Canadian fine art photographer
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Jeff Wall talks to Ben Luke about his influences—from writers to musicians, film-makers and, of course, other artists—and the cultural experiences that have shaped his life and work.Wall—who was born in 1946 in Vancouver, Canada, where he still lives, though he also works in Los Angeles—makes photographs but aspires to approach his medium with the freedom, range and openness taken for granted by other artforms. Presented on a large scale, his images are enormously varied, from those that are close to reportage; to what he calls “near-documentary” images—tableaux, where he recreates a scene he has witnessed in reality with actors; to elaborately staged environments responding to art or literature; and even what he calls “hallucinations”. Crucially, he has used the term “cinematographic” to describe his approach, in that his pictures use different degrees of preparation and processing before he presses the shutter and afterwards, thereby applying what Jeff has called “aspects of the arts of dramatisation” to the pictorial practice of still photography. Because of this, his work has long had a fascinating philosophical relationship with truth and reality—two key cornerstones of orthodox claims for his medium's potency—and what Wall has called “blatant artifice”. Initially famous for the technique he pioneered in the art world of presenting vast transparencies on lightboxes, he now mostly works with prints, on a similar scale, in both colour and black and white. As he has engaged closely with the history of art, books and film, Jeff has used the term “prose poems” to describe his photographs: that form's complex structures and language and ability to conjure broad constellations of meanings, perfectly describe his art and how we experience it. He discusses how comics and Bruegel were his earliest visual inspirations, talks about his responses to historic works by Katsushika Hokusai and Albrecht Dürer, reflects on the “accidents while reading” that have led him to make images responding to literary works by Franz Kafka and Yukio Mishima, among others. Plus he answers some of our usual questions, including the ultimate, “what is art for?”Jeff Wall: Life in Pictures, White Cube Bermondsey, London until 12 January 2025; Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology, Lisbon, Portugal, April-August 2025. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
A conversation with renowned photographer Jeff Wall. Wall's work transforms everyday moments into cinematic, almost painterly scenes. His latest exhibition at Gagosian's 541 West 24th Street location in New York runs November 8 to December 21. In that exhibit, he explores themes of memory, artifice, and narrative through his unique approach to staged and ‘near-documentary' photography. https://gagosian.com/exhibitions/2024/jeff-wall/https://gagosian.com/artists/jeff-wall/
上集 PODCAST節目中,我們與高雄市立美術館策展人崔綵珊老師一起探討《瞬間-穿越繪畫與攝影之旅》特展中的展覽作品。今天從大衛.霍克尼 David Hockney《藝術家肖像(泳池與兩個人像)》開始講起,我們探討藝術家創作的過程集畫中人物的故事,一路聊到盧西安.佛洛伊德 Lucian Freud與已逝英國女王伊麗莎白二世的軼聞趣事。最後以Jeff Wall 傑夫.沃爾 A Sudden Gust of Wind (after Hokusai) 突如其來的一陣風(借鑒鑑葛飾北齋)作為結語。探討這些藝術家如何創作藝術作品,使作品穿梭在虛實之間,讓觀者錯落在攝影與繪畫的境界之中。╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆《瞬間-穿越繪畫與攝影之旅》展覽期間|2024.06.29-11.17展覽地點|高雄市立美術館101-103展覽室(高雄市鼓山區美術館路80號)更多資訊|高雄市立美術館╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆
上集 PODCAST節目中,我們與高雄市立美術館策展人崔綵珊老師一起探討《瞬間-穿越繪畫與攝影之旅》特展中的展覽作品。今天從大衛.霍克尼 David Hockney《藝術家肖像(泳池與兩個人像)》開始講起,我們探討藝術家創作的過程集畫中人物的故事,一路聊到盧西安.佛洛伊德 Lucian Freud與已逝英國女王伊麗莎白二世的軼聞趣事。最後以Jeff Wall 傑夫.沃爾 A Sudden Gust of Wind (after Hokusai) 突如其來的一陣風(借鑒鑑葛飾北齋)作為結語。探討這些藝術家如何創作藝術作品,使作品穿梭在虛實之間,讓觀者錯落在攝影與繪畫的境界之中。╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆《瞬間-穿越繪畫與攝影之旅》展覽期間|2024.06.29-11.17展覽地點|高雄市立美術館101-103展覽室(高雄市鼓山區美術館路80號)更多資訊|高雄市立美術館╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆╭★╭♬ ╭☆
Adventures in culture and the arts, with Rifa and Chris. Thanks for joining us! This episode we're in Barcelona for Primavera Sound 2024 and we also checked out some art: photographer Jeff Wall — Possible Tales at La Virreina Centre de la Imatge, and painter and collagist Armand Boua at OOA Contemporary Gallery in Sitges. Rifa is reading Mikaela Loach's book It's Not That Radical and, on a similar climate crisis jag, Chris is reading Andreas Malm's How To Blow Up A Pipeline. Find us on Instagram @refigureuk
Hoy nos acompañan Los Estanques, para escuchar juntos 'UVE', su más reciente disco que podemos definir como un 'circo' de variedades sonoras... Rock, psicodelia, jazz, folclore... incluso toques de italo-disco, todo un juego con la música y con las letras. Mery Cuesta nos habla de la exposición que el Centre de la Imatge 'La Virreina' de Barcelona, dedica al fotógrafo contemporáneo Jeff Wall.Visitamos el Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza con Ángela Núñez, que nos descubre la exposición 'La memoria colonial'. Una reflexión sobre el colonialismo y el relato eurocéntrico de los museos. Y en este lunes de exposiciones, terminamos el recorrido en Berlín conectando con Beatriz Domínguez, corresponsal de RNE en la capital alemana. Allí se puede ver una retrospectiva del fotógrafo Helmut Newton, coincidiendo con el veinte aniversario de su fallecimiento. Nos vamos con propuestas veraniegas para los más pequeños, con 'La Pequeteca' de Leticia Audibert y conocemos el resumen de actividades culturales para la semana.Escuchar audio
Jeff Wall est considéré comme le fondateur de la "staged photography" (photographie mise en scène). Ses images composées de manière complexe à partir de nombreuses prises distinctes sont souvent inspirées de scènes du quotidien, de lʹhistoire de lʹart, comme des scènes de films. Mais pas seulement. Le curateur de lʹexposition, Martin Schwander est au micro de Florence Grivel. Jeff Wall, Fondation Beyeler, jusquʹau 21 avril
“Quando una superficie, una tela, viene suddivisa anche da una sola linea, si creano dei rapporti conflittuali, si dà sempre adito a una interpretazione.” scrive Enrico Castellani “Ecco io volevo che ciò che facevo fosse indiscutibile, non interpretabile, qualcosa che c'è e basta.” La ricerca di questo grande artista italiano è volta principalmente alla sua idea di rappresentazione dello spazio sulla tela. Architetto di formazione e pittore per vocazione, Enrico Castellani occupa una posizione incontestabile nella storia dell'arte del Secondo Novecento. Tuttavia, a questo artista sono state dedicate pochissime mostre personali fuori dall'Italia. In Svizzera, sino ad oggi, addirittura nessuna. Questo fatto ha spinto Barbara Paltenghi Malacrida, direttrice del Museo d'Arte di Mendrisio, a presentare la prima grande retrospettiva di Castellani in territorio elvetico. La mostra inaugurata sabato 23 marzo 2024 è al centro della puntata di Voci Dipinte. Gli ospiti della puntata sono: Barbara Paltenghi Malacrida, direttrice del Museo d'Arte di Mendrisio; Federico Sardella, direttore della Fondazione Enrico Castellani e la rinomata storica dell'arte Ester Coen.L'inserto della settimana ci porta a visitare la mostra dell'artista canadese Jeff Wall, considerato uno dei fondatori della stage photography, alla Fondazione Beyeler di Basilea. L'esposizione, aperta fino al 21 aprile, presenta 55 opere provenienti da vari musei internazionali e dall'archivio privato dell'artista. Ne parla il curatore Martin Schwander.
Eine Liebeserklärung an die französische Küche, angerührt von einem Filmemacher mit vietnamesischen Wurzeln: Trân Anh Hùng bringt «La passion de Dodin Bouffant» ins Kino. Und: Werke von Jeff Wall, des Meisters der fotografischen Erzählung, sind derzeit in der Fondation Beyeler in Riehen zu sehen. Der Filmemacher Trân Anh Hùng verbindet in seinem Film «La passion de Dodin Bouffant» die Leidenschaft fürs Kochen mit Liebeskunst. Im Mittelpunkt steht eine Köchin auf einem französischen Landgut Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts, dargestellt von Juliette Binoche, die sich in der Küche emanzipiert und den Schlossherrn für sich gewinnt. Werke des international bekannten kanadischen Fotografen Jeff Wall sind derzeit in der Fondation Beyer in Riehen bei Basel zu sehen. Seine Bilder sind, einem Filmset gleich, stark inszeniert und weisen ihn als Meister der fotografischen Erzählung aus. Weitere Themen: - Essen, kochen und lieben: «La passion de Dodin Bouffant» - Jeff Wall – Meister der fotografischen Erzählung
Jeff Wall - einer der ganz Grossen der Fotografie. Seine Bilder sind aktuell in der Fondation Beyeler in Riehen bei Basel ausgestellt. Es handelt sich dabei um die erste Werkschau von Jeff Wall in der Schweiz seit fast zwei Jahrzehnten. Die Ausstellung zeigt in über 50 Fotografien das gesamte Spektrum der bahnbrechenden Werke von Jeff Wall. Die Ausstellung über die Werke von Jeff Wall läuft noch bis am 21. April 2024 in der Fondation Beyeler. Diese hat täglich von 10 Uhr bis 18 Uhr offen, am Mittwoch jeweils bis um 20 Uhr.
Gampert, Christianwww.deutschlandfunk.de, Kultur heute
„Alle Kunstwerke, die uns beeindrucken haben eine „Jetzt-Qualität.“ Und sie scheinen nie alt zu werden. Ich hoffe, das ist bei meinen Bildern auch der Fall.“, sagt der Fotokünstler Jeff Wall. Mit einer umfangreichen Werkschau zeigt die Fondation Beyeler in Basel, wie vielfältig die Arbeiten des Kanadiers sind. Jeder Ausstellungsraum ist ein Bilderkosmos, der die Frage nach dem Zusammenhang zwischen Realität und Fotografie immer neu stellt.
