Podcasts about lesbian art

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Best podcasts about lesbian art

Latest podcast episodes about lesbian art

Artalogue
Violets and Velvet: Lesbian Art and Fashion History with Dress Historian Eleanor Medhurst

Artalogue

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2024 31:20 Transcription Available


Welcome to Season 2 of the Artalogue! Our first 4 episodes this June will be focusing on Queer creatives in the arts. Fashion can be a powerful tool for expressing queer identities and challenging societal norms. Eleanor Medhurst is a dress historian who specialises in lesbian fashion history and is here to chat all things lesbian fashion in art and culture! We chat about the significance of clothing to the lesbian identity as seen in historical works of lesbian art.  Eleanor uncovers the historical significance of symbols like violets and lavender, tracing their roots to the poetry of Sappho and their resurgence in early 20th-century Paris. In fashion as well as art history, these symbols have long communicated lesbian identities and solidarity among women. Eleanor shares insights from her upcoming book, "Unsuitable: A History of Lesbian Fashion" set to release on June 1st, 2024. She reveals intriguing findings about trans lesbians in interwar Berlin and the vibrant cultural scene supported by archival lesbian magazines from the 1920s and 30s. Eleanor also offers valuable advice for budding historians, emphasising the importance of passion, peer connections, and leveraging social media for academic networking. Don't miss this fascinating blend of art, fashion, and history through a queer lens. Happy Pride!!!Read more on the Dressing Dykes Blog Order Eleanor's Book "Unsuitable: A History of Lesbian Fashion" Connect with us:Madison Beale, HostCroocial, ProductionBe a guest on The Artalogue Podcast

The Journey Told
Jessica Yatrofsky Chats Body Politics,Film and Photography

The Journey Told

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2023 26:23


Jessica Yatrofsky is a NYC-based artist and activist, known for film and photographic work exploring body politics, beauty, and gender. After receiving her MFA from Parsons the New School for Design, she published her first photography monograph, I Heart Boy, with powerHouse Books in 2010, and her second photography monograph, I Heart Girl, in 2015 with her accompanying film "I Heart Girl - Video Screen Tests," capturing over 100 women featured in her series. The film premiered with i-D Magazine in 2016. Her photographic work has been exhibited internationally in addition to book signings with Barnes&Noble and Strand Books in NYC. In 2015, her film SUN IN MY MOUTH received an Honorable Mention in the LGBTQ “All Out Arts” Fresh Fruit Festival as well as screened during the Northside Film Festival in Brooklyn, New York. In 2016, Yatrofsky was featured in the cover story THE NEW PROGRESSIVES for the “Activists Issue” in Interview Magazine. Her work was featured in the NSFW:Female Gaze group exhibition at the Museum of Sex in NYC from 2017-2018. Yatrofsky's work is part of the permanent collection at the Leslie-Lohman Museum for Gay and Lesbian Art. In 2016, Yatrofsky founded the NY FEM FACTORY, a feminist collective that has hosted and curated literary readings, art exhibitions, and live immersive events in North America and Europe coinciding with the release of her debut book of poetry Pink Privacy. Yatrofsky and the NY FEM FACTORY recently completed a residency at the experimental Institut fur Alles Mogliche in Berlin including collaborations with Soho House Berlin and the German woman's publication, Libertin Magazine. In 2017, Yatrofsky and NY FEM FACTORY curated a live activation for “Performance is Alive” in the Satellite Art Show during Art Basel Miami. In 2018, Yatrofsky and the NY FEM FACTORY curated a reading featuring local female poets hosted with the Ace Hotel in NYC. This winter Yatrofsky and NY FEM FACTORY will cohost the YCC in Miami Beach, FL at the PULSE Art Fair that includes a live performance and curated installation for PULSE PROJECTS. Yatrofsky has curated panel discussions and hosted literary events with The Battery in San Francisco, CA, The Standard in both West Hollywood, CA and Miami, FL as well as participated in artist lectures for the Camera Club of New York, The Robert Giard Foundation, and the International Center for Photography in NYC. From 2016-2017, the Soho House hosted her touring conversation series “Gender Beauty & the Camera.” In 2019, Yatrofsky moderated a PULSE PERSPECTIVES panel discussion on “Art, Mindfulness & the Power of Community” in conversation with SAG actor Tiffany Lighty. Tune in for this in-depth conversation which focuses on all things in the creative process! 1:02-I am an artist 4:36-Inspiration Behind the Lens 7:38-Observing The Surroundings11:11-Art Style-Giving Everyone A Voice 14:57-Being A Film Movie Lover 19:29-3 tips for Artists 20:20-Upcoming Projects 24:04-I am Tell and Tell Secret:I am a solid speed cuber. I solve the rubik's cubeTell and Tell Secret: "I have been cutting my own hair since I was 16 years old"Follow Jessica: Instagramhttps://www.instagram.com/jyatrofsky Follow Shawn Zanotti at http://www.thejourneytold.com or http://www.exactpublicity.com Instagram - http://www.instagram.com/publicistshawn Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/shawnzanottihttps://www.thejourneytold.com/Facebook: https://www,facebook.com/thejourneytoldshowInstagram:...

