between the body and the built environment. The exhibitions were curated by Dan Byers. The week this show originally aired, the Secession in Vienna had just closed an exhibition of Olson's work titled “Elastic X.” In addition, Olson's work has previously been featured in solo presentations at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, NY and at The Renaissance Society at the University of Chicago. For images please see Episode No. 566. Instagram: B. Ingrid Olson, Tyler Green.
Hildigunnur Birgisdóttir er fulltrúi Íslands á Feneyjatvíæringnum í ár og sýning hennar, Þetta er mjög stór tala / commerzbau, opnar formlega í dag. Sýningarstjóri er Dan Byers. Við hringjum til Ítalíu og og heyrum í Hildigunni og Auði Jörundsdóttur, forstöðumanni Myndlistarmiðstöðvar. Einnig hugum við óbeint að Alþjóðlega plötubúðadeginum sem haldinn verður hátíðlegur í plötubúðum um allan heim næsta laugardag. Að því tilefni veltum við fyrir okkur miðlun tónlistar en ekki vínylplötunni sem er hvað háværust þegar kemur að plötubúðardeginum heldur geisladisknum sem hefur verið að hnigna undanfarin ár. Ólöf Rún Benediktsdóttir hóf fyrir um tveimur árum síðan að safna geisladiskum og kíkir til okkar með safnið sitt.
Located in Berwick, Illinois, the Byers' family farming operation began with first generation farmer, Ron Byers, in the late 1970s. 6 Pack Meats started in 2020 when Dan and his wife, Missy, were looking for a way to grow the butcher beef sales which were already a part of the farm. The natural next step was to expand and offer their products to a larger audience through smaller bundles, local delivery sales and shipping within the continental U.S. Issues in the food supply chain and consumers' desire for more farm-to-table purchases drove Dan and Missy to take the steps to help meet this demand by expanding product offerings to pork as well.
Harry Everett Smith is an odd figure to come across in an art museum. That's because he's not known primarily as a visual artist at all. For most, Harry Smith is probably best known as the compiler of the legendary Anthology of American Folk Music, a landmark collection of early recordings published in 1952, which became a huge influence on the folk music revival and through that, on rock in the 1960s. Smith was born in 1923 and died in 1991, and his biography reads like a who's who of cultural icons. He was a big figure in the Beat Generation and a close friend of Allen Ginsberg, appeared in one of Andy Warhol's screen test films, and he was also a tireless collector of all kinds of cultural objects, from out-of-print records to Ukrainian Easter eggs. Smith was also an experimental filmmaker and artist, an early student of anthropology, and an acolyte of a variety of mystical belief systems. Now, the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York is hosting “Fragments of a Faith Forgotten: The Art of Harry Smith," an unusual, but thrilling new show, with an unusual curator, the artist Carol Bove, herself one of the most celebrated sculptors working today. Bove has had a solo show at the Museum of Modern Art and installed work on the façade of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, among many other accomplishments. Working with Elisabeth Sussman, a curator at the Whitney, Dan Byers, director of the Carpenter Center for Visual Art, and Rani Singh, director of the Harry Smith Archives, Bove has dedicated herself to helping organize this show, to tell the story of Harry Smith. In advance of “Fragments of a Faith Forgotten,” which opens October 4 at the Whitney, Carol Bove spoke to Artnet News's chief art critic Ben Davis about Harry Smith's life in art and what it is about this hard-to-categorize figure that fired her imagination and will do the same for visitors to this show. “Fragments of a Faith Forgotten: The Art of Harry Smith” is on view at the Whitney Museum of American Art from October 4, 2023–January 28, 2024.
