Colombian artist
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El coordinador general de la ONG Provea, Oscar Murillo, explicó la importancia de la decisión de la ONU de prorrogar dos años más la misión que investiga las violaciones a los derechos humanos en Venezuela. Asegura que, de esta manera, se puede documentar la violación sistemática del Estado a los derechos de la ciudadanía. Además, la directora general de México Unido contra la Delincuencia, Lisa Sánchez, explicó en Conclusiones las novedades de la estrategia de seguridad de la presidenta Claudia Sheinbaum. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Luz Elena Mainero, Historiadora del Arte, nos cuenta más acerca del acervo pictórico de Banamex con alrededor de mil 500 obras; desde Hacienda Patrón, en Atotonilco el Alto, Jalisco, Eddy nos comparte una espetacular experiencia gastronómica ofrecida por Tequila Patron con el Chef Daniel Nuñez y el Mixólogo Oscar Murillo, todo esto y más con Eddy Warman de Noche.
Die Kunst von Oscar Murillo lässt zuerst ins Schwärmen und dann ins Tanzen kommen. Die Morgenandacht von Kirstin Faupel-Drevs.
What do Sterling Ruby, Oscar Murillo, Kennedy Yanko, and Aomoako Boafo have in common? Beyond being some of the most sought-after contemporary artists of the last decade, they are all veterans of the prestigious Rubell Museum Residency program. Helmed by its namesake founders, the mega-collecting duo Don and Mera Rubell, the residency program is something of a hit-maker—call it "the Rubell effect." Beyond minting art-market stars, the Rubells now have two museums, a 100,000 square-foot campus with more than 50,000 square-footage dedicated to galleries in Miami's Allapattah, and a newly opened 32,000-square-foot outpost in Southwest Washington D.C. The Rubell's art collecting began when they were newlyweds who would squirrel away $25 from Mera's teaching salary to put toward acquisitions while Don was in medical school. Now, along with their son Jason and daughter Jennifer, they own one of the largest private collections of contemporary art in the world, with more than 7,400 works of art by the likes of Kehinde Wiley, Jean-Michel Basquiat, and Catherine Opie. On the heels of their DC museum's grand opening, and just weeks before they will hold court at Art Basel in Miami Beach, Artnet News's senior reporter Katya Kazakina caught up with Don, Jason, and Mera to discuss the origins of their collection, the symbiotic relationship between art and real estate, and their famous Midas touch for sussing out the hottest emerging artists.
What do Sterling Ruby, Oscar Murillo, Kennedy Yanko, and Aomoako Boafo have in common? Beyond being some of the most sought-after contemporary artists of the last decade, they are all veterans of the prestigious Rubell Museum Residency program. Helmed by its namesake founders, the mega-collecting duo Don and Mera Rubell, the residency program is something of a hit-maker—call it "the Rubell effect." Beyond minting art-market stars, the Rubells now have two museums, a 100,000 square-foot campus with more than 50,000 square-footage dedicated to galleries in Miami's Allapattah, and a newly opened 32,000-square-foot outpost in Southwest Washington D.C. The Rubell's art collecting began when they were newlyweds who would squirrel away $25 from Mera's teaching salary to put toward acquisitions while Don was in medical school. Now, along with their son Jason and daughter Jennifer, they own one of the largest private collections of contemporary art in the world, with more than 7,400 works of art by the likes of Kehinde Wiley, Jean-Michel Basquiat, and Catherine Opie. On the heels of their DC museum's grand opening, and just weeks before they will hold court at Art Basel in Miami Beach, Artnet News's senior reporter Katya Kazakina caught up with Don, Jason, and Mera to discuss the origins of their collection, the symbiotic relationship between art and real estate, and their famous Midas touch for sussing out the hottest emerging artists.
