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Welcome to the latest episode of Lunch with Shelley featuring our very special guest Beth Solomon – founder of the Georgetown Dish and author of the very fun read Dishy Dollups from the World's Most Important Neighborhood. Along with Claude we're at the iconic Martin's Tavern tucked into the Madeleine Albright booth, and we have a very joyous lunch to share with you!Pull up a seat and try some bubbling Welsh Rarebit as we discuss all things Georgetown, travel, the importance of friendships and even a love story!Check us out at www.lunchwithshelley.com or wherever you get your favorite podcast, and in the meantime, Peace, Love and Lunch!
This week the hosts discuss why people may be forgetting their COVID pandemic memories, and they examine new research that shows refined carbs and red meat are driving a global […]
This week the hosts discuss why people may be forgetting their COVID pandemic memories, and they examine new research that shows refined carbs and red meat are driving a global […]
Jordan North and William Hanson are an unlikely pair. They met at the BBC in 2012 and walked away assuming it would be a one-off. However, fate had other plans and today they are best friends and present a very successful podcast together called Help I Sexted My Boss. Each week, their listeners share hilarious dilemmas and Jordan and William respond with very different advice. The duo now have a sold-out tour and a companion book out. Jordan North has recently left Radio 1 to take over the Capital breakfast show and William Hanson is the UK's number 1 etiquette expert. Angela prepares a moreish Rarebit Mac ‘n' Cheese for her hungry guests who are speechless after just one mouthful. The dish is paired with a Bourgogne Blanc Marc Dudet, a refreshing chardonnay chosen by the experts at Waitrose and just to William's taste. Jordan opts instead for a can of Guinness. Talk around the table turns to etiquette right away and William is on hand with all the facts. Our foursome chat about restaurants and family - and listen out for the culinary surprise that Nick and Angela have in store for Jordan at the end of the meal. Just so you know, our podcast might contain the occasional mild swear word or adult theme. All recipes from this podcast can be found at waitrose.com/dishrecipes A transcript for this episode can be found at waitrose.com/dish We can't all have a Michelin star chef in the kitchen, but you can ask Angela for help. Send your dilemmas to dish@waitrose.co.uk and she'll try to answer in a future episode. Dish is a S:E Creative Studio production for Waitrose Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Destination Celebration | Presented By National Day Calendar
Welcome to Destination Celebration, your passport to everyday festivities! Join hosts Marlo Anderson and Latoya Johnson as they explore two distinct celebrations. First, it's all about precision and camaraderie on U.S. Bowling League Day. Bowling enthusiasts unite as they aim for strikes and spares in the spirit of healthy competition. Whether you're a casual bowler or a league champion, this day celebrates the joy of rolling a perfect game. In the second part of the show, the hosts savor the cheesy and flavorful world of National Welsh Rarebit Day. They explore the history of this delectable dish and share some mouthwatering facts about this classic British comfort food. Join Marlo and Latoya as they take you on a journey through the lanes and kitchens, celebrating sportsmanship and culinary delights. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Paloma et Elodie Petit commentent le couronnement du roi Charles III, un prétexte pour revivre le couronnement de la reine de France, et se gaver de cheddar trempé dans de la bière.Musique Hornyclafoutis Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
This week the hosts discuss why people may be forgetting their COVID pandemic memories, and they examine new research that shows refined carbs and red meat are driving a global rise in type 2 diabetes. Plus, they share a tasty brunch recipe for Welsh Rarebit.
This week the hosts discuss why people may be forgetting their COVID pandemic memories, and they examine new research that shows refined carbs and red meat are driving a global rise in type 2 diabetes. Plus, they share a tasty brunch recipe for Welsh Rarebit.
The Gents are back and in person together in the greatest city in the world. Benjamin and Nate report on a very special lunch in New York by St. JOHN sponsored by Drake's - it took Fergus and Co to get Mr. Godsill to Brooklyn. And of course all the gossip from the art world in London, New York, LA, Costa Rica and BEYOND. All that AND MORE on THE ONLY ART PODCAST --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/benjamin-godsill/support
Lexman tells the story of Natalya Bailey and her attempts to Chromolithograph a rarebit.