Harry Everett Smith is an odd figure to come across in an art museum. That's because he's not known primarily as a visual artist at all. For most, Harry Smith is probably best known as the compiler of the legendary Anthology of American Folk Music, a landmark collection of early recordings published in 1952, which became a huge influence on the folk music revival and through that, on rock in the 1960s. Smith was born in 1923 and died in 1991, and his biography reads like a who's who of cultural icons. He was a big figure in the Beat Generation and a close friend of Allen Ginsberg, appeared in one of Andy Warhol's screen test films, and he was also a tireless collector of all kinds of cultural objects, from out-of-print records to Ukrainian Easter eggs. Smith was also an experimental filmmaker and artist, an early student of anthropology, and an acolyte of a variety of mystical belief systems. Now, the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York is hosting “Fragments of a Faith Forgotten: The Art of Harry Smith," an unusual, but thrilling new show, with an unusual curator, the artist Carol Bove, herself one of the most celebrated sculptors working today. Bove has had a solo show at the Museum of Modern Art and installed work on the façade of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, among many other accomplishments. Working with Elisabeth Sussman, a curator at the Whitney, Dan Byers, director of the Carpenter Center for Visual Art, and Rani Singh, director of the Harry Smith Archives, Bove has dedicated herself to helping organize this show, to tell the story of Harry Smith. In advance of “Fragments of a Faith Forgotten,” which opens October 4 at the Whitney, Carol Bove spoke to Artnet News's chief art critic Ben Davis about Harry Smith's life in art and what it is about this hard-to-categorize figure that fired her imagination and will do the same for visitors to this show. “Fragments of a Faith Forgotten: The Art of Harry Smith” is on view at the Whitney Museum of American Art from October 4, 2023–January 28, 2024.
Episode No. 566 of The Modern Art Notes Podcast features artist B. Ingrid Olson and curator Idurre Alonso. The Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts at Harvard University is presenting two concurrent B. Ingrid Olson exhibitions, "History Mother," and "Little Sister" through December 23. Each exhibition is on a separate floor of CCVA's building. Olson's exhibitions feature site-specific presentations that engage with doubling and mirroring, gendered forms, the interplay between photography and sculpture, and between the body and the built environment. The exhibitions were curated by Dan Byers. A catalogue will be available. This week, the Secession in Vienna closed an exhibition of Olson's work titled "Elastic X." In addition, Olson's work has previously been featured in solo presentations at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, NY and at The Renaissance Society at the University of Chicago. Alonso discusses her new exhibition "Reinventing the Américas: Construct. Erase. Repeat" at the Getty Research Institute in Los Angeles. The exhibition considers the ways in which artists have helped construct ideas about the Western Hemisphere, particularly in the decades after the arrival of Europeans. It is on view through January 8, 2023. Instagram: B. Ingrid Olson, Idurre Alonso, Tyler Green.
This story has so many twists and wild tales in it that if you didn't know it was all true, you'd think it a fantastic work of fiction. Dan Byers put everything on the line for his adventure of a lifetime and from the onset his plans have been upended so many times that it will leave you wondering how he remained so resilient. Not only that, but Dan's story really highlights how motorcyclists look out for each other, how this common thread draws strangers together and creates friends for life. If you've enjoyed this episode please consider supporting this show by going to adventureriderradio.com/support and don't forget to check out our sponsors. Follow Adventure Rider Radio: Facebook: AdventureRiderRadio Instagram: @adventureriderradio Twitter: @ADVRiderRadio For more on this episode see the show notes at Adventure Rider Radio.
Piano man Daniel Byers stops by to enjoy a hot cup of joseph and a chat on an abnormally cloudy day in Phoenix. This cat has a story to tell; from his formative years in Nashville, his trek to ASU, to starting Palo Brea, and the hell of a year he had in 2021 (you thought YOU had a year?). Through all the trials and tribulations, the wins and losses, he is still out there finding pure joy in making music with his band, sharing love, acceptance, and optimism and he's straight up crushing up. He even shares a snippet of a new Palo Brea tune called "Space and Time." Buckle up friends. Find out more about Dan Byers at https://www.palobreamusic.com/ (https://www.palobreamusic.com/)
On this edition of We the People Jenny Schweigert invites Dan Byers with a perfect reason to give NO EXCUSES. Take control of your life and get done what you need to have happen.
