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Ian Berry shows up to chat about an upcoming event highlighting local Medal of Honor recipients and scholarships.
In the final hour Jeff chats with Troy Miller and then Ian Berry.
We close out Year 1 of this podcast with my favorite movie of 2024. Luckily, Ian Berry (artist, programmer, trivia host, and all-around Astoria film hero) is even more into "Furiosa" than I am. We talk about what it means to have Chris Hemsworth's villain almost steal the show, why the Mad Max movies are like the Gospels, and break down the difference between George Miller's myth-making and Hollywood's usual world-building. I also spend a few minutes at the beginning sharing my Top 10 films of 2024. Thank you all very kindly for spending any amount of time with The Kick. See you in 2025!
Ian Berry was born in 1934 in Lancashire, England. He made his reputation in South Africa, where he worked for the Daily Mail and later for Drum magazine. He was the only photographer to document the massacre at Sharpeville in 1960, and his photographs were used in the trial to prove the victims' innocence.Henri Cartier-Bresson invited Ian to join Magnum in 1962, when he was based in Paris. He moved to London in 1964 to become the first contract photographer for the Observer Magazine. Since then assignments have taken him around the world: he has documented Russia's invasion of Czechoslovakia; conflicts in Israel, Ireland, Vietnam and the Congo; famine in Ethiopia; and apartheid in South Africa. The major body of work produced in South Africa is represented in two of his books: Black and Whites: L'Afrique du Sud and Living Apart (1996).Important editorial assignments have included work for National Geographic, Fortune, Stern, Geo, national Sunday magazines, Esquire, Paris-Match and Life. Berry has also reported on the political and social transformations in China and the former USSR. Recent projects have involved tracing the route of the Silk Road through Turkey, Iran and southern Central Asia to northern China for Conde Nast Traveler, photographing Berlin for a Stern supplement, the Three Gorges Dam project in China for the Telegraph Magazine, Greenland for a book on climate control and child slavery in Africa.Ian's recent book, Water (GOST Books, 2022), brings together many classic images from Ian's extensive archive with material shot over the course of 15 years travelling the globe to document the inextricable links between landscape, life and water. This new book brings together a selection of the resulting images which collectively tell the story of man's complex relationship with water — at a time when climate change demonstrates just how precariously water and life are intertwined. In episode 213, Ian discusses, among other things:How all the pics in Water came to be used as B&WHow the project came aboutHow he got into photographyHow he came to be the only photographer at the Sharpeville MassacreThe importance of luckGetting into Magnum after a tea with HCB and a disasterous first meetingChanges in Magnum over the years - and photography in generalThe controversy over David Allan Harvey and the subsequent action by MagnumEverything being ‘too woke'Learining from other people and looking at contact sheets Referenced:Stuart SmithAbbasRoger MaddenDrum MagazineTom HopkinsonThe Sharpeville MassacreMichele Chevalier (Visa)Marc RiboudReni BurriHenri Cartier BressonBurt GlinnPeter DenchDavid Allan HarveySteve McCurryBruce DavidsonPhilip Jones GriffithsGilles PeressBruno BarbeyWerner Bischof Website | Instgram“I brought along my contact sheets which Henri spent ages going through. And he said ‘great, good to have you'. And I went back upstairs afterwards and they said ‘fine, you're in Magnum.' And that was it…”
Merion and Jamie meet Ian Berry, artist and incredibly talented chap, talking about his medium, denim; his artistic process and how he became an internationally renowned artist from humble beginnings in the north of England. You won't want to miss the story about Ayrton Senna's portrait... You can find Ian Berry on instagram, and on his website, Ianberry.org.Read about his Fast Fashion Graveyard documentary and his journey to the Atacama Desert in Chile, to explore the textile mountains.Follow us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or Google Podcasts for more chat about love, crafts and everything in-between!You can email us at show@lovecrafts.com to share your crafting stories, guest recommendations or just your favourite flap jack recipes - we'd love to hear from you!(ps - please please leave us a review wherever you can, so that we can keep making happy pods that you love!)Happy crafting!