This story is devastating. Jeff Wall, our guest from S01, E49, has one regret. May this clip remind us all that we never really know when our time will end. And may it inspire us to make the most of every single moment. FULL EPISODE
Zwischen Blende und Zeit - Der Fotografie-Talk der fotocommunity
Angeregt durch eine interessante Diskussion zum Thema "Gestellt oder nicht gestellt" aus dem Forum der fotocommunity, sprechen wir darüber, ob und wie das Wissen über die Entstehung eines Fotos/Bildes, unsere Wahrnehmung und unsere (Be)Wertung beeinflusst. Setzt Dich gern zu uns und erfahre, was Jeff Wall mit einem Seeadler verbindet :D
Lady Justice is often depicted wearing a blindfold, signifying that judges are neutral arbiters of the law. Unfortunately, thanks for a judicial doctrine known as Chevron deference, the Supreme Court has required judges to peek from behind that metaphorical blindfold and put a thumb on the scale for the most powerful litigant in our nation: the federal government. In a case called Brand X, the Court took Chevron deference to its logical conclusion, allowing agencies to overrule judicial decisions. One dissenter wrote that this was not only bizarre, but it was probably unconstitutional. That view has been picking up steam in the past decade. Next term, the Court will hear a case asking it to overturn Chevron deference.Thanks for our guests Aditya Bamzai and Jeff Wall.Follow us on Twitter @ehslattery @anastasia_esq @pacificlegal #DissedPod Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
‘Capturing the Moment' is an exhibition at Tate Modern that explores the dynamic relationship between contemporary painting and photography. It is a group exhibition which unfolds as an open-ended conversation between some of the greatest painters and photographers of recent generations, looking at how the brush and the lens have been used to capture moments in time, and how these two mediums have inspired and influenced each other. The arrival of photography changed the course of painting forever and through ‘Capturing the Moment' we are taken on a journey showcasing the close relationship between these two mediums through some of the most iconic artworks of recent times. From the expressive paintings of Pablo Picasso and Paula Rego, to striking photographs by Hiroshi Sugimoto and Jeff Wall, you will see how these two distinct mediums have shaped each other over time. RNIB Connect Radio's Toby Davey was joined in the gallery spaces at Tate Modern by Beatriz Garcia-Velasco Assistant Curator to find out more about the exhibition, the relationship between contemporary art and photography and how these two art mediums have inspired and influenced each other over the years. Toby began by asking Beatriz why she and the other Curator's wanted to bring this conversation on art and photography to the walls of Tate Modern, Image shows A Black and White Photograph of A Lady Looking Worried with Two dishevelled Looking Children Leaning on Each Shoulder and a Baby in Her Arms
Transferable lessons from the Jiu-Jitsu mat?! Yes, please!Meet Dr. Jeff Wall, Professor of Music and Director of Choral Studies at Northeastern State University in Tahlequah, OK but also an avid practicer of jiu-jitsu. In this conversation, we connect the dots on what we can apply from the mat to the choral/singing space. You're going to love this! Connect with Dr. Wall: www.jefferywall.com www.voxsolaris.net www.nsuokchoirs.com Watch this episode on YouTube: https://youtu.be/LcpkPKNwkRM The Music (ed) Matters Podcast is sponsored by our friends over at Perform International. Thinking of going on tour domestically or abroad, want to take a solo tour, or team up with a dynamic festival? PI offers the best educationally sound and culturally significant experiences! Check them out, and tell them Emmy sent you :) Perform-International.com Order your copy of “The Business of Choir”: https://www.giamusic.com/store/resource/the-business-of-choir-book-g10713 or check out the website, businessofchoir.com. Join us over at Patreon.com/MusicEdMatters for monthly meet-ups, monthly bonus episodes, special content, and more!**Show music originally written by Mr. Todd Monsell
Red House Interviews local songwriters, artists, creatives, and interesting people, recorded at Red House Studio and hosted by Tyler Nail. Visit TylerNail.com for more information and the full library of The Red House Podcast Big Dumb Hick (AKA Jeff Wall) is a songwriting out of Kernersville, NC who is full of jokes and stories. We talk about everything from ADHD to his new book to performing at a nudist community. Red House Merch: https://www.bonfire.com/red-house-logo/ Website: https://www.tylernail.com/redhouse Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/redhousenc/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RedHouseSess... Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2M5acfC... Patreon link: https://www.patreon.com/tylernail The Triad Podcast Network is presented by The Ginther Group Real Estate, Ashley McKenzie-Sharpe of Highlands Residential Mortgage and Three Magnolias Financial AdvisorsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today on Eye on Franchising we have two people discussing a great recession proof brand. The brand is Handyman Connection, which is North America's premier business liaison connecting customers to local craftsmen in their home community. The brand services a variety of home improvement and repair needs, from carpentry, flooring and electrical work, to painting, plumbing, and remodeling.Guest number one is Jeff Wall, President & CEO of Handyman Connection. Jeff joined College Pro Painters as a franchisee in 1990 while attending the University of Illinois. After graduating from the School of Business, Jeff joined College Pro full-time in 1992 as a General Manager and moved up through the organization to become President of the US West in 2001. In 2008, Jeff joined CertaPro Painters as the Regional Vice President of the Midwest and Southeast divisions. In 2009, he added the responsibilities of the West and Central Regions. In January of 2010, Jeff became the President of Handyman Connection. After spending 23 years working in the First Service Brands family, Jeff purchased Handyman Connection from First Service Brands in 2013.Guest number two is Luke Schulte. Luke loves fostering relationships with candidates, consultants, and coaches to ensure potential franchisees discover the value of our service-based franchise, one that provides a simplicity and forcastability that is attractive to most potential owners who are looking to be in control of their owner destiny. Prior to joining Handyman Connection, Luke was Sr. Vice President of Franchise Development for Premium Service Brands, focused on vertically stacking seven brands in home services. He has also held development roles with Two Maids & A Mop and Fish Window Cleaning and worked in sales for a master franchise at Bonus Building Care.Through this episode you will learn why you would join Handyman Connection as a franchisee vs. starting your own Handyman business. Franchises operate under a predetermined business model that has already proven successful, while independent businesses make adjustments and decisions to their business model as they go.Handyman Connection has spent over 25 years building and refining our business model, As a result, investing in a Handyman Connection franchise allows you to take advantage of the years of experience of our full-time team, and the current franchisees experience. They have tried-and-true methods that will help you succeed as a franchise owner.Handyman Connection offers handyman franchise opportunities for driven individuals considering starting their own business. The home improvement and repair industry is multi-faceted and will be around as long as there are homeowners. While handyman franchise businesses can be a great investment opportunity, The Handyman Connection brand gives our franchisees an edge.Tune in to learn all about Luke, Jeff and Handyman Connection.Have you heard the news? We are officially on YouTube. Come check out a few videos have have and give me a follow!https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwoAdrkPZmveJt5AQRDk8WA---Lance GraulichFranchise Consulting Services from ION FranchisingEye On Franchising
If you enjoyed my very first blog, Underneath Their Robes (2004-2006)—which I wrote under a pseudonym while working as a federal prosecutor, pretending to be a female associate in Biglaw obsessed with federal judges and fashion—then you'll enjoy this latest podcast episode. How many podcasts combine analysis of Supreme Court oral arguments with discussion of pumps versus cowboy boots versus Mary Janes? (For the record, my guest made the first reference to shoes; I didn't go there unprompted.)My latest guest is—of course—the inimitable Lisa Blatt, chair of the Supreme Court and appellate practice at Williams & Connolly, the legendary litigation firm. Lisa needs no introduction to Original Jurisdiction devotees, so I'll mention just two distinctions. First, Lisa has argued 43 cases before the U.S. Supreme Court, more than any other woman in history. Second, she has won 37 of those 43 cases (86 percent), which makes her one of the most consistently victorious SCOTUS advocates. (Trivia question: is there a Supreme Court lawyer currently practicing who has argued that many cases before the high court with that high a win percentage?)In our ebullient and enjoyable interview, Lisa and I covered her special relationship with the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, for whom she clerked; how she rose to the top of the male-dominated Supreme Court bar, as a woman from Texas who “didn't go to a fancy law school”; how she developed her distinctive, famously unfiltered style of oral argument; and why she prefers cowboy boots over stiletto heels. I hope you have as much fun listening to this episode as Lisa and I had recording it.Show Notes:* Lisa Blatt bio, Williams & Connolly LLP* Reflections of a Lady Lawyer, Texas Law Review* Lisa S. Blatt: Cases argued, OyezPrefer reading to listening? A transcript of the entire episode appears below (although you really should listen to this one, since as is the case with her SCOTUS arguments, a transcript doesn't do Lisa justice).Two quick notes:* This transcript has been cleaned up from the audio in ways that don't alter meaning, e.g., by deleting verbal filler or adding a word here or there to clarify meaning (although I've done less clean-up than usual to better preserve the flavor of our fabulous and freewheeling conversation).* Because of length constraints, this newsletter may be truncated in email. To view the entire post, simply click on "View entire message" in your email app.David Lat: Hello, and welcome to the Original Jurisdiction podcast. I'm your host David Lat, author of a Substack newsletter about law and the legal profession also named Original Jurisdiction, which you can read and subscribe to by visiting davidlat.substack.com.You're listening to the seventh episode of this podcast, recorded on Wednesday, November 30. My normal schedule is to post episodes every other Wednesday.I must confess, with all due respect to my past guests, that this episode might be the most fun one yet—and I owe it all to my guest. Lawyers are known for being risk-averse and many carry that over into their interviews, not wanting to say anything that might get them in trouble or rub someone the wrong way. That's definitely not true of my latest guest, who's known for her refreshing candor, whether you're chatting with her at a cocktail party or whether she's arguing before the United States Supreme Court.Lisa Blatt serves as Chair of Williams & Connolly's Supreme Court and appellate practice. She has argued 43 cases before the Supreme Court, more than any other woman in history. And she has prevailed in 37 of those 43 cases, giving her a win percentage of 86 percent—which has to be one of the highest around, at least among advocates who have argued before the Court as often as she has. She has won numerous awards, including Litigator of the Year from the American Lawyer in 2021.Lisa graduated from the University of Texas for both college and law school, summa cum laude both times. She clerked for then-Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the D.C. Circuit and then joined Williams & Connolly as an associate. After government service, at the Department of Energy and then the Office of the Solicitor General, where she worked for 13 years, Lisa returned to private practice, and in 2019, she came full circle by returning to Williams & Connolly.In our lively and wide-ranging conversation, Lisa and I discussed her unique relationship with the late Justice Ginsburg, for whom she clerked; her distinctive approach to Supreme Court oral advocacy, including her thoughts on trying humor with the justices; why she loves coaching debate; and why she thinks lawyers should not be passionate about their work.Without further ado, here's my interview of Lisa Blatt.DL: Lisa, thank you so much for joining me. I'm honored to have you on the podcast.Lisa Blatt: Well, thank you. I am honored to be here.DL: So if I had to guess where you're from based on meeting you at a cocktail party or hearing you argue before the Court, I would've guessed you're one of us, a New Yorker or a Northeasterner. But you're from Texas.LB: That's right. Both of my parents are from New York, and I grew up listening to the word “y'all” with a very thick New York accent, so everyone assumes I'm from New York. But no, I was born and raised in Texas, West Texas. I moved all over Texas, UT for undergrad and law school, and a lot of my personality is because I'm from Texas. And I think I'm on my 12th pair of cowboy boots?DL: Oh wow, okay!LB: I'm definitely a Texan. Part of the way I talk just is because my parents are both from New York.DL: That makes sense. And you have a kind of candor, although I guess Texans are pretty candid too, aren't they?LB: I don't think my candor comes from being from Texas! I don't know where that comes from, actually—no one in my family's like that.DL: Fair enough. So going to your upbringing in Texas, were there any hints that you might become a lawyer? I believe your parents were not lawyers.LB: Right. Dad was a software engineer, Mom a stay-home mom until she became a psychologist. But no, I think it was Thurgood Marshall, something about his story of Brown—I still get sort of teary when I think about it—something about his story of what he did in Brown v. Board of Education, being the lawyer, the advocate, not the justice. I just wanted to be a lawyer and I did debate, speech and debate starting maybe in seventh grade, I was always very into debate and just knew that I wanted to go to law school.DL: What events did you do in speech and debate?LB: Now it's embarrassing, but policy debate, which is all that fast talking, and I had to unlearn that many years later. But yeah, I did policy debate and I spent many years coaching debate, so I do love the art of advocacy and argumentation and trying to persuade someone.DL: I read in one of your profiles or interviews that you do coach or did coach debate. What was that like for you? It seems like you're very competitive about coaching debate?LB: No, actually that's not right. I'm very passionate about coaching debate, and I feel very strongly about coaching; it's what I would definitely do if I wasn't a lawyer, and I feel very passionate about helping children and kids. But I don't think it's about winning—and that's one of the things you have to teach kids, because they just want a trophy. So much in life when it comes to competition and jobs is arbitrary and capricious. One of the things that is so important for us, even adults, to understand is that some stuff is out of our control. If I can just teach one child how to stand up straight and feel good about an argument, then that's a home run. So I love everything about coaching debate.Also, the different perspective was just a huge thing, getting a bunch of kids in a room. I've taught middle-school debate and high-school debate, and I would say my favorite was middle school because they're not yet completely sold on their politics and ideology, and trying to just get them to open up about things like background checks or hate speech or should dodgeball be banned in schools because it's violent. Just anything, any topic—nowadays not all topics are as safe as others, but just lots of fun topics—which tastes better, Coke or Pepsi, anything that you can just form an argument about and how to organize your responses.Look how excited I get! Just the notion of being able to teach this in a way that is helpful, especially for women, and a lot of kids are very insecure at this age, and everything about trying to show them that they can be confident is just the best thing in the whole world.DL: Speech and debate was huge for me in that respect. I was a very nerdy kid, very insecure, but when I found something and I enjoyed it, and I was good at it, it was a big boost for my confidence. So your husband's a lawyer, you're a lawyer, I believe you have two kids—are either of them into speech and debate?LB: One's in law school, they both did debate, and the other one's just applying and now getting into law school. So we're going to be Blatt & Associates, or Blatt Blatt Blatt & Blatt. David, my husband, no debate, he finds it completely foreign, but both Daniel and Rachel did debate.DL: Excellent. So in doing my research, I did come across your wedding announcement when you and David got married. I'm curious: did you give much thought to the whole “take his name or not take his name” thing?LB: My maiden name is Schiavo, so I was so eager, I would've married anybody with any last name—as soon as somebody gave me a proposal, the answer was yes. So yes, I gave a lot of thought to taking his last name. Everyone mispronounced Schiavo. Actually its direct translation is “slave” in Italian. So I was happy to [take his name], I happen to love Blatt, which rhymes with your last name. It's so great.DL: It's very easy to spell. The only issue is one or two t's, but absolutely.LB: I'm actually fine with people—a lot of people still know me as Lisa Schiavo, and that's fine too—but I like being Lisa Blatt.DL: So as we talked about, you went to UT for college and law school, summa cum laude, did super well. And in some ways your first big break, I would say, was clerking for then-Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the D.C. Circuit. She was a great advocate and