Lo mejor de la música tropical y rítmica en inglés cortesía del RESTAURANTE TIKO PURA VIDA DE LAS VEGAS que te invita al concierto de OSCAR MURILLO trovador costarricense este 15 de Octubre www.elshowdetonyfranco.com
www.elshowdetonyfranco.com RESTAURANTE TIKO PURA VIDA te invita a celebrar EL MES DE LA HISPANIDAD con la actuación especial del trovador costarricense OSCAR MURILLO este 15 de Octubre. Ven a disfrutar de este concierto y los platillos auténticos costarricenses te esperamos
RESTAURANTE TIKO PURA VIDA DE LAS VEGAS te invita a saborear los ricos platillos de la cocina costarricense y a disfrutar la presentación de OSCAR MURILLO trovador "Tico" este 15 de Octubre mes de la Hispanidad www.elnoticoto.com/tikopuravida
www.elshowdetonyfranco.com RESTAURANTE TIKO PURA VIDA te invita a celebrar EL MES DE LA HISPANIDAD con la actuación especial del trovador costarricense OSCAR MURILLO este 15 de Octubre. Ven a disfrutar de este concierto y los platillos auténticos costarricenses te esperamos
RESTAURANTE TIKO PURA VIDA DE LAS VEGAS te invita a saborear los ricos platillos de la cocina costarricense y a disfrutar la presentación de OSCAR MURILLO trovador "Tico" este 15 de Octubre mes de la Hispanidad www.elnoticoto.com/tikopuravida
Helloooo,THE BRITISH ART SHOW IT HERE! AND I AM WORKING AS PART OF IT!So cool, I am invigilating, I have been working around the Caroline Walker, Oscar Murillo and Sean Edwards artworks; dope!Here is the British Art Show website!I have also been gifted another bursary! And I will soon be exhibiting my bursary work with Multistory!Socials:Instagram - @scarlettart18Website - scarlettford.co.uk - YOU CAN LISTEN TO THE POD FROM MY WEBSITE!!Linkedin - https://uk.linkedin.com/in/scarlett-ford-485795208Email - scarlettart18@gmail.comEdited on LumafusionMusic from Epidemic SoundsMic: Samson Q2Uif you listened, your dope,Happy Valentines Day too! You don't need anyone to spend it with hahaha, like I have someone this year to spend it with but it is all vibezzz not having anyone; like dude I usually celebrate with my parents hahaha!!!Oh yeah for anyone who's interested I have tore my ACL and my meniscus; vibezzzzz, looks like I will be doing a lot more of my other hobbies instead of sport... oh godddddd
And just like that… we're back and we made it past the previous episode! In one of our most thot provoking episodes yet, we discuss the new West Side Story, the Sex and the City reboot, House of Gucci, and take a look at some questionable writing on Oscar Murillo and O'Flaherty's.
Experiences of migration and displacement are finding exciting form in the work of Colombian artists. Their art offers possibilities for new identities, questioning the very idea of home. Presenter Maria Wills Londoño, director of Bogotá's Banco de la República art museum, meets migrant and displaced Colombian artists to explore art of the spaces ‘in-between'. Turner Prize-winner Oscar Murillo exhibits work around the globe, yet his starting-point is often family history. In the sound-piece My Name is Belisario, Oscar's father recounts his migration journey, offering a universal message within a personal tale. In the Cauca region, Maria meets Julieth Morales, an indigenous artist from the Misak community. Julieth uses Misak fabric known as chumbe to weave textiles combining indigenous and Western knowledge. The fabric is an expression of resistance: to survive, the Misak must accept the world beyond their community. Colombian artist Carolina Caycedo lives in Los Angeles, but returns to her homeland regularly. She grew up by the Magdalena river, which became a major focus in her work when she learned it was to be dammed. She uses fishing nets as a metaphor for a sustainable mode of environmental engagement. In Popayán, Maria visits performance artist Edinson Quiñones. His extreme, sometimes violent performances heal past trauma. He explains the piece which defines his career: the ritual removal of a tattoo dedicated to his grandmother. Image: A tattoo on the shoulders of Edinson Quiñones (Courtesy of Edinson Quiñones)
Farah Bashir, author of Rumours of Spring: A Girlhood in Kashmir, shares the particular challenges for girls growing up in a conflict zone. Bjorn Andresen, Swedish teenage star of the 1971 film, Death In Venice, talks about how being dubbed “the most beautiful boy in the world”, blighted his childhood. He's revisiting his early role and its impact on his life in a new documentary called The Most Beautiful Boy in the World. Japanese-American artist Ei Arakawa on his new artwork, Mega Please Draw Freely, at the Tate Modern gallery in London. It's breaking down the boundaries between artists and audience – with children and young people featuring strongly on both sides. And Turner Prize-winning Colombian artist Oscar Murillo and Argentinian political scientist Clara Dublanc on their collaboration with 100,000 international school children for their Frequencies exhibition in Hackney in London. Presenter - Chi Chi Izundu Producer - Paul Waters, Olivia Skinner, Kirsty McQuire (Photo: Farah Bashir. Credit: Shahbaz Khan)