Work Your Inner Wisdom
Episode 16 - Accessing Your Intuition Through Creative Expression (with Tracy Nuñez)

Work Your Inner Wisdom

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2022 34:38


This week on Work Your Inner Wisdom, I'm thrilled to welcome intuitive artist Tracy Nuñez. Tracy is a spiritual artist, teacher, and mentor who helps her clients build a bond with their higher power to help them tap into their subconscious mind. In this episode, we talk about how spirituality informs art and how her intuition guides her work and her business. Tracy also shares how she uses a unique creative process called “Conscious Collage” to forge a connection with her Higher Power, and provides guidance on how we can do the same. LINKS: Show notes: https://workyourinnerwisdom.com/16/ Tracy's website: www.tracynunez.com Tracy's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tracynunez4 Leslie Lohman Museum for Gay and Lesbian Art: https://www.leslielohman.org/ ACT on Your Business: https://actonyourbusiness.com/

Arts To Hearts Podcast
Embracing Identity & finding 'PRIDE' in who you are w/ Halie Torris, Artist

Arts To Hearts Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2022 35:47


Listen & Subscribe on Apple  Find more creative content & opportunities at 

PERSPECTIVES
In Conversation with Res and Bryson Rand

PERSPECTIVES

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2020 59:23


Photography has always been a uniquely mobile medium, unconfined to an artist’s studio. What happens to the medium when its peripatetic practitioners are locked in place? When they lose access to the world’s photographic face? What happens to photography under lockdown? In this episode, art historian Samuel Shapiro sits down with American photographers Res and Bryson Rand to talk about photography and interiority, about the necessarily inward turn their photography has taken during our collective confinement. They discuss about their practices, the impact of lock down in their photographic work and the general state of the medium today. This episode is presented in conjunction with the online viewing room The World Within: Photography and Interiority. Res earned an MFA from the Yale School of Art in 2017 and has shown all over New York, New Haven, and Florida, where they recently completed a residency with Catherine Opie. Res’s work has been featured in Aperture, Cultured, and W Magazine and a few of their notable recent projects include Pulse, a series made in the aftermath of the Pulse Nightclub shooting in 2015 and Towers of Thanks, a 2017 photobook published by Loose Joints, that explored their mother’s role as the construction manager for Trump Tower. Bryson Rand received an MFA from the Yale School of Art in 2015 and has since also attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. He’s shown in galleries from Berlin to Mexico City to New York, where he’s had solo shows at Zeit Contemporary Art and La Mama Galleria and where he participated in an exhibition at the Leslie Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art. He’s published four books and has lectured at Harvard University, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and the School of Visual Arts. Enter Online Viewing Room

Studio Confessions
Jaqui Almaguer: En Vivo

Studio Confessions

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2020 51:37


Listen in on this Spanglish gem of an episode with Chicago based artist Jaqui Almaguer . I haven’t laughed this much in a while. I literally get my Chicano card revoked and get a well rounded education on some Mexican and Chicano culture. The artist talks about growing up in Los Angeles and Chicago, and how Bob Ross and cholo culture influenced her art and studio practice. Jaqui shares some entrepreneurial tips for artists and some technical advice on going live while listening to your favorite music, without having to pay for copyright (yes, this is a thing)! We also talk about being Queer artists and how it can manifest in our work and empowering cross cultural references. Join the conversation! …ps. it is pronounce “Ale-bree-heh”… (lol)!   Follow the artist and watch there Live Painting events on Instagram at @artejaqui    

Not a Drill Podcast
Lesbian Art Teachers!