a great justice, but some say she wasn't warm and fuzzy with her clerks. But based on your great piece for the Texas Law Review—Reflections of a Lady Lawyer, which I'm going to put in the show notes—it sounds like you had a fairly close relationship with her?LB: Extremely, because I couldn't talk about the law with her! I'm being completely serious. Both my co-clerks were absolutely brilliant people from Harvard, on the Harvard Law Review, but that was just never going to go anywhere with me, to talk with her about the law. And so I'm probably one of her few clerks where it was shoes, jewelry, or clothes. I could not keep up with her, and we talked about fashion.When it was one of her huge anniversaries, it may have been her tenth year on the Court, twenty years on the bench, there were only two people, maybe three people who gave a toast, and I was one of them. And everyone talked about all her this, that, and the other thing, legal giant—and I spent the whole time roasting her about how skinny she was and all her jewelry and how she was an airhead, and she was cracking up. But she liked people who made her laugh, and I think I made her laugh.DL: That makes perfect sense. Look at [her late husband] Marty, look at [her good friend] Justice Scalia, and you. She was somewhat reserved or introverted, but she was drawn to people who could bring her out.LB: She's so hard to talk to about… I just couldn't talk to her about the law, and I was probably her least productive and least intelligent clerk. I remembered at this toast I did for her, I showed everyone the bench memo I did for her, it was a made-up thing, but she took only the caption—a draft opinion, I drafted the opinion, and she cut out the caption and used that for the opinion. It's true, it was a true story, but I did it on a big blowup poster and it was very funny. And I was also her first and last clerk from University of Texas, because she's such a snob, a super school snob….DL: That is true. Yeah….LB: Some of them are very, very specific about their Ivy League schools. But I loved her, and I do think it was a different relationship than she had with other clerks. Very different.DL: That makes perfect sense. You mentioned you both were into or bonded over fashion. Did you have similar or different styles?LB: No, she was so weird! She would just—come on, she wore all those caftans, at least back in when she was on the D.C. Circuit. Actually, now I think I dress like her because I love bright colors, and she definitely is where I got my “you know what, just wear it, own it.” Because she would show up in the strangest outfits and she just like looked very happy and I thought, “Wow, I wanna be her, she's beautiful.” She just loved life and travel and clothes. She definitely had a unique clothing style. I have a bunch of Mary Jane shoes that I have now after she passed away that I call my “RBG shoes.”DL: Oh, interesting…. Mary Janes, and cowboy boots. I would've thought you would go for some pumps, with three- or four-inch heels or something?LB: I'm so tall, I can't do it. No, I can't do heels, really. Cowboy boots are my thing.DL: Okay, fair enough. So turning to what you're most well-known for, arguing before the Supreme Court, I believe you have argued more Supreme Court cases than any woman in history. You noted that in your Texas Law Review piece, but I noticed that on your Williams and Connolly bio, it doesn't say that. Was that intentional? Do you want to be known as a Supreme Court advocate and not a female Supreme Court advocate?LB: Uh, no. How about a “female Jewish funny old-lady Supreme Court advocate”? No, I didn't even know that, David. I guess I could put [it] on my website. I don't know if anyone cares, so, no intentionality, no, no intentionality at all. I am very proud of the fact that I have more arguments than any woman in history, but I expect and hope to see other women pass me up very shortly, and I assume they will.DL: Do you happen to know who would be number two?LB: Well, I'm hoping it'll be Elizabeth Prelogar when she gets out of the SG's office.DL: That's right, that's right. She is racking up a lot of arguments.LB: And she's gloriously fantastic.DL: She's amazing.LB: She's amazing. But there are plenty of women out there. Well, [my partner] Sarah Harris, my right-hand person, she's far more talented than I am. Because I'm a little bit different than other people, I hope that my style doesn't necessarily rub off, but I hope that what rubs off on people is that somebody who didn't go to Yale or Harvard and who lacked a lot of self-confidence and wasn't really groomed for anything can just do well. I was incredibly insecure for so much of my professional life. And so I very much want to be a model for people.DL: And you write about that very eloquently in your Texas Law Review essay, which again, I really commend to people.I'm curious, your Williams & Connolly bio does note that you've argued 43 cases before the Court, and you've won 37. And as I recall, didn't you have a very long win streak before you notched that first loss?LB: Yeah, I was in the twenties, and Ted Olson gave me a case to lose. Yeah!DL: And let me ask—are you the “winningest” Supreme Court advocate with a certain number of arguments below your belt, like 25 or 30 or 40? Your win percentage is something like 90 percent, 88 percent, something like that.LB: I don't know….DL: One thing that's interesting about the Supreme Court, and I think you alluded to this earlier—you said so much of life is arbitrary and capricious and luck, and I would argue that despite your amazing talents as a Supreme Court litigator, so many Supreme Court cases are decided based on political or jurisprudential or other factors independent of the argument style. How important would you say briefing and argument are? I know this is a very vague question….LB: I'll break it down two ways. I disagree on the jurisprudential [point], except for abortion, guns, race, and religion. Everything else, I think, is open to grab, although you could make some points about statutory construction and administrative law—so you're increasingly more correct, but I still think that there are plenty of cases that are completely up for grabs on bankruptcy or even arbitration these days. Just random commercial cases or civil cases, I don't think it's that ideological. I will give you on—I don't think the Court needs to be briefed on how to rule in an abortion case, you're just completely right.Then there's oral argument, and whether that matters, and a lot of us who argue like to say it matters. At a minimum, I would say it matters in that you can lose a case at argument and you can go backwards. It's much harder to win a case at argument, but it's pretty easy to lose a lot of ground and lose a case at argument. And as you can tell now from the current format, the justices are just bursting with stamina in terms of how much they want to argue. It's like the cage has been opened, and I think they're going to go back to all-day argument soon.DL: Do you like the new approach?LB: How can you not?DL: I do, as a listener….LB: Because there's no time limit for them in the lightning round or whatever they call it—round robin, Justice Sotomayor just called it—and you can tell they're all sort of looking at each other like, “How much longer can I get away with?” The worst thing about the old style, where it was rapid fire and Justice Thomas was silent, is you just didn't learn that much about what their concerns were because it was so hard to get your point out, it was so hard to hear what every justice thinks. Now Justice Thomas is free and is so involved in argument, and all of them are, so you're just getting all of them now. The only problem with that is you're having nine conversations, so it's just turning into very long arguments. But the parties, who aren't lawyers, it's helpful for them to see the Court in action, so I like that, and for the public to see how hard they're working through the issues.DL: Absolutely—and I know this is a pending case, so we won't delve into the merits—but I would commend people to the argument in the Warhol case [Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. v. Goldsmith], which you and Roman Martinez and Yaira Dubin recently argued. It's a great case. It's super-interesting. The argument went on for quite some time, but you really do see the justices grappling with the issues in a very earnest and non-ideological way. It's a great argument.LB: One of the things I don't like talking about in argument is the law, so to me, those cases are the most fun, because you can talk about how the case matters in the real world, what it means to people, the public, the parties, and you're not so much talking about what some word in the U.S. Code means.DL: Exactly. That case covered everything from Darth Vader to Mondrian to The Jeffersons, and so it was a really fun case for folks to listen to.Turning to advocacy and your style of arguing before the Court, which we alluded to, Sarah Isgur of the Advisory Opinions podcast said that nobody should try to imitate Lisa Blatt, even though Sarah thinks you're an amazing advocate, nobody should try to imitate Lisa. And I agree that there's a sort of “don't try this at home, kids” quality to your argument. Would you say you have a distinct style of argument, and if so, how is it?LB: Well, it upsets me that so many people say don't try to emulate her because… it just upsets me to hear that. I'd like….DL: I would be flattered! I'd be like, I'm inimitable, I'm sui generis, you can't imitate me!LB: One of the things that you have to do when you're a Supreme Court advocate or any advocate is make sure everything you say you can back up. If somebody wants to say, “wait a minute, did you just say what you said,” you're going to go, “I absolutely said what I said, and I'll repeat it again,” and that has always been my philosophy.It's true I think some people think I maybe go right up to the edge, but I'm okay with that. Sometimes I say things and I'm like, oh my God, why did I say that? In the Romag case with Neal Katyal, that was definitely one of my more notable ones, where I said, “I think you might have to cut me off.” The Chief just looked at me like, “Are you crazy?”So I say things like that and I'm like, what? Or “I didn't go to a fancy law school,” and I'm like, well, why did I say that? So things like that, I'll regret saying, and you shouldn't say things like “I didn't go to a fancy law school,” so I would never recommend people repeat that. But I would think that lots of people make statements and arguments that they're like, I should have said it differently, so I don't know why I should be any different.What I guess is upsetting to me is my style, if it's unique, it's that I have this very strong view that truth is the best form of advocacy and for someone to have a different view—it's disturbing to me. Why would you not be incredibly honest and direct with the Court? That's all I have to say, and I think everyone would agree. I don't know whether it was Irv Gornstein or Michael Dreeben [who said it], but Paul Clement and I often talk about this, that oral argument is truth serum, so whatever someone tells you to do, what you think is really going to come out. I've tried to change my style, I would like to be different, but it's very hard for me to not be the way I am.DL: Well, let me give you some examples. I totally agree with you on the point about fidelity to the law and the facts, and I think that if someone were to compare you to Paul Clement, your former colleague in the SG's office, who would also be identified as one of the best Supreme Court litigators of all time….LB: Paul is the best. Let's just be clear.DL: Okay, well, fair enough….LB: Paul is magical in a completely different way. His magic is the way he engages with cases and doctrine, and I've never seen anything like itDL: What would you say is your special sauce or superpower?LB: I don't think I have one! I think, I'm not trying to be funny, but I think that they sometimes are laughing, like a fair amount of times are laughing. And so I don't know why that is, that they think it's funny, the things I say.DL: I think this is another aspect of your argument that I think people say don't try to imitate. Usually when people say, well, what are the rules of appellate or Supreme Court advocacy, they say, well, listen to the judges or justices, don't talk over them, really try to be responsive, [and] people also say generally don't try humor. But you do try humor, and it almost always works.LB: No, I don't try it, I don't try it! That's, no, you never should try humor! Absolutely. Never. Try. Humor. It would be a disaster. And can you imagine making a bad joke? That is the worst thing to do. Don't try humor. I think sometimes I say things…. I remember the first time I said something that got a hysterical laugh, it was an argument in the gas tank case [United States v. Flores-Montano], which is mentioned in the Guide for Counsel. Definitely considered, I know at least by Justice Ginsburg, it was one of her favorite arguments, and it was a glorious argument, but in the course of the argument, Justice Scalia said, I said something and he goes, “Is that public?” And I said, “I just made it public.” And they all just broke out laughing. And I'm like, I'm not trying to be funny, but sometimes that bluntness and directness, it's funny, but I'm not trying to be funny. Does that make sense?DL: Well, so when you made the funny quip in the Warhol argument about the airbrushed photos of Lisa Blatt, you were not trying to be funny? Because it was funny.LB: Nor was I trying to be funny when I said the court was “yakking.”DL: Yes. That was also great!LB: The minute that came out, I was like, ah, how do I take that back? And they thought it was hysterical, but I wasn't trying to be funny. Why would anybody say that? Intentionally?DL: Okay, okay, fair enough.LB: But, so, I think it's just quirky. I don't, maybe, I don't know what the word is. I don't know.DL: When people say, don't try to imitate you, I don't think they're saying anything about your fidelity to the facts or the law or the record. I think you and Paul are pretty much toe to toe on that. But you have very different styles. He's conversational and you are conversational, but you're much more… lively, no offense to Paul, you're more sort of… in your face, I guess? I don't know how to put it….LB: Oh, I don't know what I think of that. Paul is definitely just more eloquent and elegant and intellectual, and I'm just more, let's talk, let's roll up our sleeves.DL: And I think that would be your superpower. I think you have a way to just cut to the heart of the case, in a way, and to also play out the consequences. I know that we're deciding cases on the law, precedent, not policy, blah blah blah, but I think you're really great at unfolding [consequences]. I love the line you had in the B.L. v. Mahanoy Area School District case about the cursing cheerleader, where you're saying near the end in your rebuttal, like, “judges, justices, don't do this!” in terms of setting forth a bad rule.LB: I said, “please don't do this to courts,” or “please don't do this to schools.” Yes, I said “please.” Okay. The minute I said “please,” it's like, I would highly recommend never saying, in any oral argument, “please.” But it did come out that way.DL: It was great!LB: Maybe it's just refreshing because nobody says “please.” Or I referred to North Korea and Russia. And so, but trust me, I am not trying to be entertaining because I strongly think that that is a disastrous move. You should never try to be that or try to be—you just can only be yourself.DL: Yes.LB: And so what you see at argument, I think with a lot of people is just someone's true self. And maybe it's because I didn't go to a fancy law school.DL: You mentioned in your Texas Law Review piece that it took you a while to learn to be yourself, that you tried on a couple of styles before settling on your current one?LB: Absolutely. Yes. That's why I feel the modeling and supporting younger people are extremely important. But how are you supposed to know this in your thirties? I didn't have the confidence and I hated everything about myself, so, yeah, I thought I would look at other, I guess, women and men and want to be like them. Maureen Mahoney, one of the best all-time advocates, everything about her is to die for. I couldn't be her if my life depended on it. And it was very hard for me to just accept the fact that I was never going to be that kind of lawyer or just always be a little different and not ever feel comfortable like in a suit, and just really…. I'm sure a lot of people feel this way, where they don't feel like they belong. This is not some great revelation. And so the sooner you can accept your weaknesses and lean into your strengths, the better off you are. So the more I can try to tell people that wherever that leads you, the better. It just took me a while, probably late thirties, early forties.DL: What were some of the styles you tried on before settling into your current one?LB: I grew up in the eighties, seventies and eighties. It was the suits, the, like, really uncomfortable suits, pantyhose, all that stuff, like uncomfortable shoes, not bright colors, or not speaking up, or worrying about how it comes out. I think the biggest thing that a lot of people won't do is admit they don't understand something. And I do that all the time at the meeting, I'm like, I have no idea what you're talking about, I literally have no clue what you just said. And a lot of people would never do that. And I think I sat through so many meetings where I would just go, I have no idea what those people are talking about. And now I'll say it and maybe people think I'm dumb, but I don't care. I'd rather—I'm positive that there's probably someone in the room that didn't follow it either.DL: Yes, exactly. I think that's so true.LB: But you know what? Shame and humiliation drive so many people and the way they conduct themselves, and the sooner you can sort of laugh at yourself, the better off the world would be.DL: That's very true, very true. I'm curious, over your 40-plus arguments, is there a win that you're most proud of? You have won a lot of really interesting cases, but is there one, maybe one that we haven't heard of or have not heard as much about?LB: Yes, and it'll be probably, you know, a lot of people will get mad at this, and please don't hate me on social media, but the [Adoptive Couple v.] Baby Girl case.DL: Ah yes….LB: With the Adoptive Couple [case] that I did with