Oscar Murillo talks to Ben Luke about the defining cultural experiences and influences of his life. Oscar first shot to fame in the art world with paintings that attracted huge attention in 2013—canvases with loose, scratchy, expressive marks, patches of pure colour, and daily dust and grime from the studio, scrawled with words such as "burrito", "yuka" and "chorizo". But he has also consistently made works in sculpture, installation, performance and film. At the heart of his work is an engagement with language, with the nature of labour and production, with the movement of people and with fluid cultural identities. He discusses his major project Frequencies, in which children from more than 350 schools in 34 countries across the world were sent canvases that were affixed to desks, so that children could draw and write on them, consciously or unconsciously, over several months—and how the project relates to his own work. He talks about his ongoing interest in class as well as race, in relation to his Colombian background. He picks out the artists and musicians that have most influenced him, discusses the dual influence of La Paila, the village in Colombia in which he grew up, and London, to which he emigrated when he was 11 and made his career in art. And he answers the questions we ask all our guests: what are the essential rituals in his working life? If he could live with just one work of art, what would it be? And what is art for? This episode is sponsored by ARTIKA.Links for this episode:Oscar Murillo at David ZwirnerFrequencies, presented by Artangel, until the 30 August 2021By Means of a Detour, a book co-published by Kettle's Yard in Cambridge and the Kunstverein in HamburgJannis Kounellis at Cheim & ReadDavid Hammons at MoMAMonet's Water-Lilies at l'Orangerie in Paris and Murillo's Surge paintings, made partly in responseHans Haacke's Der Pralinenmeister (The Chocolate Master)Our podcast, A brush with… Julie MehretuFela Kuti on Spotify and his song VIP (Vagabonds in Power) See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Our final attempt at a podcast for 2020, and we're trying to keep it fun-filled and Covid-free! We kick procedures off in traditional form for Christmas with a mostly art-based quiz.As it's a bit of a special episode we round up our favourite artist discoveries in 2020, we pin our hopes on new shows in 2021, and we couldn't resist but stir up drama with some art-world stories. The controversial Mary Wollstonecraft statue, the soft-opening of the Humboldt Forum in Berlin, and the frustration of a Kandinsky restitution claim.We were both a bit giddy about our final Artist Focus of 2020: it's the record-breaking Georgia O'Keeffe. Mother of American Modernism, she was plagued throughout her life by interpretations of her work as expressions of the female sex organ. But while she found success amongst the New York elite, she spent most of her life working in New Mexico, avoiding the city scene and the labels they attributed to her. Enjoy!SHOW NOTES:Salman Toor: https://www.salmantoor.com/ Hanna Hansdotter: https://www.instagram.com/hannahansdotter/ Daisy Parris: https://daisyparris.com/Hester Finch: http://www.hesterfinch.com/Doron Langberg: http://www.doronlangberg.com/Jules de Balincourt: https://julesdebalincourt.com/Oscar Murillo: https://www.davidzwirner.com/artists/oscar-murillo Sophie von Hellermann: https://www.pilarcorrias.com/artists/38-sophie-von-hellermann/Manon Steyaert: https://www.manonsteyaertart.com/Emin/Munch: Between the Clock and the Bed: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000q5zn Beyond the Visible - Hilma af Klint: https://www.modernfilms.com/hilmaafklint Klaus on Netflix: https://www.netflix.com/gb/title/80183187Happiest Season on Sky/Now TV: https://www.nowtv.com/watch/happiest-season-2020/A5EK5E17HwqyCtmaCdEkJJoana Vasconcelos 'Beyond' at Yorkshire Sculpture Park until 9 January 2022: https://ysp.org.uk/exhibitions/joanavasconcelosHenry Taylor at Hauser & Wirth Somerset 6 Feb - 6 June 2021: https://www.hauserwirth.com/hauser-wirth-exhibitions/30991-henry-taylor Bruce Nauman at Tate Modern until 21 February 2021: https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-modern/exhibition/bruce-naumanCece Phillips: Yayoi Kusama Infinity Mirror Rooms at Tate Modern 29 March 2021 - 27 March 2022: https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-modern/exhibition/yayoi-kusama-infinity-mirror-roomsJohn Nash 'The Landscape of Love and Solace' at Towner Eastbourne 1 May - 26 September 2021: https://www.townereastbourne.org.uk/exhibition/john-nash-the-landscape-of-love-and-solace/ Bridget Riley 'Pleasures of Sight' at Lightbox Woking 13 February - 16 May 2021: https://www.thelightbox.org.uk/bridget-riley-pleasures-of-sight'Alice: Curiouser and Curiouser' at the Victoria and Albert Museum from 27 March 2021: https://www.vam.ac.uk/exhibitions/alice-curiouser-and-curiouser Helen Frankenthaler 'Radical Beauty' at the Dulwich Picture Gallery 27 May - 28 November 2021: https://www.dulwichpicturegallery.org.uk/whats-on/exhibitions/2021/may/helen-frankenthaler-radical-beauty/Paula Rego at the Tate Britain 16 June - 24 October 2021: https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-britain/exhibition/paula-rego Maggi Hambling responds to statue critics: https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2020/nov/14/i-need-complete-freedom-maggi-hambling-responds-to-statue-critics Humboldt Forum in Berlin Finally Opens (Sort of): https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2020/nov/14/i-need-complete-freedom-maggi-hambling-responds-to-statue-critics Disputed Kandinsky won't be returned to Jewish heirs: https://www.dw.com/en/nazi-looted-art-trial-disputed-kandinsky/a-55957434 The Real Meaning of Georgia O'Keeffe's Flowers: https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-real-meaning-of-georgia-okeeffes-flowers-1467394564Georgia O'Keeffe 'A Life in Art' documentary: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UonkqMuOZgM
Episode summary: What is principal to an art institution when it comes to big commitments such as commissioning? To what extent museums can contribute to the discourse about socio-ecological emergencies and How to remain relevant if people can't physically visit the space? In this week's episode, Suad Garayeva-Maleki, the Artistic Director of YARAT Contemporary Art Space in Baku, Azerbaijan, dives into the interdisciplinary universe of a contemporary art institution and the Politics of Ecology, Social practice and Humanocentrism. In this bold and crucial conversation Suad talks about a museum as a place where people come together and think together, where international artists arrive to create a work in response to regional context in order to become easily translatable to the local communities, and where ambitious projects should be realised focusing on eco- aesthetics and critical social issues.About the speaker: Suad Garayeva-Maleki is the Artistic Director of YARAT Contemporary Art Space, Baku, Azerbaijan. YARAT is a not-for-profit institution with 3 exhibition venues, an international artist residency and a multidisciplinary public and education programme, including lectures, workshops, and festivals. Suad has worked on special commissions and projects by artists such as Goshka Macuga, Neil Beloufa, Hannah Black, Oscar Murillo, Vajiko Chachkhiani, Taus Makhacheva, Babi Badalov, Aida Mahmudova, Pedro Gomez-Egaña, Ilkin Huseynov, Zamir Suleymanov and others, as well as numerous thematic group shows. She also curated "The Union of Fire and Water"- YARAT's critically acclaimed Collateral Event at the 56th Venice Biennale in Palazzo Barbaro with Almagul Menlibayeva and Rashad Alakbarov. Her curatorial activity includes independent projects such as Mike Nelson's "Cloak" for Nouveau Musee National de Monaco (2016) and "It's OK to Change Your Mind: Contemporary Russian Art from the Gazprombank Collection" for MAMbo, Bologna (2018). Prior to joining YARAT in 2014, she was a specialist at Sotheby's London where she curated groundbreaking exhibitions “At The Crossroads: Contemporary Art from Caucasus and Central Asia” (2013) and “At The Crossroads 2: Art from Istanbul to Kabul” (2014), as well as heading up the “Contemporary East” sales. She was a faculty member at Istituto Europeo di Design Venice in 2015-2016 and is a PhD candidate at the European Graduate School, Saas Fee.Hosts: Farah Piriye and Elizabeth ZhivkovaSign up for ZEITGEIST19's newsletter at https://www.zeitgeist19.comFor sponsorship enquiries, comments, ideas and collaborations, email us at info@zeitgeist19.com
This episode of “Blind Contour” features recent AAM guest educator, Stacey Shelnut-Hendrick, and a brief conversation with our Learning Director, Rachel Ropeik! Listen to them talk about the practice of object-based learning, the role of museums in education, how museums interact within the community, and more! Also, be on the lookout for bonus content featuring an audio object-based learning section inside Oscar Murillo’s exhibition “Social Altitude”—coming soon!