Ian Berry - veteran, former game keeper and current forester for the United Food Trust out of the UK - joins Robbie from a stroll on the beautiful English countryside. Together, the boys dive deep into some rabbit holes around this lifestyle we love so much and the UK venison scene. See more from Blood Origins: https://bit.ly/BloodOrigins_Subscribe Music: Migration by Ian Post (Winter Solstice), licensed through artlist.io Podcast is brought to you by: Bushnell: https://www.bushnell.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Rodrigo Guendelman conversó con José Délano, museógrafo de la muestra “Ander: Resistencia cultural en El Trolley y Matucana 19”, quien entregó detalles sobre esta exposición que se presenta en el Museo de Bellas Artes y que abarca la contracultura de los años 80 y principios de los 90. En el segundo bloque Javier Pinto, director de Cultura de Metro de Santiago, comentó a la inauguración de una nueva muestra de Metro Arte, dos cuadros hechos por el artista Ian Berry en mezclilla, donde retrató a los músicos nacionales Anita Tijoux y Roberto Márquez
Sermon Series: "The Holy Spirit" on Sunday evening, 19 June, 2022. Bible reading Psalm 139:1-10.
How making music lifts the soul, and reminds us of who we are. I reference my wise friend Ian Berry, who helps people find their essence and become wise leaders: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ianberry1 (linkedin.com/in/ianberry1)
What does it take to be a great news editor? Tom Hopkinson was sacked by the proprietor of Picture Post for trying to run a true story during the 1950 Korean War. Later he also sent a photographer - Ian Berry - to cover the Sharpeville Massacre in South Africa for Drum .... in time he fell out with the proprietor of that magazine as well. "To affect the world you've got to get into a position to affect it," he said, "and that means you've got to be very patient and fight your way in." Nominating Tom Hopkinson is Donald Macintyre, former correspondent in the Middle East and one of the very first students on the Cardiff journalism course Tom Hopkinson set up. Also in studio is his daughter, Professor Amanda Hopkinson. The presenter is Matthew Parris and the producer is Miles Warde
Sermon Series: "Reconnect" on Sunday morning, 6 March, 2022. Bible reading 1 Peter 4:1-11.
Hey there, my wise friends and welcome to episode 46 of Collective Wisdom, which I'm very happy to say I'm recording from sunny Singapore. And it's been such a treat to reconnect with friends, many of whom I haven't seen for almost two years now. Health and well-being are definitely front of mind again this week, as news emerged of the new Omnicon variant of COVID-19 virus. It's still very unclear at this point, just what an impact it will have. But a reminder to us all that when our health is threatened, everything else becomes secondary. This is something that my guest today, Ian Barry, has had to deal with for most of his adult life, as he was diagnosed with melanoma when he was in his early 20s. He was told by his surgeon at the time that his capacity to survive the threat that it posed, would largely be affected by his attitude. And that adopting an attitude of gratitude would go a long way to help as he is now in his late 60s, I think we can safely say it's had the desired effect so far. Sometimes it just pays to be playful, give compliments to yourself and to others, and to find something to be grateful for even when the chips are down. For me today, I'm simply grateful to have met Ian and had the pleasure of his company for this episode. And if after listening to him, I'm sure you will feel the same way. Ian Berry's website is https://www.ianberry.biz/ Ian Berry on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/ianberry1/ My relatively new service is https://www.ianberry.biz/we-need-to-talk where I have two vacancies for the 10AM AEDT session and one for the 8.30 AM UK time session Enough. Unlock a life of abundance starting right where you are Song: ‘Up Where Belong' Joe Cocker and Jennifer Wares Wisdom: Never forget when you look in the mirror that you are seeing a unique one-of-a-kind human being.