Paul, it just took, you know, like two years into my life and it was just a long, long struggle. And so I am proud that we won that case. It was just involved, a child, a family, and so it was just, to me, a meaningful case. It was also, you know, definitely one of my more memorable oral arguments.DL: I remember that case. I re-listened to that one recently, and this was a case that was interpreting the Indian Child Welfare Act, or ICWA, which is now back before the Court. And you just had a really powerful line in there where you said something like, “Look, we're talking about children, we're not talking about property or something.” You had a really resonant line in that argument.LB: Yeah, so I think in that case, I think it's fair to say that I know this from inside sources that, you know, you could see that case in two ways: it was one about the law and one about the facts. Then you can take it from there, and I chose to argue the case about the facts. I think the ICWA case now before the Court is very much about the law.DL: Interesting.LB: It's just so—some cases are more about the facts than the law.DL: I think you won that case on the facts as well. There were a lot of facts, I think, that were not great for the other side.LB: It was a 5-4 case. It was just tough, and the argument was very tough. It was also just very meaningful for me because I did it with Paul who was, you know, such an inspiration, and I basically give Paul credit for my entire career. So it was just a huge deal to me to have him up there arguing with me.I also blame Paul because I was really restrained in the whole beginning of the argument and it looked like we were losing. And Paul is like, you know, you gotta keep, keep it under control. And right before I went up for rebuttal, I said, “Can I just let loose?” And he said, “Yeah, just do it.” So I don't know if he remembers it that way, but I always say, Paul told me just to let loose, so that's what I did.DL: I would say another one of your superpowers is you really bring it in the rebuttal. Rebuttal is sometimes kind of an afterthought, but your rebuttal in that case, your rebuttal in the BL v. Mahanoy Area School District Case….LB: No, Oklahoma [Carpenter v. Murphy] was the worst.DL: What do you mean by the worst?LB: Well, because I basically said, this will stimulate you, and then repeated about rapists and molesters and murderers. It was, it was epic. And then everybody blamed me for going hysterical, and then everything I predicted happened in Oklahoma [after McGirt v. Oklahoma, which addressed the same issue after the Court deadlocked in Carpenter]. But yeah, no, the Oklahoma rebuttal was definitely one that was probably a little over the top.DL: Well look, sometimes you go a little over the top, but I think you also just bring a—I know you don't like this word as applied to argument—but I do think people would say you're a passionate advocate, or you're….LB: Ugh!!!DL: I know, I know, I've read your pieces saying don't use the P word, save it for your, save it for your hobbies, or…LB: Save it for sex.DL: Ha!LB: I'm not a big fan of “passion.” Do you really want a passionate surgeon? No.DL: Well, I guess maybe….LB: I just want someone who's good. Do you want a passionate architect? No. Do you want a passionate airline pilot? No. Just get me somebody who can get the job done and not mess up my face, or my house, or my plumbing. I mean, just get the job done. I do not want a passionate professional, period.DL: Okay, so well…..LB: I would say I'm extremely high-energy.DL: Yes, yes. And I think you just have a sort of sincerity, I think, [so] that nobody feels they're ever getting a snow job from you. It's like very, very honest, very unfiltered. And I think that that candor, that uber-compliance with the duty of candor to the court, I think is very appreciated by the judges.LB: Again, think of a surgeon. Seriously. When you're out and under their knife, you need them doing a good job with whatever they're repairing. Your life is in their hands and you need to take care of them. And that is in addition to putting myself in the role of a mother, I also think of a surgeon. I mean, you do everything you can for your kids. And if you're a surgeon, you know you got a job to do and you just, you gotta get it done. And so, I don't like that word “passion.” It sounds like it interferes with judgment. That's why I don't like that word. And maybe I am passionate, but I don't like to be called that.DL: So what are you passionate about then? What do you like to do outside of work? I see you, the listeners can't, but we're on Zoom, I see you're wearing a Peloton sweatshirt. Are you passionate about exercise? I know you mentioned you're not passionate about cooking or baking because you tried that on and that didn't work. So what do you like to do when you're not arguing before the Court?LB: I love to play with my dog, I love to exercise, I love music, and I love children.DL: Okay. Those are all worthy interests.So this is the lightning round, [since] I see our time is almost elapsed. Let me ask you my final four questions, which are standardized for all guests.The first is, what do you like the least about the law? And that can either be the practice of law or it can be law as that system that governs all of us.LB: The stereotypical male ego.DL: Fair enough. That is a good point and a very concise one. What would you be if you were not a lawyer?LB: Debate coach.DL: Oh, there are a lot of similarities there.LB: I would coach. I would be involved with children in some way, teacher, coaching, whatever I could do with kids.DL: Wonderful, wonderful.LB: I think everything that you think is different about me as an advocate is why I really come alive with children, because they're so not used to adults that are normal. They're so used to adults kind of doing weird stuff with kids and they're like, they just flip out when an adult is like, just tells it to them straight. They just, there's some way, just so much fun. I love kids.DL: Well, it's funny, I think in your Texas piece you had a line about how, well, the kids know that you're different from the other parents because….LB: I swear with them. I can't tell you how much I love kids. I mean, I love dogs too, but I love children.DL: Oh, that's great. Well, I'm sure that if you ever retire from Supreme Court advocacy, I'm sure a school or debate camp would love to have you.Question number three, how much sleep do you get each night?LB: I sleep all the time, in the middle of the day, in the morning, I just sleep. I love to sleep, so I don't know, seven, eight hours. I would sleep for 12 if I could. I really like to sleep.DL: I am so glad to hear that.LB: Naps are the best.DL: I agree with you on that. I have a great ability to nap. Unfortunately, not everyone does, and some people have trouble sleeping, but it sounds like you're not one of them.LB: I've had trouble since the pandemic. I've had trouble sleeping, but I still, then I'll just sleep in the daytime. But I do like to sleep, so I definitely get enough sleep.DL: Oh, good, good. And I guess my final question: any words of wisdom, especially for listeners who look at your life and career and say, I want to be Lisa Blatt?LB: Maybe it's two things that are similar. The hardest lessons are how to deal with failure, and you just can't let failure define you. It is inevitable. Setbacks are so inevitable, and so is embarrassment, shame, and humiliation. And so the sooner you can adapt to that, the better. Jeff Wall once gave me the best advice of my entire life: with every door that closes, the window opens. And the other thing that Jeff Wall told me that was sort of foundational was when you look back upon your life, will you be thinking about how much money you have or how many arguments you have? And the answer is no. You're not gonna be thinking, if I'd only had one more argument or gotten one more award, you'll be thinking about the relationships you've made along the way, that those are the most important. Now, I remember telling this to Judge [Pamela] Harris, who's an amazing Fourth Circuit judge, and she said, “No, that's not what I'll be thinking about, I'll be thinking about what good I did for the world.” And I was like, “Ah, I can't win for losing!” So if you don't think about your relationships, at least think about what good you did for the world.And then the other piece of advice, which is along [the lines of] don't let failure define you, is just don't let other people's view of you define you just because someone doesn't respect you. Okay. You need to define who you are for yourself, and it is so easy to see yourself through other people's eyes, and it's just something you need to fight if you're insecure, like I was.DL: Again, very, very true, and I think you have managed to succeed and define yourself in a really unique way. And again, I have such admiration for you, Lisa, and I'm so grateful to have you on the show.LB: Yeah. And David, let me just plug you. You're a god and my family loves you. My husband loves you. We always read you. You're just amazing. My husband follows everything you say about Yale.DL: Well, there's a lot to say, and I think I'm gonna be hopping on a train soon to head up there for an event. But, again, thank you so much….LB: We are avid, avid followers of you.DL: Thank you again, Lisa. This was so much fun and best of luck in the arguments you have stacked up for the rest of this Term.LB: Thank you. And thank you for inviting me!DL: Thanks again to Lisa for joining me. I'm always inspired by people like Lisa who can reach the pinnacle of the legal profession while remaining true to themselves. She's a unique advocate and personality, and I mean that in the very best sense.As always, thanks to Tommy Harron, my sound engineer here at Original Jurisdiction, and thanks to you, my listeners and readers, for tuning in. If you'd like to connect with me, you can email me at davidlat@substack.com, and you can find me on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn, at davidlat, and on Instagram at davidbenjaminlat.If you enjoyed today's episode, please rate, review, and subscribe to Original Jurisdiction. Since this podcast is relatively new, please help spread the word by telling your friends about it. Please subscribe to the Original Jurisdiction newsletter if you don't already, over at davidlat.substack.com. This podcast is free, as is most of the newsletter content, but it is made possible by your paid subscriptions to the newsletter.The next episode of the Original Jurisdiction podcast should appear two weeks from now, on or about Wednesday, December 28. Until then, may your thinking be original and your jurisdiction free of defects.Thanks for reading Original Jurisdiction, and thanks to my paid subscribers for making this publication possible. Subscribers get (1) access to Judicial Notice, my time-saving weekly roundup of the most notable news in the legal world; (2) additional stories reserved for paid subscribers; and (3) the ability to comment on posts. You can email me at davidlat@substack.com with questions or comments, and you can share this post or subscribe using the buttons below. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit davidlat.substack.com/subscribe
As Nottingham's network of 800 man-made caves inspire an exhibition called ‘Hollow Earth' at the city's contemporary art gallery, Shahidha Bari and guests explore the underground world. Archaeologist Chris King discusses discoveries under Nottingham's streets, literary historian Charlotte May suggests stories to read, curator Sam Thorne picks out images, and award-winning cave explorer Andy Eavis, tells us about his career discovering more territory on earth than anyone else alive - all of it underground. Producer: Ruth Thomson Hollow Earth: Art, Caves & The Subterranean Imaginary runs at Nottingham Contemporary until January 22nd 2023. Organised in collaboration with Hayward Gallery Touring, the exhibition features works by René Magritte, Santu Mofokeng, Kaari Upson, Jeff Wall and Aubrey Williams, as well as new commissions from Sofia Borges, Emma McCormick-Goodhart, Goshka Macuga, Lydia Ourahmane and Liv Preston. In 2023, the exhibition will tour to The Glucksman in Cork and to RAMM in Exeter. The Being Human Festival which showcases academic research has several events in Nottingham exploring the city's caves and underground history throughout November 2022. You can find another Free Thinking episode exploring Breakthroughs in electricity research showcased at this year's Festival https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0dhyp89 The Green Thinking collection on the Free Thinking programme website features a host of discussions about the environment and our landscapes https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p07zg0r2 You can find a discussion about holes in the ground featuring Prof Paul Younger from Glasgow University, Geoscientist magazine editor Ted Nield and writer Rosalind Williams in the Free Thinking archives https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b06vs6g0 And poet Sean Borodale, archaeologists Francis Pryor, Paul Pettitt and Ruth Whitehouse join Sharon Robinson Calver in an episode called What Lies Beneath; Neanderthal Cave Art to Fatbergs
In this ninth episode, Jack talks with Jeff Wall. Jeff is a partner with Sullivan Cromwell, which has offices in Washington, D.C., and New York, and is head of the Supreme Court and Appellate practice. Before rejoining his current firm, Jeff served in the office of the Solicitor General of the United States as the deputy principal deputy for two years. For two years, he actually served as the acting Solicitor General. Jeff has argued 30 cases before the Supreme Court as part of the Solicitor General's Office, as well as in private practice. After graduating from law school, Jeff clerked for Associate Justice Clarence Thomas of the Supreme Court. Listen to this episode as Jack discusses with Jeff about his journey of choosing to go to law school to arguing cases before the Supreme Court.Learn more about Jeff along with our other guests on the third season of our podcast on my website at jackwwilliams.com/podcast.
Begin 17de eeuw. Een troep reizigers op weg naar Venetië. Hun geklets en geruzie inspireert componist Adriano Banchieri tot een liedcyclus. Dat inspireert Annelies Van Parys en Gaea Schoeters tot een opera, Notwehr, te zien in … Venetië. Jeff Wall schreef fotografiegeschiedenis. Chantal Pattyn sprak hem tijdens het opbouwen van zijn tentoonstelling in Brussel. Met de Hasselblad-camera van haar grootvader legt Alexia Leysen boeiende mensen vast en bevraagt hen naar de zin van hun leven.
They're back! And not just Bradshaw, Luca, and Nolan... Former co-host of the show Jeff Wall re-joins the podcast just in time for the crew to reveal their 2022 NFL season predictions. MVP, breakout players, surprises, disappointments, and of course, our SB 57 matchup. All you'll need to get prepped ahead of the first Sunday of the year!
“Marine Hugonnier“Le cinéma à l'estomacau Jeu de Paume, Parisdu 8 juin au 18 septembre 2022Interview de Marine Hugonnier,par Anne-Frédérique Fer, à Paris, le 7 juin 2022, durée 25'58.© FranceFineArt.Communiqué de presse Commissaire : Marta PonsaÀ l'été 2022, le Jeu de Paume ouvre ses portes à Marine Hugonnier pour sa première grande exposition en France. L'exposition réunira une sélection d'oeuvres représentatives de son approche artistique depuis ses débuts en 1998.Depuis vingt ans, le travail de Marine Hugonnier opère une lecture critique de la complicité que les conventions de la représentation entretiennent avec les idéologies politiques. Concevant sa pratique comme une recherche sur les politiques du regard, elle tente de mettre au jour les mécanismes de pouvoir qui les sous-tendent en cette époque de spectacularisation généralisée qui est la nôtre. L'artiste franco-britannique s'attache ainsi à rendre compte de ce qui façonne les images pour mettre en question l'empreinte qu'exercent le colonialisme, le capitalisme et le patriarcat sur tout appareil de captation et de restitution dans nos sociétés occidentales.Habitée par le sentiment d'être toujours une étrangère en raison des différents pays dans lesquelles elle a vécu, elle est animée par la volonté de déconstruire le cadre culturel qui modèle notre regard pour en imaginer un autre qui soit émancipateur et non aliéné.Cinéaste avant tout, Hugonnier a souvent voyagé avec sa caméra Aaton, filmant en marchant et vice versa, empruntant la posture d'une reporter ou d'une ethnographe afin de brouiller délibérément le statut de l'artiste.Après des études de philosophie et d'anthropologie, Hugonnier participe à la numérisation de la photothèque du musée de l'Homme, ce qui lui donne accès aux clichés des expéditions ethnographiques de Jean-Baptiste Charcot, Désiré Charnay, Paul-Émile Miot et Claude Lévi-Strauss. L'étude de cette documentation sera déterminante quant à la définition des enjeux majeurs de son travail : une attention portée à la matérialité des images et un intérêt particulier à interroger la distance qui sépare l'observateur de l'observé afin d'éviter l'écueil d'une instrumentalisation du monde par les images.Cette démarche discursive s'est traduite par une thèse intitulée Mapping the Politics of Vision: Searching for a Transformative Gaze [Cartographier les politiques du regard. À la recherche d'un regard transformatif], que l'artiste mène au Centre de recherche du cinéma expérimental et documentaire de l'université de Westminster à Londres et qu'elle soutient en mars 2021.Sa deuxième expérience fondatrice a lieu en 1990 lorsqu'elle effectue un stage au Centre Pompidou à l'occasion de l'exposition « Passages de l'image ». Hugonnier se trouve alors en contact avec les oeuvres, entre autres, de Jeff Wall, Gary Hill et Michael Snow, mais c'est Chris Marker et son Zapping Zone (Proposals for an Imaginary Television) qui la marquera le plus durablement. Cette installation multimédia, constituée d'une collection d'images, de logiciels informatiques et de fragments de vidéos d'origines diverses, critique l'attitude passive des téléspectateurs devant une représentation chaotique du monde globalisé et médiatisé.Le cinéma à l'estomac est sa première grande exposition en France. Elle emprunte à Julien Gracq une partie du titre de son pamphlet La Littérature à l'estomac, publié en 1950. [...] Marta Ponsa Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
Jesus is the light of ALL the world, including Sierra Leone! Hear stories from Jeff Wall as he shares about his recent trip to Sierra Leone.