¿Qué se esconde detrás de la Zona de Desarrollo Estratégico Nacional Arco Minero del Orinoco, mejor conocido como el Arco Minero? ¿Se trata de un revestimiento legal para el saqueo de nuestro oro y la destrucción del medio ambiente por parte de guerrilleros colombianos, disidentes de las ahora desmovilizadas Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (Farc) y miembros del Ejército de Liberación Nacional (ELN)? Las voces de la periodista Valentina Quintero @valendeviaje, el economista Asdrúbal Oliveros @aoliveros, el miembro de PROVEA, Oscar Murillo @oscarfmurillo, y las periodistas de investigación Lorena Meléndez @loremelendez y Clavel Rangel @ClavelRangel, responden estas interrogantes y revelan la tragedia que viven los habitantes de los estados Bolívar, Amazonas y Delta Amacuro, así como el impacto ambiental que ha sufrido la región generando ecocidio y muerte. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sincodigo/message
Comenzaremos la primera parte del programa hablando de un informe de la ONU que denuncia las violaciones de derechos humanos por parte de las autoridades en Chile; y del regreso del peronismo a la Argentina, ahora que Alberto Fernández asumió la presidencia. Hablaremos también de un nuevo “museo vivo” subacuático en las aguas de la República Dominicana; y para finalizar, del arresto de un hombre que se hizo pasar por su madre durante un examen de conducir. En el primer diálogo hablaremos del artista Oscar Murillo y su decisión de compartir el Premio Turner con los otros finalistas. Cerraremos la emisión hablando de “Un violador en tu camino”, el himno feminista latinoamericano que está causando sensación en las redes. - ONU denuncia violación de derechos humanos en Chile - Con Fernández, vuelve el peronismo a Argentina - República Dominicana abre “museo vivo” en el mar - Hombre se disfraza como su madre para examen de manejo - Óscar Murillo comparte el Premio Turner - Un himno feminista para América Latina
The art world has been up in arms this week as Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Helen Cammock, Oscar Murillo and Tai Shani were all announced as the winner of the Turner Prize. We talk to Louisa Buck about the decision and how it might change the award in the future. Plus, we talk to the Miami-born artist Teresita Fernández about her homecoming show at Pérez Art Museum Miami. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Nato is celebrating its 70th anniversary with a summit in Watford, but after all these years, are the threads of the alliance starting to fray? Donald Trump's cancelled a press conference after Canada's PM Justin Trudeau was caught on camera apparently gossiping about the US President. France is asking questions about America's commitment. The Leader Podcast speaks to the Evening Standard's US correspondent David Gardner.Also, Arts Correspondent Robert Dex speaks to the Leader after the Turner Prize was given to everyone on the shortlist. Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Helen Cammock, Oscar Murillo and Tai Shani formed a collective at the ceremony in Margate. Has the competition that likes to shock gone too far? See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The Boy in the Dress is a major new musical at the RSC in Stratford based on the book by David Walliams, with songs by Robbie Williams and Guy Chambers, a script by Mark Ravenhill and directed by Gregory Doran. With such a pedigree will it match the success of Matilda? Nick Ahad reviews. The Turner Prize is one of the biggest art prizes in the UK and offers £25,000 to its winner. Front Row goes to the Turner Contemporary in Margate where the Turner Prize exhibition is hosted this year to meet the nominees – Tai Shani, Laurence Abu Hamdan, Oscar Murillo and Helen Cammock - ahead of the winner announcement on the 3rd December. The Radio 4 Christmas Appeal with St Martin in the Fields will be launched on Sunday 1 December. This year, the fundraising gala at St Martin’s will include a performance of The First Nowell by Vaughan Williams with Radio 4 presenters, featuring a modified libretto by Zeb Soanes. He and Em Marshall-Luck, Founder-Director of The English Music Festival and former Chairman of the Vaughan Williams Society, discuss the delights of this rarely performed seasonal work. Presenter: Stig Abell Producer: Sarah Johnson