Welcome to September 3rd, 2022 on the National Day Calendar. Today we celebrate poor man's rabbit and a party on the go. We all know that nicknames have a way of sticking with us. Take the name “Welsh Rarebit” for example. This basic dish of toasted wheat bread with cheddar cheese sauce contains no actual rabbit and was originally called caws pobi in 16th Century Wales. The English dubbed the meal Welsh Rarebit towards the end of the 18th century as a nod to “poor man's rabbit.” Apparently the Welsh didn't mind a bit of ribbing as this traditional fare is still a pub favorite. On National Welsh Rarebit Day try a bite of something classically delicious and raise a pint to the Welsh who know how to take a joke. With Fall in the air, the season of tailgating officially begins. For most folks this coincides with football but it seems the tradition has earlier roots. Some have suggested that the spectators of the Battle of Bull Run in 1861 were the first tailgaters. They reportedly arrived with their picnic baskets and bottles of claret to watch the “opposing teams.” This only proves that you don't need a truck or a tailgate to enjoy the tradition of sharing a meal outside before the advent of the big game. Grab the portable grill and some drinks and snacks and head to the stadium. Most people like the casual potluck feel of this gathering where the only rule is “come hungry!” And if you're feeling fancy, go all in with face painting. On National Tailgating Day, enjoy this party on the go that's guaranteed to draw a crowd. I'm Anna Devere and I'm Marlo Anderson. Thanks for joining us as we Celebrate Every Day. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This time we learn about the life and times of equality campaigner Martha P Johnson. We hear from Madonna and Stuart Price on the making of Hung Up and we also chat about Queer Britain, the new LGBTQ+ permanent exhibition in London, Btw in case you're wondering about the podcast pic with the cheese toasty, all is revealed in the Podcast Extra Bits Remember you can catch up with the latest via @ThisisNDebz on Twitter. If you'd like to get in touch with the show you can email us via thisisNDebz@gmail.com or message us via www.facebook.com/NDebzOfficial
Dava Newman is a relief artist and accomplished yttrium collector. She tells us about the things she collects, how she finds them, and the unique challenges of working with this unusual material.
Chris Lappin is joined by Bolton Town Wrestling General Manager Lucas Jackson. Lucas promotes Bolton Town Wrestling GOLD RUSH on 22nd April at Ellesmere Road Recreation Centre in Bolton. Mega Main Event which see both the BTW and GTM Titles being defended when BTW champion Rarebit and GTM champion Gareth Angel meet in a Triple Threat 2-fall match. The third competitor will be decided in a 10 man gold rush battle royal (5 gtm/5 btw) with the winner will be added to the main event and be in with the chance of becoming a double champion. Lucas also discusses the history of some feuds that are coming to a head at Gold Rush, how the BTW and GTM partnership came about, BTW champion Rarebit title history and his own Wrestling Journey. Get your tickets here for Gold Rush on Friday 22nd April in Bolton www.skiddle.com/e/36027504/ Follow Lucas - Instagram - instagram.com/lucas_jackson_wres…gshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y= Follow BTW Instagram - instagram.com/boltontownwrestlin…gshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y= Twitter - twitter.com/Boltonwrestling?t=D…1aigfyR8ytY45w&s=09 Facebook - www.facebook.com/BoltonTownWrestling/ Follow GTM Instagram - instagram.com/gtministriesuk?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y= --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/britwres-journey/message