In this episode Sammie talks to Jeff Wall, founder of Golden Age Karate. Jeff goes to different senior citizen facilities and teaches them karate and shows kindness. Sammie and him recently worked on a small project together and because what he does is so inspiring it was a no brainer to ask him to be a guest on Sammie Smiles. Find out what motivates Jeff and how he overcame obstacles to continuing his mission while so many places were shut down during the pandemic. This is a kickin' good episode that will inspire you to want to get out and help the elderly or anyone for that matter. Don't forget to stay tuned until the end for the rapid-fire round and what makes Jeff smile.
Jeff give his view of the would through songs and comedic storytelling --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sandy-carlton/message
Just over 30-years ago, two local guys started building decks and fences here in Anne Arundel County. At the time, they never dreamt that Fence & Deck Connection would become the largest and most-respected, locally-owned business in the area! But here we are. Today, we talk with Jeff Wall who is a managing partner and the VP of Sales and Marketing. who joined his friends nearly a decade ago and has shepherded in some stellar growth. Fence & Deck Connection now manufactures a lot of their own product giving them control of the process. They maintain separate commercial and residential divisions. They focus tightly on Anne Arundel County. And unbelievably, their crews complete 6 fencing projects and 6 decking projects every day! Plus we find out what sets them apart from other contractors and why they consider themselves specialists in waterfront properties! If you are considering a deck or fence for your home or business, this should be your first call. Support local. Buy local. Because, as you will see, they support local as well! Have a listen! LINKS: Fence & Deck Connection (Website) Fence & Deck Connection (Facebook) Fence & Deck Connection (Twitter) Fence & Deck Connection (Instagram) Fence & Deck Connection (YouTube) Fence & Deck Connection (Pinterest) Fence & Deck Connection (Linked In)
Our hosts, Sheila and Tom, with Peter Blake, visit Glenstone, discuss issues in contemporary art brought up by sculptures by Charles Ray, chalk drawings by Tacita Dean, large-scale photographs by Jeff Wall, and drawings by Vija Celmins.
Chaque vision est singulière, porteuse de sens et de changement. Le but de ce format est de rassembler de nombreux artistes et que chacun nous délivre sa vision et son expérience de la photographie. Ce podcast a été auto-produit. Pour nous soutenir : https://visionspodcast.fr/nous-soutenir/ La première fois que je rencontre Laura Henno, c'est à l'occasion de la visite de presse de sa nouvelle exposition, fin 2021, intitulée Radical Devotion, à la galerie Nathalie Obadia. J'arrive l'un des premiers. Je suis directement frappé par ces tirages de diverses formes, certains sont très grands, d'autres sont assemblés comme des polyptiques. Et ces photographies, la plupart du temps mises en scène, dégagent une certaine tension, notamment par le regard souvent frontal des sujets. Le temps semble s'être arrêté. L'artiste expose ici sa série encore en cours sur Slab City, « la dernière ville libre des États-Unis ». Je m'interroge sur le titre. Une dévotion, c'est déjà un fort attachement et un geste radical. Pourquoi y ajouter ce qualificatif ? Et une dévotion à quoi ? À qui ? Une dévotion, c'est un moment d'amour inconditionnel, presque une transe. On se livre, on donne de sa personne, de son intimité. On aime aussi de manière sincère, on vénère parfois un dieu ou une figure, qu'elle soit religieuse ou non. Entre images fixes et en mouvement, Laura Henno s'attarde à montrer des personnes en lisière, à la marge, ou que l'on place à la marge. Des vies invisibles en somme. Des migrants comoriens, des adolescents fragiles, en passant par des mineurs isolés ou bien, plus récemment, par une communauté souvent « blessée », en autarcie. Ces sujets photographiés par l'artiste vouent une dévotion certes, mais à une certaine liberté. Au fait de vivre pleinement. Ou de vivre tout simplement. À la suite d'études de photographie à l'ENSAV de La Cambre, Laura Henno s'initie au cinéma au Fresnoy. Lauréate du Prix Découverte des Rencontres Internationales de la Photographie d'Arles en 2007, l'artiste multiplie depuis les expositions en France et à l'étranger, à l'instar de son exposition à l'Institut pour la Photographie de Lille 2019, au Ryerson Image Center de Toronto, Redemption aux Rencontres de la photographie d'Arles en 2018, M'Tsamboro au BBB Centre d'Art à Toulouse en 2017, Summer Crossing au Centre Photographique Ile-de-France ou de son exposition au Finnish Museum of Photography à Helsinki en 2011. Lauréate du Prix SAM pour l'art contemporain 2019, Laura Henno bénéficiera également d'une exposition au Palais de Tokyo du 15 avril au 4 septembre 2022. Dans ce grand entretien, l'artiste évoque tout d'abord son parcours, ses références. Beaucoup sont américaines. On comprend que les maîtres de la peinture et du cinéma, souvent documentaire, ne sont jamais loin de son travail initial. Il est évoqué son rapport singulier à la mise en scène et à la fiction. On parle également de son approche, qui a évolué au fil des ans. Une photographie, qui, comme elle le souligne dans le podcast, « s'est rapprochée au fil du temps de l'humain, de situations de vie existentielles ». Malgré une esthétique documentaire bien présente dans son travail, Laura Henno cherche toujours le pas de côté. En observant avec attention ses photographies, nous devinons que l'artiste cherche avant tout à dévoiler la part d'humanité, souvent imperceptible au premier abord, de ses sujets. Puis, nous entrons doucement dans son univers en commençant par deux séries intimement liées : Summer Crossing et La Cinquième Ile. Suite à sa recherche aux Comores, qui explore la géopolitique complexe de l'archipel au travers de portraits de vie d'adolescents clandestins, de passeurs, Laura Henno tourne son regard vers Slab City, campement hors du temps, perdu dans le désert californien. Montrée pour la première fois à Paris, la série Outremonde, initiée en 2017 est remarquée par la critique aux Rencontres d'Arles en 2018, ainsi qu'à l'Institut de la Photographie en 2019 et au Bleu du Ciel en 2020, sous le commissariat de Michel Poivert. Le résultat final ? Un podcast aux couleurs musicales : nous naviguons entre différents projets, descriptions de photographies, pistes de réflexion… L'artiste se plonge à corps perdu dans ses séries, aux côtés de ses sujets… De manière littérale parfois, comme à Slab City, où elle vit en immersion plusieurs semaines par an, demeurant dans sa caravane. Finalement, ne serait-ce pas Laura Henno qui voue une dévotion « radicale » aux arts visuels qu'elle pratique ? Nous ressentons en tout cas une passion communicative qui fait plaisir à entendre. Il ne reste plus qu'à vous souhaiter une agréable écoute. Pour aller plus loin Walker Evans, Robert Frank, Dorothea Lange, Diane Arbus, Stephen Shore, William Eggleston, Jeff Wall, Don DeLillo, Jim Harrison, Russel Banks, Toni Morrison, James Baldwin, Philip Roth, Édouard Glissant, Patrick Chamoiseau, John Akomfrah, Francis Alÿs, Steve McQueen, Mohamed Bourouissa, Wang Bing, Roberto Minervini, Peter Watkins, Gianfranco Rosi, FSA Liens https://www.instagram.com/hennolaura/ https://laurahenno.com/ https://www.instagram.com/podcastvisions/ https://www.visionspodcast.fr/
All Your Week 13 bets here! Who will win Bills vs Patriots in an AFC East clash? Kyler Murray makes his return vs the Bears.Jeff Wall's last day on the podcast.____________________________
Photographer Jeff Wall has helped change the perception of his art form. Jeffrey Brown goes to Glenstone Museum outside of Washington to look at the unusual process behind Wall's large-scale works. This segment is part of our arts and culture series, CANVAS. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
Photographer Jeff Wall has helped change the perception of his art form. Jeffrey Brown goes to Glenstone Museum outside of Washington to look at the unusual process behind Wall's large-scale works. This segment is part of our arts and culture series, CANVAS. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
This week on Cover 4 Nolan Kangas, Luca Moia and Jeff Wall recap week 6, and see who's on the Head Coach Hot seat
Today for the second episode of XTer Asia season, Dispatch is going to talk to Barcelona-based art patron Han Nefkens. Despite having a lot of mutual friends through our cross-continent network, this is the first time our host Arlette meets Han. The conversation will anchor to Han Nefkens' close engagement with Asia at large. We start from the new initiative of Han Nefken's foundation with major institutions across Asia, to Han's very first activities in the continent at the AIDS-awareness event in Bangkok, and the idea of collecting without artwork possession. Han Nefkens is a writer, art collector, and patron of the arts. His collection of contemporary art consists of photographs, videos, installations, and paintings by Jeff Wall, Roni Horn, Bill Viola, Shirin Neshat, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, and others...
Today for the second episode of XTer Asia season, Dispatch is going to talk to Barcelona-based art patron Han Nefkens. Despite having a lot of mutual friends through our cross-continent network, this is the first time our host Arlette meets Han. The conversation will anchor to Han Nefkens' close engagement with Asia at large. We start from the new initiative of Han Nefken's foundation with major institutions across Asia, to Han's very first activities in the continent at the AIDS-awareness event in Bangkok, and the idea of collecting without artwork possession. Han Nefkens is a writer, art collector, and patron of the arts. His collection of contemporary art consists of photographs, videos, installations, and paintings by Jeff Wall, Roni Horn, Bill Viola, Shirin Neshat, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, and others...
Justin Fields highly anticipated debut couldn't have gone any worse, Matt Nagy was horrible, the Chicago Bears were bad. On this episode of Cover 4, Nolan Kangas, Luca Moia and Jeff Wall recap week 3 in the NFL. DON'T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE ____________________________
Cover 4 Podcast Week 2 reactions, as well as NFL Week 3 predictions and the game of the week in the NFL. Nolan Knagas, Jeff Wall and Luca Moia talk all the football highlights of the week. Will Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers beat the LA Rams? DON'T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE ____________________________ FOR THE FULL VIDEO VERSION HIT THE LINK BELOW (https://youtu.be/JVtKgj0WFWw) ____________________________ Subscribe to the Cover 4 Podcast podcast!
In this episode I'm talking to Art and English teacher, Ethan Lester. Ethan is a multidisciplinary artist from Toronto, Canada. He holds a BFA from the University of Western Ontario and an MFA from the University of Victoria, where he taught photography and drawing. He currently teaches Secondary Visual Art and English in Hong Kong. We discuss: The best book he's ever read or been taught Ethan's background in photography and the extent it plays a part in his teaching career to date. Who he considers are the pillar stones of photography that everyone either learns about or knows of in the industry? Whether a set of integral terminology that newcomers need to know exists in order to analyse the photographer's message How Ethan feels photography is different from any other art from in terms of communicating its message And finally, for English / language teachers looking to teach photography for the first time, some key resources to look at. Thanks again to Ethan for taking the time to enlighten me on a portion of the new IB Language and Literature course that I feel relatively insecure about. Be sure to check out all of his suggestions in the show links below as they make for excellent consideration if you fancy teaching photography in the future. If you'd like to be kept abreast of when educational chat such as this becomes available in the future, then please subscribe using whichever podcast platform you use. Alternatively you can follow me on Twitter @chrisjordanhk. Links: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Stieglitz (Alfred Stieglitz) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man_Ray (Man Ray ) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ansel_Adams (Ansel Adams) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cindy_Sherman (Cindy Sherman) https://www.andreasgursky.com/en/works/2017/pyongyang-vi-vii/pyongyang (Andreas Gursky) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vikky_Alexander (Vikky Alexander) https://gagosian.com/artists/jeff-wall/ (Jeff Wall) https://www.amazon.com/Photograph-Contemporary-Art-World/dp/0500204187 (The Photograph as Contemporary Art by Charlotte Cotton) https://www.amazon.com/How-Write-About-Contemporary-Art/dp/0500291578/ref=sr_1_1?crid=29L3K7W71QVE3&dchild=1&keywords=gilda+williams+how+to+write+about+contemporary+art&qid=1631799757&sr=8-1 (How to Write About Contemporary Art by Gilda Williams )
On the Cover 4 Podcast the guys recap Week 1 in the NFL. And after the boys are done giving you the week 1 highlights of the Arizona Cardinals and Kyler Murray, Nolan Kangas, Luca Moia, Bradshaw Furlong and Jeff Wall preview Thursday Night Football, and give you the best Thursday Night Football Bets. All that and more on the Cover 4 pod. DON'T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE ____________________________ FOR THE FULL VIDEO VERSION HIT THE LINK BELOW (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y2wUfO9VmyI) ____________________________ Subscribe to the Cover 4 Podcast podcast!
This is it! The top 10 NFL Players in 2021. Will Aaron Donald come out on top? Will Patrick Mahomes cement himself as the games best player? or will MVP Aaron Rodgers take the number 1 spot? As the NFL counts down their top 100 players, on the Cover 4 podcast we count down the top 50 NFL players in the 2021 season. Nolan Kangas, Jeff Wall, Bradshaw Furlong and Luca Moia give you the top 10 best NFL players. RATE & REVIEW the Podcast. Thank you for your help! DON'T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE ____________________________ For the Video Version Click Here! (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EbcNarqeNIo) ____________________________ Subscribe to the Cover 4 Podcast podcast!