Investigating regeneration and gentrification, the Turner Contemporary, the 2019 Turner Prize exhibition, writer Maggie Gee on her novel Blood, & the town in literature. The seaside town of Margate has both struggled and thrived over the past two centuries – it thronged with holidaymakers from the Victorian era onwards but limped through the latter half of the 20th century and was one of the most deprived parts of the UK before the £17.5m Turner Contemporary opened in 2011. Many hoped that the new art gallery would spearhead change and eight years on there has clearly been growth – the town sometimes jokingly referred to as Shoreditch-on-Sea has been through a wave of gentrification, complete with the common trappings of independent cafés, vintage shops and yoga studios, frequented by an ever-growing artistic community bolstered by regular arrivals of Londoners fleeing the capital. Tourist numbers are up, with the Dreamland amusement park reopening and over 3.2m visitors to the Turner Contemporary reported since its launch. This narrative of a successful arts-led regeneration however ignores that fact that Margate remains in the top 1% of deprived communities in the country and in some wards around half of all children live in poverty. The painter JMW Turner once remarked of Margate that it had the ‘loveliest’ skies in Europe, but can they brighten prospects for the local community, as well as for the artists that flock there? As this year’s Turner Prize comes to Margate for the first time, Philip Dodd looks at whether the arts are a successful driver of regeneration, with Turner Contemporary Director Victoria Pomery and the social artist Dan Thompson, who has looked at people, place and change throughout his career. We reflect on the Turner Prize exhibition itself, and the work of shortlisted artists Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Helen Cammock, Oscar Murillo and Tai Shani. The exhibition runs at Turner Contemporary until January 12th and the winner is announced on December 3rd. The author Maggie Gee’s new novel Blood is set in Margate and the surrounding area of Thanet. A darkly comic crime thriller set in Brexit Britain East Kent where the political atmosphere bleeds into the action. Her imposing protagonist Monica is accused of murdering the tyrannical patriarch of her family – a situation complicated by the fact she’s armed with an axe ready to do just that, when she finds her father’s body. Maggie tells us about Blood and how the local area is a perfect canvas for the story. Margate is hosting several events as part of Being Human, the UK’s national festival of the humanities which runs from November 14th to the 23rd – you can find more information on their website https://beinghumanfestival.org/ Literary historian Professor Carolyn Oulton is hosting a Murder Mystery trail in Margate for Being Human, amongst other things, and has been studying seaside towns in literature during the railway age. She gives us a view of Margate from the Victorian era – a bustling, promiscuous, populist place full of tourists – and the kind of stories set there. Crime and romance reads for the beach did particularly well for the holiday market, with works like Love in a Mist and Death in a Deckchair key tomes in the Margate canon. Producer: Karl Bos
Dialogues | A podcast from David Zwirner about art, artists, and the creative process
This episode pairs artist Oscar Murillo with the editor Charles Henry Rowell for a conversation about class, race, art, and the African cultural diaspora that is one part history lesson and one part personal history. Murillo is short-listed for the 2019 Turner Prize and Rowell is the founder and editor of Callalloo, the longest continuously running African-American literary journal. The Turner Prize exhibition runs through January 12, 2020, at Turner Contemporary in Margate, UK. (The winner will be announced on December 3.) Read more about Callaloo here.