This week on the Top Artist Podcast, we talk with artist Ian Berry about his creative process and the way he uses denim to create spectacularly detailed installations and works of art. After working in advertising while perfecting his craft on the side, Berry decided to take a leap of faith and become a full-time artist. Since then, he has been fascinating the world with blue-toned scenes that celebrate the range of colors and textures found in jeans. Berry tells us that to him, this style is about portraying contemporary life out of a very urban fabric that may be the “material of our time.” See some of the artwork we discuss on the Top Artist Instagram Follow Ian Berry’s work on his website, Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram. And read more about some of the projects we discuss during our chat: Giant Clapping Hands Are Projected Around the World to Say ‘Thank You’ Artist Recreates His Lockdown Living Room Completely Out of Denim Artist Recreates California’s Chill Vibes and Summer Blues Using Only Denim Artist Creates “Secret Garden” with the Last Denim Made in USA Artist Uses Denim Jeans to Create Realistic Scenes of Everyday Life
In March 1960, the South African police opened fire on a crowd of demonstrators in the township of Sharpeville, killing 69 people and injuring nearly 200 more. The massacre outraged black South Africans, leading to a radicalisation of anti-apartheid organisations such as the ANC and a ruthless crackdown on dissent by the whites-only government. Simon Watts hears the memories of Nyakane Tsolo, who organised the demonstration in Sharpeville, and Ian Berry, a photographer whose pictures of the killings caused an international outcry. PHOTO: The crowd fleeing from the police at Sharpeville in 1960 (Universal History Archive/UIG via Getty Images)
Geoff McDonald Heart Leadership with Ian Berry GeoffMcDonald.com Heart Leadership In his latest book, Heart Leadership, business mentor and leadership expert Ian Berry talks about the progress from the mind of leadership to leading with the heart. It’s an interesting update on leadership styles and more timely than ever given our experiences with the pandemic, lockdown and often, leading from afar with more…
Carolyn Corkill & Ian Berry are two great humans who both know firsthand what it feels like when faith changes. When it moves through pain, doubt, joy, confidence, confusion and everything in between. So Benj and I asked them to join us for a conversation. It also happened to be in a tent with a crowd of friends. There was some real wisdom and beauty in this conversation. So join us in the tent.Inhabit podcast is a collaboration between Narara Valley Baptist Church and Greenhouse Church, Long Jetty.nvbc.infogreenhousechurch.onlineHosts: Will Small & Benj GouldMusic: Josh Corkill
Carolyn Corkill & Ian Berry are two great humans who both know firsthand what it feels like when faith changes. When it moves through pain, doubt, joy, confidence, confusion and everything in between. So Benj and I asked them to join us for a conversation. It also happened to be in a tent with a crowd of friends. There was some real wisdom and beauty in this conversation. So join us in the tent. Inhabit podcast is a collaboration between Narara Valley Baptist Church and Greenhouse Church, Long Jetty. nvbc.info greenhousechurch.online Hosts: Will Small & Benj Gould Music: Josh Corkill
Sermon Series "Who We Are" with a panel of Ian Berry, Craig Corkill, Will Small & Sienna Aloisio on Sunday evening, June 30, 2019.
This episode and Photomuse is on the importance of the work of Magnum's longest serving photographer, Ian Berry and, in particular, his 1978 book, The English. I also outline my hope for a review of English documentary photography about the English. Ian Berry's work has inspired me to attempt to start a conversation about the need for a new look at the value and unique properties of the work of English documentary photography. Recording note - I taped this monologue on my phone. I think the quality is ok. I'd be very pleased to hear what you think about this as it certainly speeds up the process! As ever I welcome your thoughts and comments. Please contact me at alex@flowphotographic.com. I hope you enjoy this episode. Alex
Ian Berry is an award-wining Magnum photojournalist. Now 82, he reflects on the morality and regrets of taking the picture vs helping. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Photojournalist Glenn Edwards speaks with Magnum photographer Ian Berry just prior to Ian delivering the second Nick Lewis Memorial lecture hosted by Cardiff School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies. Recorded by Ffoton Wales on 25th February 2016 in Cardiff.
Are you fit for the future? Join Gihan Perera, Ian Berry, Alicia Curtis and Jenny Brockis in this blab as we discuss the key principles you need as a leader to be fit for the future. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Differentiation is a crucial factor for success in our fast, flat and free world. But you can't just be different from everybody else and hope to succeed - you have to be different in the right ways. In this conversation with Ian Berry, we explore change, leadership and the difference that makes a difference. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Geoff McDonald Ian Berry – Simplifying Leadership GeoffMcDonald.com Ian Berry In his corporate life, Ian was a State Manager for a Financial Services company overseeing 200 people and sales in excess of $100 million. Since leaving the corporate world Ian has become an expert in the leadership space. He is an author, speaker, blogger and mentor. Ian is also: Past National President of the…
For decades, long before social media and the rise of the individual, Ian Berry has been promoting the idea that the key role of leaders is to identify and develop the gifts and talents of their people. In this interview, we discuss why this is more important than ever, how it leads to measurable business results, and what leaders need to do to get started. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
It's a quadruple sized year end spectacular. Ian Berry, Jason Rouse, and Ted Douglas join me and we discuss our top ten films of 2010. These films run the gamut from Holocaust documentary to celery-in-the-butt comedy.