As the NFL counts down their top 100 players, on the Cover 4 podcast we count down the top 50 NFL players in the 2021 season. Nolan Kangas, Jeff Wall, Bradshaw Furlong and Luca Moia give you players 20-11. DON'T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE RATE & REVIEW the Podcast. Thank you for your help! Don't forget to SUBSCRIBE to the Cover 4 Podcast podcast! ____________________________ For the full video version and YouTube channel Link Below! (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QDKULbIfxLw) ____________________________
As the NFL counts down their top 100 players, on the Cover 4 podcast we count down the top 50 NFL players in the 2021 season. Nolan Kangas, Jeff Wall, Bradshaw Furlong and Luca Moia give you players 30-21. DON'T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE RATE & REVIEW the Podcast. Thank you for your help! Don't forget to SUBSCRIBE to the Cover 4 Podcast podcast! ____________________________ For the full video version and YouTube channel Link Below! (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=98qRuNfsDzM) ____________________________
NFL Player Rankings time! Who are the best NFL Players heading into the 2021 NFL Season? This week on Cover 4 Podcast the guys rank the top 50 NFL players numbers 40-31. Nolan Kangas, Bradshaw Furlong, Luca Moia and Jeff Wall break down their top 50 NFL players list. RATE & REVIEW THE PODCAST DON'T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE ____________________________ Subscribe to the Cover 4 Podcast podcast!
NFL Player Rankings time! Who are the best NFL Players heading into the 2021 NFL Season? This week on Cover 4 Podcast the guys rank the top 50 NFL players numbers 50-41. Nolan Kangas, Bradshaw Furlong, Luca Moia and Jeff Wall break down their top 50 NFL players list. RATE & REVIEW THE PODCAST DON'T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE ____________________________ Subscribe to the Cover 4 Podcast podcast!
On the Cover 4 Podcast the guys look at the league, who's stock is up? And who's stock is down? Is #JalenRamsey going to see some regression? Are the #PittsburghSteelers going to be that bad? Will #JustinFields have a big year? Nolan Kangas, Jeff Wall, Bradshaw Furlong and Luca Moia got it all covered for you. RATE & REVIEW THE PODCAST DON'T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE ____________________________ CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL VIDEO VERSION (https://youtu.be/al89rnGC9Tw) ____________________________ Subscribe to the Cover 4 Podcast podcast!
George Kittle and Travis Kelce made Tight End U. So the guys break down the best College football teams for each position group. LSU, Ohio State, Alabama, Clemson who makes the top NFL Players? All that and more on the cover 4 Podcast with Nolan Kangas, Jeff Wall, Bradshaw Furlong and Luca Moia. RATE & REVIEW THE PODCAST DON'T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE ____________________________ FULL EPISODE BELOW (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j3xebvF7qJg) ____________________________ Subscribe to the Cover 4 Podcast podcast!
Richard Sherman, Justin Houston, Mitchell Schwartz, and Kenny Vaccaro are a few notable NFL Free Agents left available. But where are the best landing spots for the remaining free agents? On this episode of Cover 4 podcast Nolan Kangas, Jeff Wall, Bradshaw Furlong and Luca Moia find these players their new homes! RATE & REVIEW THE PODCAST DON'T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE ____________________________ CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL VIDEO VERSION (https://youtu.be/al89rnGC9Tw) ____________________________ Subscribe to the Cover 4 Podcast podcast!
L'architettura moderna è nata nella Vienna cosmopolita di fine '800 per rispondere al bisogno di ambienti che rispettassero i nuovi standard sanitari richiesti dai medici: spazi ampi, più luce e migliore areazione. Oggi, mentre ci lasciamo lentamente alle spalle una lunga pandemia, il legame tra architettura, salute e stile di vita è tornato a essere un tema cruciale. Costantino e Francesco ci raccontano una storia laterale dell'architettura contemporanea, parlando di anarchitetti batterici come Gordon Matta-Clark e archistar mancati come gli italiani di Archizoom, dell'architettura senza architetti di Yona Friedman e dell'architettura per i poveri promossa da Hassan Fathy e Laurie Baker.In questa puntata si parla di Sigmund Freud, Egon Schiele, Arnold Schönberg, Beatriz Colomina, Josef Hoffman, Adolf Loos, Gordon Matta-Clark, Mark Wigley, Holly Solomon, Roberto Matta, Benjamin Ward Richardson, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Gunter Sachs, John Zorn, Luis Barragán, Jill Magid, Rolf Fehlbaum, Federica Zanco, Harald Szeemann, Laurie Baker, Josef Albers, Anni Albers, Banksy, Kaws, Takashi Murakami, John Hilliard, Hassan Fathy, Superstudio, Archizoom, Poltronova, Ufo, Gianni Pettena, Rem Koolhaas, Mario Dezzi Bardeschi, Stefano Boeri, Gianandrea Barreca, Rachel Whiteread, Bruce Nauman, Sant'Agostino, Yona Friedman, Toni Negri, Renzo Piano, Richard Rogers, Minecraft, Bernard Rudofsky e Jeff Wall.
This week on the Cover 4 Podcast the guys give their bold predictions for the 2021 NFL season. Will Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs surpass expectations? Can Baker Mayfield lead the new look Cleveland Browns to their first AFC championship in over 30 years? All that and more with Nolan Kangas, Jeff Wall, Bradshaw Furlong and Luca Moia on the Cover 4 pod. RATE & REVIEW THE PODCAST DON'T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE ____________________________ Full Video Link Below (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YcN7ing0KI8) ____________________________ Subscribe to the Cover 4 Podcast podcast!
Julio Jones was on Undisputed where Shannon Sharpe called the All-Pro Wide Receiver asking him if he was leaving the Atlanta Falcons. His response "I'm outta there". So who will trade for Julio Jones? The New England Patriots? San Francisco 49ers? All the Julio Jones trade talk you can handle on the Cover 4 Podcast with Nolan Kangas, Bradshaw Furlong, Luca Moia and Jeff Wall. SUBSCRIBE, 5 Stars, Review, and Share! ____________________________ Subscribe to the Cover 4 Podcast podcast!
On this episode of Cover 4... Rookie Minicamp is over. Now it's time to figure out which rookies will have the biggest impact. Will Trey Lance, Justin Fields, Mac Jones, or Trevor Lawrence lead the rookies in passing yards? All that and more with Nolan Kangas, Bradshaw Furlong, Luca Moia and Jeff Wall on the Cover 4 podcast. SUBSCRIBE, 5 Stars, Review, and Share! ____________________________ Full YouTube Version Below (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZABKTvHthUQ) ____________________________ Subscribe to the Cover 4 Podcast podcast!
More NFL draft grades from the Cover 4 Podcast. This time it's the AFC West and NFC West. Luca Moia thinks the Kansas City Chiefs draft makes them even better! Jeff Wall loved the Denver Broncos draft class. Nolan Kangas rips another bad Las Vegas Raiders draft class. Bradshaw Furlong gives out his grades for the LA Chargers drafting the Rashawn Slater for Justin Herbert! Did Kyle Shanahan and the San Francisco 49ers do the right thing when they drafted Trey Lance? SUBSCRIBE, 5 STARS & SHARE the Cover 4 Podcast! ____________________________ To watch the FULL Podcast on YouTube Hit the Link Below! (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k8FfN3nCIZQ ) ____________________________ Subscribe to the Cover 4 Podcast podcast!
More #NFLDraft Grades from the Cover 4 Podcast. This Time it's the AFC North and the NFC North draft classes. Jeff Wall gets to talk about his #ChicagoBears drafting #JustinFields. Nolan gets to talk the good and the bad of the #MinnesotaVikings draft. Did the #ClevelandBrowns become contenders for the AFC Championship? Did the #CincinnatiBengals get what #JoeBurrow needs? Bradshaw Furlong grades the #BaltimoreRavens draft class. And Luca Moia reacts to the Pittsburgh Steelers draft class. SUBSCRIBE, LIKE & COMMENT For MORE! ____________________________ Watch the Full Video version on YouTube! Link Below (https://youtu.be/n9-_Qr0RBIY) ____________________________ Subscribe to the Cover 4 Podcast podcast!
Today on the Cover 4 Podcast the guys grade the the #AFCEast and #NFCEast teams. Did the #NewYork Jets give #ZachWilson a chance? Why did the #DallasCowboys draft #MicahParsons and then more Linebackers? Luca Moia gets to talk the #NewEnglandPatriots drafting #MacJones. Jeff Wall does not love the New York Giants draft class. Nolan Kangas gives his thoughts on the Washington Football Teams draft. Does Bradshaw Furlong think the Buffalo Bills are contenders in the AFC anymore? SUBSCRIBE, LIKE & COMMENT For MORE! ____________________________ To watch the FULL Podcast on YouTube Hit the Link Below! (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gv8OeMvs08k) ____________________________ Subscribe to the Cover 4 Podcast podcast! Spotify! (https://open.spotify.com/show/6NfDClrlJbCUNQ1xGAy0HQ?si=4Mqsks9bQwS9oIMQNcclFw) Apple! (https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/cover-4/id1547543108) ____________________________
Who are the Draft busts in this years NFL Draft? Quarterbacks like Zach Wilson have failed before. Trey Lance played in division 2. Will Jalen Waddle be another over drafter speedy receiver? That's this weeks Cover 4 pod, with Nolan Kangas, Jeff Wall, and Bradshaw Furlong. SUBSCRIBE, LIKE & COMMENT For MORE! ____________________________ Subscribe to the Cover 4 Podcast podcast! Spotify! (https://open.spotify.com/show/6NfDClrlJbCUNQ1xGAy0HQ?si=4Mqsks9bQwS9oIMQNcclFw) Apple! (https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/cover-4/id1547543108) ____________________________
The New York Jets have traded Sam Darnold to the Carolina Panthers. Was this a good move for Darnold? Who won this trade? What Happens to Teddy Bridgewater? NFL Draft gems. Who are the sleepers in the 2021 NFL draft? The Cover 4 guys Nolan Kangas, Bradshaw Furlong, Luca Moia and Jeff Wall have you covered! SUBSCRIBE, LIKE & COMMENT For MORE! ____________________________
The 2021 NFL Draft is almost here! It's NFL Mock Draft season at the Cover 4 Podcast. Everyone loves Lawrence, some love Zach Wilson, others love Justin Fields and Trey Lance, but the San Francisco 49ers may like Mac Jones most! Where will each Quarterback go? NFL Draft season is in full swing! Daniel Jeremiah & Buck Brooks have their Mock Drafts, Mel Kiper and Todd McShay have theirs. We have ours lets see who can predict the pick! Nolan Kangas, Bradshaw Furlong, Jeff Wall, and guest Luca Moia have you're draft simulator needs covered. ____________________________
NFL Free Agency kicked off this week with the New England Patriots spending on Hunter Henry and Jonu Smith. Who were the winners and losers? Plus which NFL Team had the most under the radar signing? Nolan Kangas, Jeff Wall and Bradshaw Furlong break it all down on the cover 4 podcast!
Chaque vision est singulière, porteuse de sens et de changement. Le but de ce format est de rassembler de nombreux artistes et que chacun nous délivre sa vision et son expérience de la photographie. Grande première pour le podcast, nous invitons notre premier duo de photographes : Elsa Parra et Johanna Benaïnous, artistes plasticiennes, photographes et réalisatrices ! Originaires respectivement du Pays basque et de Bretagne, Elsa & Johanna se rencontrent à la School of Visual Arts de New York. En 2015, elles se font connaître avec la série d'autoportraits, A Couple of Them, dans laquelle elles incarnent des personnages fictifs, occupant à la fois le rôle de modèles, de photographes, de stylistes et de scénographes. La mise en scène de soi devient un thème récurrent de leur travail personnel. En 2016, les artistes sont invitées au Salon de Montrouge, sont finalistes du Prix HSBC pour la photographie et de la Bourse Révélation Emerige. Leur œuvre entre dans la collection du Fond d’Acquisition d’Art Contemporain de la Ville de Paris en 2018. Elsa & Johanna remportent le Prix du public au Festival de Hyères 2019 dans la section photo et sont finalistes du Prix Découverte Louis Roederer pour Les Rencontres d'Arles 2020. Pour cet entretien, Elsa & Johanna nous accueillent chaleureusement dans le 5ème arrondissement, juste avant le vernissage de leur dernière exposition à PhotoSaintGermain. Il s'en suit un échange riche où le duo nous livre entre autres leurs influences respectives, leur processus créatif singulier pour chaque série, leurs manières d’interpréter les personnages… Nous parlerons également de la sortie de leur nouveau livre Beyond the Shadows, publié aux éditions H2l2. Bonne écoute ! Nous soutenir https://visionspodcast.fr/nous-soutenir/ Pour aller plus loin Diane Arbus, Bruce Wrighton, David Hockney, Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Rineke Dijkstra, Jeff Wall, François Halard, William Eggleston, Martin Parr, Pedro Almodóvar. Liens https://www.instagram.com/elsa.and.johanna Le nouveau livre d’Elsa & Johanna : https://www.kisskissbankbank.com/fr/projects/elsaetjohanna-photobook https://www.instagram.com/podcastvisions/ https://www.visionspodcast.fr/
One of the NFL's best quarterbacks is officially on the trading block — Deshaun Watson wants out, and there's no shortage of QB-needy teams in the market who would love to add the superstar passer. Nolan Kangas, Bradshaw Furlong, Jeff Wall and David Crosby cook up their favorite trade proposals and discuss under-the-radar destinations. But Watson isn't the only available quarterback! The Lions are exploring potential trades for Matthew Stafford, and the crew finds the perfect fit for a player who would be a great consolation prize.
The Conference Champions have been crowned and the Super Bowl matchup is set. Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers stunned Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers in a shootout victory to take the NFC Championship. In the AFC Championship, Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs destroyed Josh Allen and the Buffalo Bills. Nolan Kangas, David Crosby, Bradshaw Furlong and Jeff Wall share their reactions and biggest takeaways to a wild weekend, and give out their Game Ball to each matchup's star performer.
NFL Championship weekend is here! It's Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers vs. MVP favorite Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers in the NFC Championship. In the AFC Championship. Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs battle Josh Allen and the Buffalo Bills. Nolan Kangas, David Crosby, Bradshaw Furlong and Jeff Wall, preview all the biggest stories, factors and players in the final four and pick their winners. Special guest Stefan Leo from Fan Share Sports joins us for all your NFL betting needs and to preview the Indianapolis Colts offseason.