Not a Drill Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2020 33:02


This is a bonus episode. Its just Chris stream of conscience on a topic.... scary! Lesbian teacher suspended for showing photo of 'future wife' gets $100,000 settlement Link to article https://www.nbcnews.com/feature/nbc-out/lesbian-teacher-suspended-showing-photo-future-wife-gets-100-000-n1143736 --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/notadrill/message

The Queer Creative
Hugh Ryan | INQUIRY

The Queer Creative

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2019 87:09


Renessa and Jonah catch up about work and the NYC Marathon a couple of weeks ago (which means we can finally stop talking about it until next year). We kept this week’s Queer News & Culture brief, and talked a little bit about 45’s deplorable efforts to let faith-based groups exclude LGBTQ parents, and the promising upsurge in queer characters on network TV shows.We then dive right into our interview with the smart, inquisitive, and handsome Hugh Ryan! Hugh is a writer, curator, and speaker in New York City. His work is about queer politics, culture, and history, and his new book, When Brooklyn Was Queer which is a groundbreaking exploration of the LGBTQ history of Brooklyn, from the early days of Walt Whitman in the 1850s up through the women who worked at the Brooklyn Navy Yard during World War II, and beyond. We learn about how the inquiry into this research was inspired and carried out to write this book, some of the groups and specific people who were featured in it, and applying for grants. Hugh also shares a bit about his background and his other areas of work, which include teaching and working with the Urban Justice Center in NY (and maybe being a voice actor in the future?!) INTERVIEW STARTS AT 24:09Intro links:A new Trump administration rule could hurt LGBTQ youth in foster careStudy shows LGBTQ characters are at a record high on network TVLGBTQ Representation On TV Is Up Again, A GLAAD Report SaysAtypical Star opens up about being queerInterview links:Hugh Ryan’s WebsiteWhen Brooklyn Was Queer - Order the book!!!Follow Hugh on TwitterHugh’s PatreonLesbian Herstory ArchivesWeeksville Heritage CenterSong: “Freestyle” by Young M.A. (from “M.A. The Mixtape”)----------------Follow The Queer CreativeInstagram: @thequeercreativepodcastTwitter: @creativequeerYouTube: The Queer Creativewww.thequeercreative.com

The Queer Creative
Daniel Djuro-Goiricelaya | COMMUNITY

The Queer Creative

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2019 110:39


TQC took a week off, but we're back with some personal and podcast updates! This week we're also joined by new friend of the pod Clayton for our very first "Millennial Moment" segment, where we discuss queer topics with someone younger (and smarter) than Jonah and Renessa (because let's face it, they're barely getting by). The topic this week is the term Latinx—Where did it come from and how/where is it used? Clayton shares his Latin roots and helps break it down. Our creative guest interview is Daniel Djuro-Goiricelaya. Daniel is not only a deep friend of the pod, he's also a Venezuelan-born, NYC-based interdisciplinary artist, and co-founder of El Patio De Mi Casa, an artist project and pop-up exhibition space for emerging artists. We talk art, design, materials, color (and reclaiming colors), culture, the importance of community, activism, meditation, and balancing work/life and a relationship. Jonah and Daniel also bond over preparing to run the NYC Marathon this weekend for the first time!INTERVIEW STARTS AT 46:07Show notes and links:Follow Daniel on Instagram: @ddjuroFollow Daniel’s available works: @bodegacolorEl Patio de Mi Casa: @lptdmcsDaniel’s website: www.ddgart.comTrevor Project LGBTQ+ History QuizFollow Clayton on Instagram: @amerikanichezigeuneLatinx comic by Terry BlasWhen Brooklyn Was QueerTinderbox: The Rise of the Up Stairs Lounge Fire and the Rise of Gay LiberationPansy BoyJulie Goldman and Kamala Harris on CNN LGBTQ Town Hall Debate“Pimpin” track by Megan Thee Stallion“Saunter” track by Acra (a queer Venezuelan electronic music artist)