Farm Broadcaster Jessica Benson talks with Dan Byers about his successful harvesting operation as well as his up and coming direct-to-consumer meat business -- 6 Pack Meats (linked below) themed after common bodybuilding lingo. Jessica and Dan discuss their similar passion for working out and bodybuilding, and how that mindset carries over into other facets of life like working in agriculture. Dan wakes up at 3:05 every morning and lives by the words, "How you do anything is how you do everything." Other than meat-head things, they discuss getting into the business of direct-to-consumer meat sales, consumer trends when it comes to purchasing direct and the importance of the H2A visa program for agriculture. They also talk about hard times building hard people and how life is ultimately what you make of it, and how we can reach the consumer world more effectively when it comes to education in ag! https://6packmeats.com/
This week I am joined by Dan Byers, body builder and owner/operator of 6 Pack Meats. We discuss his direct to consumer meat business and how animal proteins help keep him fueled.
Dan Byers (@DanByers90 on twitter) has developed amazing discipline, and he graciously shares it with us. Just listen. Powerful.
Dan Byers (The Good Wolf) is not only part of Wolf-Face's rhythm section (bass) but also owner of Rock Garden Studios where he's produced stuff for Propaghandi, Gone is Gone and one of my all times favs, MASTODON. When not playing or recording, Dan can be found in his other studio doing his other passion, building stuff out of wood. He's a Renaissance Man and all around cool dude! Check it out!
Fox Sports Radio's Dan Byers previews Super Bowl LIV
Driven by a public clamoring for action and pressure from corporate CEOs, lawmakers are noting an evolution in attitudes toward climate action among some of their Republican colleagues – a subtle but significant shift in tone that could pave the way for modest legislation this year. Guests include:Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-OR)Rep. Francis Rooney (R-FL)Sen. Chris Coons (D-DE)Catherine McKenna, Canada’s first foreign minister for climate and the environment Dan Byers, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Tamar met Dan when she was a worshipful high school freshman and he was (to her) an übercool junior who was not only the arts editor of Thoughtprints, the school's art/lit mag, but also spent his free time in the fine art studio, bending the charcoal like Beckmann. Now he's the Director of the Carpenter Center of Visual Arts at Harvard University, she's an art history podcaster, and they reconnected in the Busch-Reisinger galleries in front of Max Beckmann's "Self-Portrait in a Tuxedo" from 1927 to talk about self-portraiture, self-evolution, and the limitations of peaking in high school. [00:17] - Describing the painting. [02:35] - What drew Dan to the painting as a teenager. [06:16] - The ephemera of the cigarette. [08:17] - Self-portraits in high school. [09:25] - Drawing in thick, expressive lines. [11:35] - The self-portrait that doesn't need our validation. [15:19] - Beckmann isn't Egon Schiele [18:58] - Dan's evolving relationship with this painting. [21:58] - Thoughtprints! Full transcript: http://www.thelonelypalette.com/dan-byers-interview Music used: The Blue Dot Sessions, "Greyleaf Willow"
Every other year, the Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA) awards its James and Audrey Foster Prize to established, Boston-based artists who are well-known on a national and international level but who have received little recognition in Boston itself. Callie Crossley sat down with ICA curator Dan Byers and two of the artists -- Lucy Kim and Sonia Almeida -- chosen for this year's prize exhibit.