Jeff Wall (President/CEO, Handyman Connection), spent the first 23 years of his career as an executive leader within First Service Brands working with thousands of entrepreneurs running franchise businesses. In 2010, Jeff purchased Handyman Connection (HandymanConnection.com), a national home improvement franchise company. In addition to having a tremendous amount of experience with entrepreneurs, Jeff was also John and Rich's first boss. As we all know, the impact your first boss has is long-lasting. In this episode, we revisit many of those deep learnings that help mold our business skills.
Peloton stock hits $135!Truist raises Peloton stock target to $144.Peloton receives a record number of cargo deliveries. Will it be enough to end the delays?John Foley was mentioned in a New York Times article about the return of the family dinner.Peloton has created their own GIFs.Changes have been made to category breakdowns.There's an interesting aspect to the new "Skip Intro" feature.Bluetooth cadence sensors are being disabled.Tonal introduces virtual group workouts.Pro Publica has an interesting article about the company Peloton (and many other big businesses) use for customer service phone calls.Peloton removes Q Anon hashtags.Robin Arzon was featured in Shape Magazine.A Covid outbreak is traced back to a spin studio in Canada.Soul Cycle's previous CEO is under the microscope for some suspect spending.Tammy H was featured on the Peloton blog.Peloton is kicking off its new Broadway series with a spotlight on Hamilton.Up The Tempo Flash Challenges are here.Former instructor Steven Little is celebrating a birthday.All this plus our interview with Jeff Wall!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Peloton stock hits $135! Truist raises Peloton stock target to $144. Peloton receives a record number of cargo deliveries. Will it be enough to end the delays? John Foley was mentioned in a New York Times article about the return of the family dinner. Peloton has created their own GIFs. Changes have been made to category breakdowns. There's an interesting aspect to the new "Skip Intro" feature. Bluetooth cadence sensors are being disabled. Tonal introduces virtual group workouts. Pro Publica has an interesting article about the company Peloton (and many other big businesses) use for customer service phone calls. Peloton removes Q Anon hashtags. Robin Arzon was featured in Shape Magazine. A Covid outbreak is traced back to a spin studio in Canada. Soul Cycle's previous CEO is under the microscope for some suspect spending. Tammy H was featured on the Peloton blog. Peloton is kicking off its new Broadway series with a spotlight on Hamilton. Up The Tempo Flash Challenges are here. Former instructor Steven Little is celebrating a birthday. All this plus our interview with Jeff Wall!
Prof. Birthe Piontek. Emiliy Carr Universität in Vancouver (Kanada). Im zweiten Podcast: Fotografie Neu Denken hat Andy Scholz Prof. Birthe Piontek zu Gast, die seit 2019 Professorin für Fotografie an der Emiliy Carr Universität Vancouver ist. In ihrer Arbeit erforscht sie die Beziehung zwischen Erinnerung und Identität. Ihre Arbeiten werden international in Einzel- und Gruppenausstellungen gezeigt, sind unter anderem in der Sammlung des Museums of Contemporary Photography in Chicago zu finden und erscheinen regelmäßig in internationalen Magazinen. Birthe Piontek arbeitet als Professorin für Fotografie an der Emily Carr Universität in Vancouver und studierte gemeinsam mit Andy Scholz in Essen Fotografie. Allein das macht sie für diesen Podcast mehr als interessant. »Birthe Piontek Bilder berühren auf eine indirekte Weise. Sie wirken wie eine Skulptur, wie ein ungelenker Tanz, wie eine ungewollte Bewegung – wie etwas, das nicht ganz richtig erscheint. Es wird etwas spür- und greifbar, was wir nicht formulieren oder in Worte fassen können. In dem Podcast-Interview, das ich Ende Mai mit ihr führte, spricht sie selber davon, dass sie durch Fotografie ihre Sicht auf die Welt greifbar machen möchte und dass sie die Momente der Sperrigkeit und der Unheimlichkeit interessieren. Damit deutet sie genau das an, was die Stärke ihrer Arbeiten ausmacht. Etwas haptisch (greifbar) werden zu lassen in einem zweidimensionalen Bild.« Andy Scholz, Juni 2020 https://www.birthepiontek.com Birthe Piontek wurde 1976 geboren, studierte an der Folkwang Universität der Künste in Essen, ehemals Universität Gesamthochschule Essen und wurde 2019 als Professorin für Fotografie an die Emily Carr Universität für Kunst und Design in Vancouver berufen. Sie lebt und arbeitet seit 2004 in Vancouver (Kanada). »In ihrer Arbeit erforscht sie die Beziehung zwischen Erinnerung und Identität. Sie beschäftigt sich insbesondere mit der weiblichen Identität und wie diese in unserer Gesellschaft sichtbar ist. Ihr künstlerischer Schwerpunkt liegt auf der Fotografie. Sie nutzt aber auch andere Kunstformen wie Installation, Skulptur und Collage, um grundsätzlich zu untersuchen, inwieweit komplexe Identitäten visualisiert werden können.« (Artist statement. Zitat von ihrer Webseite. Übersetzung: Andy Scholz) Ihre Arbeiten werden international in Einzel- und Gruppenausstellungen gezeigt, sind unter anderem in der Sammlung des Museums of Contemporary Photography in Chicago zu finden und erscheinen regelmäßig in internationalen Magazinen. Ihre Arbeit »The Idea of North« erhielt den »Critical Mass Buch Preis«, die Serie »Abendlied« wurde 2018 mit dem »Edward Burtynsky Award« ausgezeichnet. Beide Projekte sind als Fotobücher im Handel erhältlich. Ein Auszug aus ihrer Arbeit wird in der großen Hauptausstellung HÖHER SCHNELLER WEITER im Kunst- und Gewerbeverein Regensburg vom 22. Oktober bis 15. November 2020 zu sehen sein. Link zum Festival Fotografischer Bilder: https://festival-fotografischer-bilder.de Save the Date: 22. Oktober bis 15. November 2020 Festival Fotografischer Bilder Regensburg Der Podcast ist eine Produktion von Studio Andy Scholz 2020 und das »Festival Fotografischer Bilder« ist eine Kooperation mit dem Kulturamt der Stadt Regensburg.
Recorded on April 10th, 2019. Jeff Wall aka The Bigdumbhick is here to play some unique and fun tunes. He is a man of contradictions, just read his bio on his Facebook page and you will see what we mean. Please welcome our big friend with the small guitar! Tonight he will be playing his tunes “Ravens & Crows”, “Ain’t Hungry Any More”, and “Three On The Tree”. We will be playing “Travelin’ Man” and “Rose Colored Glasses”.Hosted by Brian Moyer and Lex Headley.
Alaska the Wild Frontier. Moose hunting with Troy Session from 60inchclub.com and Jeff Wall aka “the Moose Whisperer” or “Dragon Wing”. We have some fun on this one talking moose hunting and DIY hunts through Troy’s Hunt Planning business. Not politically correct, the way life outta be. God Bless America!!
“Coolest Conversations” can be heard every Friday on the Mighty Manfred program SiriusXM Ch.21. It’s that series of interviews with artists who have earned themselves a “Coolest Song In The World” designation. This week’s throwback is a very special one as it features the late Jeff Wall, the 'Fleshammer’, of the Atlanta, GA based band, The Woggles, which features our host Mighty Manfred. Dating back to 2014, the bandmates discuss Jeff’s musical upbringing, joining the band and their Christmas release, Santa is coming Ho Ho Ho! Join Jeff Walls with Mighty Manfred on this Coolest Conversations in Little Steven’s Underground Garage. www.undergroundgarage.com/ (https://gate.sc/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.undergroundgarage.com%2F&token=c649b0-1-1576536481836) www.facebook.com/undergroundgarage/ (https://gate.sc/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fundergroundgarage%2F&token=bfa731-1-1576536481836) twitter.com/littlesteven_ug (https://gate.sc/?url=https%3A%2F%2Ftwitter.com%2Flittlesteven_ug&token=87cd39-1-1576536481836) www.instagram.com/littlesteven_ug/ (https://gate.sc/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Flittlesteven_ug%2F&token=11f601-1-1576536481837)
The UFC 245 card has all the potential to be a banger to end the decade! But can it live up to expectations? Jeff Wall and Nick Ward break it all down! Every single main card fight!
Jeff Wall and Nick Ward Talk UFC 242, and ask the question ' Can anyone beat Khabib?' Plus Canadian MMA talk.
Well 2019 hasn't exactly been the most exciting, action packed, card stacked, drama filled year. So after UFC 244's event surpassed expectations is it an easy Event of the year candidate? Jeff Wall and Nick Ward discuss, Jorge Masvidal's rise to stardom, thoughts on the BMF Belt, and what to do with it?
Dr. Jeff Wall, a brown belt from Triton Fight Center, hangs out with Todd and Clinton to promote his upcoming chamber choir event "Choir on Tap," talk about his martial arts journey, and talk about the pro level choir group he leads called Vox Solaris. Check out Vox Solaris and get more info about "Choir on Tap" at www.voxsolaris.net
This week Dan talks with Jeff Wall about his approach to music and a number of other topics. Check him out at www.bigdumbhick.com Please consider sponsoring us on Patreon! www.patreon.com/coverbandconfidential
Recorded August 20th 2018 A bourbon fueled Matt Moore is back by popular demand!! Also, fantasy draft recap with Jeff Wall and the Hot Box. Join the conversation on The Hot Box at 903-420-2300. Check out our website at pinecurtainnetwork.com Follow Matt Moore @mattmmoore79 Justin Peak @elpistoli Dylan Roth @Grub_Sacker Questions and comments to beyond@pinecurtainnetwork.com
Recorded May 14th 2018 Jeff Wall of The Wall Report is live with us to talk about adult camp. Jeremy Smith tells us about the time he beat up an elderly gentleman. Check out our website at pinecurtainnetwork.com Follow Matt Moore @mattmmoore79 Justin Peak @elpistoli Dylan Roth @Grub_Sacker Questions and comments to beyond@pinecurtainnetwork.com
Jeff sits down with Drew, Ruby & Mitchell from Abbotsford’s Blessed to discuss 2017’s amazing EPII, the addition of a fifth member and the recording of their future full length debut. Then they attack the rapid fire questionnaire and we learn about their favourite onstage moments, Drew’s disdain of chewing and posing for a 1.5 million dollar Jeff Wall picture. (Picture shown on right) Recorded Oct 26th, 2017 Track used with full permission from Blessed. https://blessedband.bandcamp.com Background Music: Atlantis Jazz Ensemble - Undercurrents Used with permission from Atlantis Jazz Ensemble and Marlow Records http://www.marlowrecords.com
Premier League Matchday 26 Review. Tiki, Al, Huss, and Igor get into the crazy Liverpool vs Spurs game - Kane scores 100 goals, Arsenal smash Everton, Man City "stumble", Man United take care of business, and whole bunch of Premier League coverage. Jeff Wall...we see you homie! Get yourself some premium footy gear @ Podcast FC Shop: https://podcastfcshop.com/ Discounts Here: http://ow.ly/IxPU30eQot8 Rate us PLEASE! iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/podcast-fc-show/id1050950216 Google Play: https://play.google.com/music/listen?u=0#/ps/Ij6siberui3ybyrzl2f5mwgrk6m Find us on SOCIAL MEDIA: *Twitter: https://twitter.com/PodcastFCshow *Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PodcastFCShow/ *Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/podcastfcshow/ *Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC7kk4Wc0KRavUhrgnYa5RtA The Podcast FC Show is a soccer podcast! Listen in on some soccer banter among true footy-obsessed friends and have your say on our social media. There are plenty of "proper" soccer podcasts but we pride ourselves in keeping it casual. Your hosts are Tiki, Tum, Farid, Al, and Hussey who are great friends and have been playing & watching the beautiful game since they were in diapers. Listen in on their “footy pub talk” and get your 2 cents in! Come on then, let’s have it! LEAGUE TABLES & STATS BPL TABLE: http://www.espnfc.us/barclays-premier-league/23/table BPL TOP SCORER: http://www.espnfc.us/barclays-premier-league/23/statistics/scorers BPL TOP ASSISTS: http://www.espnfc.us/barclays-premier-league/23/statistics/assists LA LIGA TABLE: http://www.espnfc.us/spanish-primera-division/15/table LA LIGA TOP SCORER: http://www.espnfc.us/spanish-primera-division/15/statistics/scorers BUNDESLIGA TABLE: http://www.espnfc.us/german-bundesliga/10/table BUNDESLIGA TOP SCORER: http://www.espnfc.us/german-bundesliga/10/statistics/scorers LIGUE 1 TABLE: http://www.espnfc.us/french-ligue-1/9/table LIGUE 1 TOP SCORER: http://www.espnfc.us/french-ligue-1/9/statistics/scorers SERIE A TABLE: http://www.espnfc.us/italian-serie-a/12/table SERIE A TOP SCORER: http://www.espnfc.us/italian-serie-a/12/statistics/scorers MLS TABLE: http://www.espnfc.us/major-league-soccer/19/table MLS TOP SCORER: http://www.espnfc.us/major-league-soccer/19/statistics/scorers