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The Queer Creative
Paul Harfleet, The Pansy Project | PURPOSE

The Queer Creative

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2019 91:59


Jonah and Renessa's updates this week include Madonna's latest NYC performance, Drag Race UK, the onePULSE Foundation's National Pulse Memorial & Museum design contest finalists, Jonah's laundry list of goals in therapy, and making fun of each other's feet and thumbs. They then sit down with London-based artist Paul Harfleet to discuss The Pansy Project, which was catalyzed by a personal experience for him. Paul plants pansies at the site of homophobic abuse, and the flower is then photographed in its location, entitled after the abuse, and posted on the pansyproject.org. His photographs have been exhibited internationally. The Pansy Project has brought Paul around the world to memorialize homophobic hate crimes and was the focus of the documentary film Les Pensées De Paul. Paul also wrote and illustrated the book Pansy Boy and does workshops at schools across the UK, US, and Canada.Interview starts at 35:14Show links:Paul Harfleet and The Pansy Project: http://www.thepansyproject.comInstagram & Twitter: @thepansyprojectonePULSE Foundation Memorial & Museum Design Competition

Work Your Inner Wisdom with Lee Chaix McDonough
Episode 16 - Accessing Your Intuition Through Creative Expression (with Tracy Nuñez)

Work Your Inner Wisdom with Lee Chaix McDonough

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2019 34:33


This week on Work Your Inner Wisdom, I’m thrilled to welcome intuitive artist Tracy Nuñez. Tracy is a spiritual artist, teacher, and mentor who helps her clients build a bond with their higher power to help them tap into their subconscious mind.   In this episode, we talk about how spirituality informs art and how her intuition guides her work and her business. Tracy also shares how she uses a unique creative process called “Conscious Collage” to forge a connection with her Higher Power, and provides guidance on how we can do the same.     LINKS:   Show notes: https://workyourinnerwisdom.com/16/   Tracy’s website: www.tracynunez.com   Tracy’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tracynunez4   Leslie Lohman Museum for Gay and Lesbian Art: https://www.leslielohman.org/    ACT on Your Business: https://actonyourbusiness.com/   The Wisdom Library: https://workyourinnerwisdom.com/free   Work Your Inner Wisdom Facebook Community: https://www.facebook.com/groups/workyourinnerwisdom/

The Queer Creative
Jessica & Caroline Kaplan // J. Caress Studio

The Queer Creative

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2019 97:32


Jonah and Renessa are getting ready for this coming weekend—they have their first interview on Saturday Morning Live, followed by a TQC interview on the topic of living with chronic illnesses. We also hear about Jonah's lube mishap with a Sonos service provider. Then TQC talks with the lovely Jessica and Caroline Kaplan of J. Caress Studio. This wife-and-wife owned business offers a range of art products that reflect the diverse spectrum of the LGBTQ+ community, from greeting cards to commissioned pieces. We hear all about how they came up with the idea for J. Caress, what it's like starting a small business like this, the need for it and the feedback they've gotten, and working together as a married couple.Show Links:Website: http://jcaress.comEtsy Shop: https://www.etsy.com/shop/jcaressstudioInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/j.caress.studio……………......….Don't forget to leave us a rating and review, Queer Creatives!Follow TQC on Instagram: @thequeercreativepodcastJoin the convo on Twitter: @CreativeQueerCheck out our website: http://thequeercreative.com