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
We follow up on Apple Music API, iOSReal's iOS podcast review, hiring iOS dev teams, Trutone displays, TZStackviews. Tim gives his review of talks and the tech workshop at NSNorth 2016, featuring Daniel Steinberg, Ayaka Nonaka, Gwen Weston, Gene Goykhman, Liz Marley, Jonathan Rhyne, Pamela Pavliscak, Rob Segal and Robles Jama. We talk about PerfectlySoft and Buddy Build. We also discuss the end of the iPhone by examining iPhone Warning Signs. Picks: HomeControl, Xcode Configs Episode 90 Show Notes: Apple announces new Apple Music API Best iOS Podcasts in 2016 Jessy Catterwaul on Episode 89 – “WWDC is cancelled” FoS Ryan Renna - Understanding the 9.7 True Tone Display NSNorth Highlights Daniel Steinberg - Swift Tech workshop. Penulimate Evernote Ayaka Nonaka - Clean View Layout with iOS9 Features Gene Goykhman - Writing Backends Can be Fun PerfectlySoft Buddy build - build apps faster Liz Marley - Safety, Fun, and Learning App Camp For Girls Pamela Pavliscak - Designing Like a Human in the Age of Algorithms Hockey Hall of Fame Karl Moskowski Anluan O'Brian Paddy O'Brien Adrienne Marshall Dan Byers Philippe Casgrain Rob Segal - Journey to the East Mega Jump Robles Jama - Charting on the App Store: How to climb to the top (and stay there) Next Keyboard Wake Alarm iPhone Warning Signs The Greatest Investors: Peter Lynch Joe Cieplisnky on Roundabout Apple Campus Phillips Hue - HomeKit Leena Mansour Episode 68 – The Future of Swift Idioms Greg Heo - Switching Your Mind to Swift Episode 90 Picks: HomeControl Xcode Configs Using Xcode Configs for API endpoint Hacking Your Phone Blackbox - Think Outside the Box
The curators, Daniel Baumann, Tina Kukielski and Dan Byers discuss their plans for the 56th edition
In this episode, I am joined by musician, animator, and longtime friend Dan Byers. We talk about Dan's animated films, his blog, and how he makes his short films. Check out Dan's short films and other goddies here: Goofygraffix
A Christmas Carol!Well, we did it. Dubbing ourselves the Empty Bottle Theatre Group, I assembled a cast of my closest friends to perform something that I have wanted to do for a long time, a live, old-time radio serial. When I asked everyone if they were interested, I got back an enthusiastic response, but since everyone was so busy this season, we had to improvise. So here is the theme, some characters were changed around and everyone got an un-edited script. It was one I found online that was used in Orson Well's original radio drama. Everyone was responsible for editing their own lines and could do whatever they wanted. We got together and ran through one scene, changed a few characters off the cuff, cracked open a few bottles of wine and ran with it. So what you are hearing is a completely un-rehearsed, ad libbed version of A Christmas Carol. You can tell that as it nears the end of the show, we all are getting drunker and drunker...I did very little editing and we all just had a blast. Granted MY ACCENTS ARE HORRIBLE, but it was all in good fun. You can hear us laughing in the background and several times, we almost couldn't contain ourselves as everything was done impromptu, which resulted in much spontaneous laughter. A big thanks to Gary Dring from the Clever Little Pod podcast, my friend from the UK. He was kind enough to record the narration for the show. Thanks to Marco Rossetti for taking some great shots while we were recording, thanks to Dan Byers for helping with production and another big thanks to all my crazy friends who made this a great night of fun.Links:Clever Little PodMarco Rossetti PhotographyDan Byer's Goofy Graffix blogGoofy Graffix siteCast: A Worlds of Wayne Christmas Carol As performed by the Empty Bottle Theatre Group Producer/Director/Head soak: Wayne Brekke Narrator: Gary Dring Scrooge / now Rita Scrooge: Laura Leininger Bob Cratchit / now Bobbi Cratchit: Angie Ankenbauer Small boy: Dan Byers Fred / now Freda (Scrooge's neice): Gini Magnuson Charity Gentleman / now Donation Chick: Laurie Brekke Marley: Wayne Brekke Ghost of Christmas Past: Jacob Houser Fezzwig: Gini Magnuson Belle / now Bill: Michael Campbell Young Scrooge: Laura Leininger Belle's Husband / now Bills Wife: Gini Magnuson Ghost of Christmas Present: Angie Ankenbauer Cratchit girl: Laurie Brekke Mrs Cratchit / now Mr. Cratchit: Michael Campbell Martha: Lori Umstead Tiny Tim: Dan Byers 1st. Man: Dan Byers 2nd Man: Eric Magnuson Boy: Wayne Brekke