由英国艺术经纪杰伊·乔普林(Jay Jopling)1993年创立的白立方画廊(White Cube Gallery)最初设址于英国伦敦詹姆斯区公爵街(Duke Street, St James)44号二层。立于伦敦西区最传统的艺术交易街上,首家白立方画廊由享誉世界的极简主义建筑大师克劳迪欧·西尔伟斯特林(Claudio Silvestrin)操刀设计,尽管展览空间略显狭小,却也是欧洲最具影响力的商业画廊之一。最初的画廊理念是受艺术家沃尔特·德·玛丽亚(Walter De Maria)1977年纽约作品Earth Room影响,矢志为一位艺术家提供可展示单件重要作品或一系列作品的紧凑聚焦空间,并于创办之初规定一位艺术家只能展出一次从不重复。 画廊名称来源于爱尔兰艺术家和作家布莱恩·奥多尔蒂(Brian O'Doherty)1976年发布于《艺术论坛》上的文章“白立方体内:画廊空间的意识形态”(Inside the White Cube: Ideologies of the Gallery Space),作者奥多尔蒂是第一位明确面对战后艺术危机的评论人,并就经济、社会环境以及美学在艺术画廊争议空间中体现之间错综复杂的关系提出艺术家如何必须在画廊空间和体系中诠释个人作品的问题。他在文中还深入探讨了在将现代画廊空间设计为中立区域--白色立方体的背后,是将空间成就为艺术品的一部分并赋予展览空间深层之美的意图。奥多尔蒂也揭示了画廊空间的重要性不仅仅是白立方体还有历史的特殊构造,目的在于热切关注艺术。 自成立以来,白立方画廊也因为多位英国青年艺术家和国际艺术家举办展览而声名鹊起,其中包括弗朗茨·阿克曼(Franz Ackerman),米罗斯拉夫·巴卡(Miroslaw Balka),查克·克洛斯(Chuck Close),翠西•艾敏(Tracey Emin),卡塔琳娜·弗里奇(Katharina Fritsch),莫娜·哈透姆(Mona Hatoum),达米安·赫斯特(Damien Hirst),加里·休姆(Gary Hume),埃尔斯沃思·凯利(Ellsworth Kelly),朱莉·梅雷图(Julie Mehretu),多丽丝·萨尔塞多(Doris Salcedo),杉本博司(Hiroshi Sugimoto),吕克·图伊曼斯(Luc Tuymans)和杰夫·沃尔(Jeff Wall)等等。 2000年4月,白立方画廊新址在伦敦东区霍斯顿广场建成,并成为该区域第二大画廊。由著名的MRJ 朗德尔联合工作室及画廊设计机构(MRJ Rundell & Associate)在原二十世纪二十年代轻工业建筑基础上改造而成,展览空间由此扩大到2000平方英尺。2002年白立方画廊公爵街原址正式关闭,2006年9月在距画廊原址不远的梅森苑(Mason's Yard)新白立方画廊开幕,在原有电力分站基础上,MRJ 朗德尔联合工作室及画廊设计机构打造了英国伦敦詹姆斯区过去三十年首栋独立建筑并且展示空间达5000平方英尺。位于伯蒙西(Bermondsey)的白立方画廊是伦敦三间画廊中最大的一家,由卡斯帕尔·穆勒·尼尔建筑事务所(Casper Mueller Kneer Architects)设计的画廊包括三个主要展厅、大型仓库、私人观览室、60人座演讲厅和书店。南画廊(South Gallery)主要承办白立方扩展计划中的重要展览,统称为北画廊(North Gallery)的三个小展场以新锐展览项目为主,配合新推出的Inside the White Cube项目,展出未曾在画廊举办过展览的艺术家作品,为业界提供了国际当代艺术交流发展的平台。此外在建筑中心,还设有名为“9×9×9”占地约81平方米的展厅。为推介艺术教育,白立方演讲厅也不定期地呈现教育项目,播放艺术家电影和举办讲座研讨对话。2012年3月2日,白立方画廊首家海外分馆落脚中国香港中环,并以世界著名艺术家Gilbert及George的一系列名为‘The London Pictures'的作品揭幕。
由英国艺术经纪杰伊·乔普林(Jay Jopling)1993年创立的白立方画廊(White Cube Gallery)最初设址于英国伦敦詹姆斯区公爵街(Duke Street, St James)44号二层。立于伦敦西区最传统的艺术交易街上,首家白立方画廊由享誉世界的极简主义建筑大师克劳迪欧·西尔伟斯特林(Claudio Silvestrin)操刀设计,尽管展览空间略显狭小,却也是欧洲最具影响力的商业画廊之一。最初的画廊理念是受艺术家沃尔特·德·玛丽亚(Walter De Maria)1977年纽约作品Earth Room影响,矢志为一位艺术家提供可展示单件重要作品或一系列作品的紧凑聚焦空间,并于创办之初规定一位艺术家只能展出一次从不重复。 画廊名称来源于爱尔兰艺术家和作家布莱恩·奥多尔蒂(Brian O'Doherty)1976年发布于《艺术论坛》上的文章“白立方体内:画廊空间的意识形态”(Inside the White Cube: Ideologies of the Gallery Space),作者奥多尔蒂是第一位明确面对战后艺术危机的评论人,并就经济、社会环境以及美学在艺术画廊争议空间中体现之间错综复杂的关系提出艺术家如何必须在画廊空间和体系中诠释个人作品的问题。他在文中还深入探讨了在将现代画廊空间设计为中立区域--白色立方体的背后,是将空间成就为艺术品的一部分并赋予展览空间深层之美的意图。奥多尔蒂也揭示了画廊空间的重要性不仅仅是白立方体还有历史的特殊构造,目的在于热切关注艺术。 自成立以来,白立方画廊也因为多位英国青年艺术家和国际艺术家举办展览而声名鹊起,其中包括弗朗茨·阿克曼(Franz Ackerman),米罗斯拉夫·巴卡(Miroslaw Balka),查克·克洛斯(Chuck Close),翠西•艾敏(Tracey Emin),卡塔琳娜·弗里奇(Katharina Fritsch),莫娜·哈透姆(Mona Hatoum),达米安·赫斯特(Damien Hirst),加里·休姆(Gary Hume),埃尔斯沃思·凯利(Ellsworth Kelly),朱莉·梅雷图(Julie Mehretu),多丽丝·萨尔塞多(Doris Salcedo),杉本博司(Hiroshi Sugimoto),吕克·图伊曼斯(Luc Tuymans)和杰夫·沃尔(Jeff Wall)等等。 2000年4月,白立方画廊新址在伦敦东区霍斯顿广场建成,并成为该区域第二大画廊。由著名的MRJ 朗德尔联合工作室及画廊设计机构(MRJ Rundell & Associate)在原二十世纪二十年代轻工业建筑基础上改造而成,展览空间由此扩大到2000平方英尺。2002年白立方画廊公爵街原址正式关闭,2006年9月在距画廊原址不远的梅森苑(Mason's Yard)新白立方画廊开幕,在原有电力分站基础上,MRJ 朗德尔联合工作室及画廊设计机构打造了英国伦敦詹姆斯区过去三十年首栋独立建筑并且展示空间达5000平方英尺。位于伯蒙西(Bermondsey)的白立方画廊是伦敦三间画廊中最大的一家,由卡斯帕尔·穆勒·尼尔建筑事务所(Casper Mueller Kneer Architects)设计的画廊包括三个主要展厅、大型仓库、私人观览室、60人座演讲厅和书店。南画廊(South Gallery)主要承办白立方扩展计划中的重要展览,统称为北画廊(North Gallery)的三个小展场以新锐展览项目为主,配合新推出的Inside the White Cube项目,展出未曾在画廊举办过展览的艺术家作品,为业界提供了国际当代艺术交流发展的平台。此外在建筑中心,还设有名为“9×9×9”占地约81平方米的展厅。为推介艺术教育,白立方演讲厅也不定期地呈现教育项目,播放艺术家电影和举办讲座研讨对话。2012年3月2日,白立方画廊首家海外分馆落脚中国香港中环,并以世界著名艺术家Gilbert及George的一系列名为‘The London Pictures'的作品揭幕。
As Congress debates controversial patent legislation that some say will undermine patent rights, has the U.S. Supreme Court been steadily eroding the scope and enforceability of patents for the past decade? The Supreme Court has made it easier to invalidate patents because an invention is “obvious,” not specific enough, or an “abstract idea.” The Court has also made it more difficult for patent owners to stop or “enjoin” ongoing infringement of their rights and riskier to assert their rights in court. Is the Supreme Court striking the right balance or is it undermining an important property right? -- This panel was presented during the Fourth Annual Executive Branch Review Conference on May 17, 2016, at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington, DC. -- Featuring: Prof. John F. Duffy, Samuel H. McCoy II Professor of Law, University of Virginia School of Law; Mr. Michael R. Huston, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher; Prof. Adam Mossoff, Professor of Law and Co-Director of Academic Programs and Senior Scholar, Center for the Protection of Intellectual Property, Antonin Scalia Law School, George Mason University; and Mr. Jeff Wall, Sullivan & Cromwell. Moderator: Hon. Randall R. Rader, The George Washington University.
Med två aktuella utställningar - Jeff Wall på Louisiana och Andres Serrano på Fotografiska - blir det fokus på foto i Kritiken som också diskuterar kulturtidskrifternas roll idag. Kritikens Karsten Thurfjell har träffat kanadensaren Jeff Wall på det danska konstmuseeet Louisiana, som just har öppnat en stor retrospektiv över den inflytelserika fotografen. Samtidigt visas fotografen Andres Serranos bilder på Fotografiska i Stockholm. Hans motiv rör sig ofta kring sex och religion, något som ofta har väckt starka reaktioner och protester. Samtal med kulturredaktionens Cecilia Blomberg, som också träffat konstnären. Och, vilken roll har kulturtidskrifterna i den offentliga debatten numera? Diskussion i studion med Mireya Echeverria Quezada, chefredaktör på Bang och förläggaren Björn Linnell, som var redaktör på Ord och bild på 80-talet. Programledare Gunnar Bolin Producent Maria Götselius
This week, a new book from photographer Danny Lyon sparks a great discussion about intent and we unpack the idea of creating a body of work versus living your way through it. We also ask the question: “Is art a part of our lives or are our lives a part of some greater art?” Jeff Wall is our Photographer of the Week. Please help us grow the show by sharing it with your friends via Twitter or Facebook.
This week, a new book from photographer Danny Lyon sparks a great discussion about intent and we unpack the idea of creating a body of work versus living your way through it. We also ask the question: “Is art a part of our lives or are our lives a part of some greater art?” Jeff Wall is our Photographer of the Week. Please help us grow the show by sharing it with your friends via Twitter or Facebook.
El Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Barcelona y el CaixaForum acogen su primera muestra conjunta, la exposición Arte, dos puntos. Más de 400 obras de 125 artistas entre los que encontramos a Eduardo Chillida, Marcel Duchamp, Jeff Wall, Jaume Plensa o Richard Hamilton, componen un itinerario ligado a la ciudad de Barcelona. La organización del MACBA y la Fundación "la Caixa" ofrecen visitas comentadas para todos los públicos, incluyendo actividades para personas mayores, familias y personas con dificultades visuales y auditivas.
Colin Marshall sits down in Yaletown, Vancouver, British Columbia with Paul Delany, professor of English at Simon Fraser University, editor of the reader Vancouver: Representing the Postmodern City, and author of the article "Vancouver: Graveyard of Ambition?" They discuss whether it makes sense to talk about a "postmodern" city in 2013; the influence of Douglas Coupland, William Gibson, and Jeff Wall; Vancouver's future-oriented open-endedness; his path to Vancouver from England via the United States and specifically a crumbling New York; the state of Vancouver in 1970, when he arrived; how the West End became dense in the fifties, and how Yaletown evolved; English literature's interest in the phenomenon of the modern city, and his own; the city as a nexus of fascinations; his disappointment in Vancouver's architectural development and its lack of internationalism, save for buildings like the downtown library, the unofficial campus for the city's many foreign language students; all the condo towers as Ballardian "prisons with the locks on the inside"; Microsoft's aborted entry into Vancouver's suburbs and its subsequent relocation to downtown; what led him to ask whether Vancouver made for a graveyard of ambition; the importance of getting outside Vancouver, and regularly; the lack of a fruitful intellectual model to replace postmodernism as a means of viewing Vancouver; and how the city's large and growing Asian presence prepares it for the future.
Julian Stallabrass, one of the most influential art critics in the United Kingdom, discusses how artists themselves, art critics and historians serve as sympathetic mouthpieces for artists using a case study of Jeff Wall. (April 7, 2010)
Fakultät für Geschichts- und Kunstwissenschaften - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU
Kinematografische Fotografien des kanadischen Künstlers Jeff Wall müssen vom Betrachter intellektuell erfasst werden und ergeben dann einen Kosmos an Deutungsmöglichkeiten, einen Kosmos der Imaginationen. Meine Dissertation durchleuchtet drei Werke Jeff Walls, die er im Abstand von jeweils etwa zehn Jahren schuf. Dabei werden wichtige Aspekte zur Erfassung und Deutung dieser Bilder erarbeitet. Als Betrachter und Leser wird man in den dargestellten Mikrokosmen zugrundeliegende Mythen erkennen, Menschen in ihrer Situation der Entfremdung, auch jenseits überkommener Begrifflichkeit, wahrnehmen und die gesellschaftlichen Veränderungen heraufziehen sehen, die sich in diesen kinematografischen Fotografien andeuten.
Ian Wallace is one of the pioneering forces behind Vancouver's conceptual art scene. Wallace taught art history at the University of British Columbia, Jeff Wall's alma mater, and the Vancouver School of Art. Here, he discusses his friendship, travels, and work with his celebrated "student" Jeff Wall. This podcast is brought to you by the Ancient Art Podcast. Explore more at ancientartpodcast.org.
Jan Tumlir teaches art and film theory at the Art Center and University of Southern California, and is a regular contributor to ArtForum, Frieze, and Flash Art. Here, he and Thomas Crow discuss Jeff Wall and more specifically, Tumlir's essay "Profane Illuminations: The Social History of Jeff Wall." This podcast is brought to you by the Ancient Art Podcast. Explore more at ancientartpodcast.org.
Jeff Wall, people! Canadian superstar Jeff Wall is interviewed by Duncan and Richard when he was in Chicago for the opening of his huge new show at the Art Institute of Chicago: Jeff Wall June 29-September 23, 2007 Regenstein Hall Jeff Wall is considered one of the most acclaimed and influential artists of his generation. He uses state-of-the-art photographic and computer technologies to make pictures that evoke the composition, scale, and ambition of the grandest history paintings. This exhibition presents a comprehensive overview of Wall's nearly 30-year career. Next, Jonathan Messinger and Zach Dodson the force behind Featherproof Books, an indie publisher based here in Chicago talk to Terri and Joanna at the Printers Row Book Fair. Finally, Amanda is leaving for New York! We say our fond farewells, but not goodbyes to Amanda Browder who has taken a position with the New York office of Bad at Sports.