Art Uncovered
Mark Addison Smith

Art Uncovered

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2019


Mark Addison Smith is a New York-based artist whose design specialization is typographic storytelling that allows illustrative text to convey a visual narrative through printed matter, artist’s books, and site installations. His work is included within the Brooklyn Museum Artists’ Books Collection, Center for Book Arts, Getty Research Institute, Guggenheim Museum Library and Archives, Joan Flasch Artists’ Books Collection, Kinsey Institute , Leslie-Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art Thomas J. Watson Library, MoMA Franklin Furnace Artists’ Books Collection, Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, ONE National Gay and Lesbian Archives, Smithsonian American Art and Portrait Gallery Library Artists’ Books Collection, Tate Library and Archives, V&A Museum National Art Library, Whitney Museum Frances Mulhall Achilles Library, and Yale Special Collections. Solo exhibitions include The Bakery (Atlanta) and Center on Halsted (Chicago). Chapter publications include Diversity and Design: Understanding Hidden Consequences (Routledge) and Queering Translation, Translating the Queer: Theory, Practice, Activism (Routledge). He holds a Master of Fine Arts in Visual Communication from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and is an Associate Professor in the Art Department at The City College of New York. All images courtesy of the artist Fagget Fucker (sic) Gay Alphabet Documentation photograph, 5x7-inch digital print of bathroom stall intervention, in which queer letterforms generated from found graffiti were arranged to read: “let’s face it, we’re all queer,” and were placed on top of source hate-speech in a Midwestern truck stop men’s bathroom stall, 2007. February 2, 2017: We have reenergized our Twitter account (from the daily You Look Like The Right Type archive) Drawing using India ink pen on Bristol board, 7x11-inch, incorporating direct-quote dialogue from February 2, 2017 and drawn on the same day. We Have Re-Energized Our Twitter Account Limited-edition artist’s book, 6 x 9 x 1 inches, 128 pages, foil-stamped linen cloth on hardback case-bound cover, offset-printed interior pages with Smyth-sewn signatures, featuring 108 drawings sourced in verbatim fragments from the daily You Look Like The Right Type overheard conversation archive and spanning 10 years, 2018 printing. February 23, 2018: This is for Victor Hugo. (from the dailyYou Look Like The Right Type archive) Drawing using India ink pen on Bristol board, 7x11-inch, incorporating direct-quote dialogue from February 23, 2018 and drawn on the same day. November 24, 2018: You spend a lot of time judging yourself through other people’s eyes (from the daily You Look Like The Right Type archive) Drawing using India ink pen on Bristol board, 7x11-inch, incorporating direct-quote dialogue from November 24, 2018 and drawn on the same day. 00:00 - Introduction 00:39 - Mark Addison Smith 02:36 - Hide - Caracol 06:01 - Relationship of Language and Queer - Related Issues 10:36 - The Queer Writing on the Bathroom Wall 26:37 - Disembodied Language 37:43 - Wknd Frnds - The F16’s 41:13 - Outro 41:35 - Finish

David Richard Gallery Podcasts
Judy Chicago and Jonathan Katz discuss PowerPlay from Adobe Airstream

David Richard Gallery Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2017 4:25


In July, David Richard Gallery in Santa Fe will host “ReViewing PowerPlay,” a series of work created in the 1980's examining the construct of masculinity. When Judy began this series, she went to the library to research gender; the only material available then was entirely focused on women, as if only women have gender. It would be another decade before Women’s Studies evolved into Gender Studies and Queer Studies emerged, which created a new context for PowerPlay. Judy is thrilled that the catalog essay will be written by Dr. Jonathan Katz, director of the Visual Studies Doctoral Program at SUNY Buffalo, president of the Board of Directors of the Leslie/Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art in New York, and co-curator of the recent (and controversial) exhibition “Hide/Seek: Difference and Desire in American Portraiture," which premiered at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C., where it created quite a stir. In conjunction with the PowerPlay exhibition, Jonathan and Judy will hold a public conversation on Saturday, July 7th, at 3PM at the New Mexico Museum of Art in Santa Fe. When Jonathan and Judy first discussed the possibility of his writing for the catalog (because, as she told him, he was the perfect person for the job), he told me that even though he thought he was familiar with my work, he knew nothing at all about PowerPlay. When he perused the material, he commented that the series seemed both prescient and powerful, perhaps because it anticipated some of the theories about performing masculinity that would emerge from queer studies. It was interesting to think back about the antics of her male peers in the male-dominated Los Angeles art scene of the 1960's and realize that this is precisely what they were doing, i.e., performing their socialized notions about how a man should act.