Chris Lappin is joined by Bolton Town Wrestling General Manager Lucas Jackson. Lucas promotes Bolton Town Wrestling GOLD RUSH on 22nd April at Ellesmere Road Recreation Centre in Bolton. Mega Main Event which see both the BTW and GTM Titles being defended when BTW champion Rarebit and GTM champion Gareth Angel meet in a Triple Threat 2-fall match. The third competitor will be decided in a 10 man gold rush battle royal (5 gtm/5 btw) with the winner will be added to the main event and be in with the chance of becoming a double champion. Lucas also discusses the history of some feuds that are coming to a head at Gold Rush, how the BTW and GTM partnership came about, BTW champion Rarebit title history and his own Wrestling Journey. Get your tickets here for Gold Rush on Friday 22nd April in Bolton https://www.skiddle.com/e/36027504/ Follow Lucas - Instagram - https://instagram.com/lucas_jackson_wrestling?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y= Follow BTW Instagram - https://instagram.com/boltontownwrestling?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y= Twitter - https://twitter.com/Boltonwrestling?t=DbeFqt801aigfyR8ytY45w&s=09 Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/BoltonTownWrestling/ Follow GTM Instagram - https://instagram.com/gtministriesuk?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y=
Lucas Jackson, General Manager of Bolton Town Wrestling, tell us about the events that have led to their upcoming show Gold Rush. Find out about how Lucas was hospitalised by Jack Johnson, the Maverick open challenge, how Helana Razor has ended up in a date match with Jack Roberts and the epic women's triple threat match which will see the wrestling debut of Hasley Rose. Lucas also shares the history of some blood feuds that are coming to a head at Gold Rush, how the BTW and GTM rumble came about from which the winner, in breaking news after the recording, will be added to the 2 fall main event with BTW champion Rarebit and GTM champion Gareth Angel where both titles will be on the line. Get your tickets here for Gold Rush on Friday 22nd April in Bolton https://www.skiddle.com/whats-on/Bolton/Ellesmere-Road-Recreation-Club/BTW-Gold-rush/36027504/ Follow here: @lucas_jackson_wrestling (instagram) @boltontownwrestling (instagram and facebook) @Boltonwrestling (twitter) @helana_razor (instagram) @HelanaRazor (twitter)
It's another week where Sam has let the guys run roughshod over the internet and we know how that can work. Nate and Huw decided to dive into some of the weird things you can find when it comes to sports. This somehow will lead us into military service. Then we get into word phrases and how things are said. Trust me there is a connection to this madness. Who doesn't want to talk about the billionaire class and the fun toys they get to have. Either way, we had a fun time talking about the nonsense of life with everything else going on in the world. We hope you are safe out there and enjoy the day.
A l'occasion de la St David's day, la fête nationale du Pays de Galles, Rosie revient pour nous régaler avec un plat dont les origines sont un peu floues mais que nous associons tout naturellement avec ce pays celte! Nous n'allons pas tenter de vous expliquer ce qu'est "l'eisteddfodau", aussi associé avec cette fête, mais un plat beaucoup plus simple à prononcer. Quoi que… Rosie a rencontré son amour dans le pré il y a 6 ans lors d'un stage d'affinage en France et depuis, elle s'est mariée avec son agriculteur. Aujourd'hui elle s'occupe des chèvres et des vaches près de Roanne où elle fabrique aussi des fromages. Elle nous a parlé de la fabrication du cheddar la dernière fois et c'est de nouveau ce fromage que nous allons honorer dans cet épisode. Welsh Rarebit ou Welsh Rabbit est le plat du jour mais s'agit-il d'un plat à base de lapin ou de fromage? That is the question! Et nous n'avons pas fini avec les faux pas culinaires de Rosie non plus!
Matthew Rhys Evans and Capt. Kelli Farwell stop by to discuss the ongoing restoration of Rarebit, a 1939 Wheeler Playmate, which is available for charter around New York City.