This week: Receding hairlines with Rami, "you're all breathtaking", Juneteenth Reparations hearing with Ta-Nehisi Coates "150 years ago and today", Prank Encounters with the new Kutch, Patrick Stewart's Kelly Ann Conway drag, Oscar Murillo at The Shed, Rob's always looking out for a future ex Mrs. Robinson, E3 games and discussion (What's an expo?), Gena Davis is back or never left?, Mindy Kaling is definitely trying to be cast as Ms Marvel, Harry Potter Wizards Unite is NOT a movie, Paul Sparks on House of Cards disappointment, I AM MOTHER review, and lots of comments!And a Men In Black International (meh) review.- SharonJuneteenth Reparations Discussion: 8:00E3: 40:00What We Into: 1:15:45Men In Black International Review: 1:22:30Comments: 1:56:00 Music Credit: Dj QuadsTrack Name: "Summer Time"Music By: Dj Quads @ https://soundcloud.com/aka-dj-quadsOriginal upload HERE - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-T5GF...• Music promoted by NCM: https://goo.gl/fh3rEJ 8-bit Evil by Heatley Bros MusiciTunes :https://goo.gl/M3b16fSpotify: https://goo.gl/5SbVukLicense:https://goo.gl/jadB5ETwitter: https://goo.gl/fKqyrjDiscord: http://discord.gg/F2pxtgYFacebook: https://goo.gl/PrsTvSPicard Song by Dark MateriaDownloadable from: http://rapidshare.com/files/155535295...https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/what-we-into/id1447059928?mt=2https://open.spotify.com/show/3rFe0yta57HAtwHsEk5KOT?si=PxZYWWSZTeezLqQO8Z8Ruwhttps://www.patreon.com/Whatweintohttps://www.facebook.com/whatweinto/https://twitter.com/dial_lawrencehttps://www.instagram.com/whatweintopodcast/Email us: whatweinto@gmail.comSupport the show (http://patreon.com/whatweinto)
We talk to two artists of different generations as they open new London shows. Howardena Pindell discusses the use of the circle in her abstract paintings, its origins in segregation in the US and the resistance to her art that she encountered among her peers. And Oscar Murillo reflects on his journey from rural Colombia to the UK, its effect on his multifarious art and why it's only now that he's doing a pure painting show for the first time. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Además, en ‘Al cierre’: qué dice el nuevo testigo en caso de porrista de Millonarios asesinada. Hoy, el tema clave gira en torno a la tensión internacional que vuelve a encenderse entre Estados Unidos y Corea del Norte, tras el episodio de la incautación de un barco norcoreano por autoridades estadounidenses que estaría violando los acuerdos y moviendo ilegalmente recursos mineros. Ahora, Kim Jong-Un amenaza con nuevas pruebas de misiles, como no lo hacía hace meses, lo que se convierte en un nuevo episodio entre el líder asiático y el presidente Donald Trump. Eduard Soto, editor de la sección Internacional, discute con Carlos Solano, editor en EL TIEMPO, los alcances que podría tener este panorama y si es posible una vía diplomática. El caso de Luisa Fernanda Ovalle, porrista del equipo Millonarios que fue asesinada hace ya casi cuatro años, ha conmovido a los colombianos y dejado el sinsabor de la justicia que no llega. Pero este jueves, en una audiencia, fue presentado un nuevo testigo que ratifica la versión del otrora único testigo del incidente y quien había sido desvirtuado por estar posiblemente en estado de embriaguez. Conozca aquí, a través del relato de Oscar Murillo, periodista de la sección Bogotá, los nuevos detalles que se conocen y que podrían dar un giro. ‘British power’: poder absoluto el de los equipos ingleses en el fútbol europeo este año, al ratificar este jueves que Arsenal y Chelsea jugarán la final de la Liga Europea, mientras que Liverpool y Tottenham disputarán la final de la Champions. Cuatro equipos ingleses demuestran el poderío de la Premier League. Así lo comenta Gabriel Meluk, editor de deportes, acerca de los resultados de esta jornada. En lo que viene, conciertos de dos gigantes de la música clásica: el chelista Yo Yo-Ma, en Medellín, y el director Simon Rattle, junto a la Orquesta Sinfónica de Londres, en Bogotá y Medellín. El periodista cultural Yhonatan Loaiza explica lo que significa la venida de estas figuras a Colombia.
Music legend Dionne Warwick discusses her new record “She’s Back”, artist Oscar Murillo talks us through his new exhibition “Violent Amnesia”, and David Coles talks about his new book “Chromatopia”.
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