Expanded Perspectives
Sight Beyond Sight

Expanded Perspectives

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2017 92:58


On this episode of Expanded Perspectives the guys start the show off talking about space junk. How big is the problem and what are we going to do about it. Few humans have ever stepped foot in space but as a species we've already managed to make a mess of Earth's backyard. Space junk from satellites and rockets is crowding out spacecraft and telecommunication satellites in Earth's orbit, and putting humans at risk. It's a big problem, and getting bigger every day. Then, robots can be terrifying all on their own, but stick a human being inside and give them control of the mechanical muscles that provide superhuman strength and you've got a recipe for a horror movie. South Korean robotics firm Hankook Mirae Technology has done exactly that, and its Method-2 robot just took its first steps towards world domination this week. The robot is just one year into development, but it's already a hulking beast that could give anyone nightmares. The bot stands over 13 feet tall and weighs over one and a half tons. Its sturdy metal arms weigh nearly 300 pounds each, and with its human-like hands it's a spitting image of the intimidating militarized robot suits that play a starring role in the sci-fi flick Avatar. Then, Greg Newkirk over on the Week In Weird posted a very interesting encounter a man had with the legendary "Hat Man" all the way back in 1969 somewhere in Northern Virginia. Then, a 12-year-old boy on Wednesday said he saw an unidentified biped he believes was a “Bigfoot” creature. The middle school student, who provided his identity but was kept anonymous as per the standard code of journalism ethics regarding disclosure of the identity of a minor, said he his brother were at a friend’s orchad in Beaverton when they allegedly spotted the animal. “It was probably around 6:30 p.m.,” he said. “The sun was going down and when I saw it, he pointed it out too.” The eyewitness claims he wasn’t sure what it was until he realized the familiar outline of a primate. “I think it was a Bigfoot. It was very large, about 7 feet tall. From where I was standing, it looked very tall.” After the break Cam and Kyle talk about the incredible Ingo Swann. INGO SWANN (September 14, 1933 - January 31, 2013) was internationally known as an advocate and researcher of the exceptional powers of the human mind, and as a leading figure in governmental and scientific projects to investigate and identify the scope of subtle human perceptions. Since 1970, his name and work have been incorporated into most contemporary books about PSI and the "paranormal." He was featured in four volumes of Time-Life's bestselling series entitled Mysteries of the Unknown. His contributive work has achieved broad media notice and been featured in every major American/British television documentary on the subject of PSI phenomena and Remote Viewing. Swann has been interviewed and/or profiled in dozens of magazines, including Time, Reader's Digest, Smithsonian and Newsweek. Swann's early work in parapsychology, as a noted and highly successful "guinea pig," made him a psychic superstar in that field. His subsequent research on behalf of American intelligence interests, including that of the CIA, won him top PSI-spy status. His involvement in government research projects required the discovery of innovative approaches toward the actual realizing of subtle human energies. He viewed PSI powers as only parts of the larger spectrum of human sensing systems. Swann was the author of over ten books. His publisher, Crossroad Press, is reissuing many titles as ebooks, audio books and paperback books, among them, Penetration: The Question of Extraterrestrial and Human Telepathy; Purple Fables; Psychic Sexuality; The Great Apparitions of Mary; The Wisdom Category; and Star Fire, with more to come. Ingo Swann was also a visionary artist and his exquisite works can be found at The American Visionary Art Museum, The Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, Edgar Cayce's Association for Research and Enlightenment (A.R.E.), The Leslie Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art, and ONE National Gay and Lesbian Archives at the USC Libraries. His extensive data base of writings on what he considered the Superpowers of the Human Biomind are available on this website in the Researcher section, while his collection of research, books and correspondences is housed within Special Collections, Ingram Library at the University of West Georgia. Thanks for listening to Expanded Perspectives! Show Notes: Space junk: How big is the problem and what are we going to do about it? This giant manned robot might patrol the North Korean border The Phantom Hat Man Came to Virginia, and He Brought Noisy Ghosts  A 12-year-old boy on Wednesday said he saw an unidentified biped he believes was a “Bigfoot” creature. Ingo Swann Write a Review for Expanded Perspectives  Sponsors: GAIA Music: All music for Expanded Perspectives is provided by Pretty Lights. Purchase, Download and Donate at www.prettylightsmusic.com. Songs Used: Pretty Lights vs. Led Zeppelin Lost and Found Starlit Skies All I've Ever Known

Sparkle & Circulate with Justin Sayre
Happy Pride with Robert W. Richards

Sparkle & Circulate with Justin Sayre

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2016 68:31


The I.O.S. welcomes famed artist Robert W. Richards - who has designed album covers for music luminaries like Peggy Lee, Lena Horne and Peter Allen - to talk about his new book "Seduction," a stunning collection of erotic illustrations. Richards regales us with stories of seeing Bette at the Baths, running away to Las Vegas with Dinah Washington, and his important work with the Leslie Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art. Also, Justin wishes the membership a great Pride and tells us about his new comedy album "The Gay Agenda."

Isnt It Queer
2014-08-13

Isnt It Queer

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2014 55:59


Stacy and Jonny interview Matt Limb, a graduate student in the School of Art and Design at SIU, who interned for the Leslie Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art in NYC this past summer. If you are a fan of this podcast, please support our radio station host, WDBX. This community radio station is in dire need of funds and may have to close its doors, likely ending shows (and podcasts) like "Isn't It Queer." If you are able and willing, please consider helping the station out either at the station website (http://www.wdbx.org/) or at this GoFundMe account: http://www.gofundme.com/cset1c

Isnt It Queer
2014-08-13

Isnt It Queer

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2014 55:59


Stacy and Jonny interview Matt Limb, a graduate student in the School of Art and Design at SIU, who interned for the Leslie Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art in NYC this past summer. If you are a fan of this podcast, please support our radio station host, WDBX. This community radio station is in dire need of funds and may have to close its doors, likely ending shows (and podcasts) like "Isn't It Queer." If you are able and willing, please consider helping the station out either at the station website (http://www.wdbx.org/) or at this GoFundMe account: http://www.gofundme.com/cset1c

Bad at Sports
Bad at Sports Episode 270: Tammy Rae Carland

Bad at Sports

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2010 70:12


This week: The kick off of a series of programs recorded at Baer Ridgway Exhibitions in San Francisco during BAS's mini residency as a guest of Chris Duncan during his "Eye Against I" exhibition. Brian and Duncan talk with Chris about the series, and then the main event Tammy Rae Carland! In addition to being a fascinating guest, Tammy is the only guest we've had who has a song written about them to utilize as their intro/outro clip (by the awesome band Bikini Kill no less). Bio lifted from Tammy's site: Tammy Rae Carland was born in Portland Maine in 1965. She received her MFA from UC Irvine, her BA from The Evergreen State College in Olympia Washington and attended the Whitney Independent Study Program. She is an Associate Professor at the California College of the Arts where she also Chairs the Photography Program. She is represented by Silverman Gallery in San Francisco and primarily works with photography, experimental video and small run publications. Her work has been screened and exhibited in galleries and museums internationally including New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Berlin and Sydney. Her photographs have been published in numerous books including The Passionate Camera; Queer Bodies of Desire and Lesbian Art in America. Her fanzine writing has been republished in A Girl’s Guide to Taking Over the World. She has also published photographs and received reviews of her work in numerous national media including: The New York Times, Big, The Los Angeles Times, Spin, Details, Out and The Village Voice. In the 1990’s Carland independently produced a series of influential fanzines, including I (heart) Amy Carter. She has collaborated on the record art of some seminal underground music releases for the bands Bikini Kill, The Fakes and The Butchies. From 1997-2005 she co-ran Mr. Lady Records and Videos, an independent record label and video art distribution company that was dedicated to the production and distribution of queer and feminist culture. Tammy Rae Carland lives in Oakland California.   PS: A hearty "Fuck You" to Libsyn and their crappy software. This is the third time I've written this. Turn off or down the "time out" function on your site, jerks.