This week we have a delectable blend of deep grooves and dreamy selections from our friend Codiss, a true master of his craft, enjoy! -- Follow @Codiss www.instagram.com/Codiss www.instagram.com/Plantiss_ -- "Growing up attending electronic music festivals in Southern California, Codiss expresses an understanding of DJing and rhythm assembly of an industry professional well beyond his years. With a warm, jazzy, eclectic style and quality taste, his sets can range from 90's house and disco to deep, groovy, melodic sounds and break-beats." -- Tracklist: 1. Jad & The - Bells Creek Road | @jad-lee 2. Ebende - unrivaled | @ebende 3. Capeesh society - shumbling in | @capeeshsociety 4. Etienne de crecy- prix choc | @etienne-de-crecy 5. Retro migration- another turn | @retromigration 6. Coral O'Connor - jynx | @coraloconnor 7. Traumer - quanta | @traumer 8. Sofia kourtesis - by your side | @sofia-kourtesis 9. Ricky Razu - drift | @rickyrazu 10. Joren Edwards - combo | @jorenedwards 11. Charlie banks - don't trip | @charliebanks 12. Rarebit - camellia | @jdnls-1 13. Sebastian Ledher - brick lane mood | @sebastian-ledher 14. Eastwood , Akyra- 304 | @eastwood_3 @dj-akyra 15. Earth boys - canal st blues | @earthboys 16. Phil Asher - 6AMSTAR | @philasherofficial 17. S.d.j - fly high 18. Roy green & Protone feat. joaku - arrive | @roygreen 19. LTJ Bukem - Rhodes To freedom | @ltj-bukem 20. Moomin - move on | @moomin 21. Glen e ston - minimal session | @gleneston 22. future engineers - time shift | @future-engineers 23. Janeret - thorb | @janeret 24. Deepest sound , j rokka - game changer | @jrokka 25. Dub size - time lapse | @dub-size 26. Random movement - cylindrical | @randommovement 27. Roni size, reprazent- trust me | @ronisize 28. Future 3 - the boy from west Bronx
Are You A Fan Of Caw Pobi? Welcome to September 3rd, 2021 on the National Day Calendar. Today we celebrate poor man's rabbit and team spirit. We all know that nicknames have a way of sticking with us. Take the name “Welsh Rarebit” for example. This basic dish of toasted bread with cheese sauce contains no actual rabbit and was originally called caws pobi in 16th Century Wales. The countrymen loved it so much that a joke sprang up at the time. It was said that God asked St. Peter to get rid of the Welsh from heaven as they were causing too much trouble. St. Peter stepped outside and yelled “caws pobi!” and the Welshmen all came out at once. The English dubbed this dish Welsh Rarebit towards the end of the 18th century as a nod to “poor man's rabbit.” On National Welsh Rarebit Day try a bite of something classically delicious and raise a pint to the Welsh who don't mind a bit of ribbing. Fall is back and with it comes college football. The season can lead to heated arguments as friends and families cheer on their favorite teams. This fierce team loyalty even extends to the US Armed Forces. Army and Navy are usually on the same side. Except for once a year when the Army-Navy matchup takes place—possibly the fiercest rivalry in college sports. These teams have gone head to head 121 times, with the Navy winning 61 of them. Even sitting Presidents have attended the games between the Army Black Knights and the Navy Midshipmen, and the stands are usually full of either black, gold and gray or navy blue and gold. On National College Colors Day, celebrate your team spirit with the colors of your choice. I'm Anna Devere and I'm Marlo Anderson. Thanks for joining us as we Celebrate Every Day.
Jean had a RAREBIT of an issue with today's crossword, but it was nothing MAJOR. Mike, meanwhile, was intrigued by 17A, Marine inhabitant that's an animal, not a plant, despite what it's called, SEACUCUMBER, and appreciated its location in the grid near what it clearly was a case of -- 1A, Negative media coverage, in brief, BADPR. One clue that stood out, was the delicious (and crossing RAREBIT, especially well-placed) 10D, Olio di ______ (bread dip at a trattoria), OLIVA. Sounds delicious, or as yesterday's crossword would have us say in modern slang, NOMS!
John Adamson is the founder and owner of Neon Tiger, a cool, hip, concept-driven restaurant and bar in Charleston, SC. If you are in the area - you have to visit! Neon Tiger just won The Best New Restaurant in Charleston. And if know anything about the food scene and the level of competition there, you know that goes a long way. Neon Tiger is located right on Kings street, has a remarkable and tastefully crafted drink menu... And oh wait... it just happens to be vegan!John Adamson is a visionary. Since he started his first restaurant in 2001 - a Mellow Mushroom - he opened 10 restaurants and bars, with the last few being The Rarebit and The Americano.Neon Tiger, his latest creation, is a glitch in the matrix. Set in 2048, when the oceans are dead, and most wild animals are extinct, Neon Tiger represents a beacon of hope, a call to action, and a price we should not want to pay for our taste preferences today. If you walk through the restaurant you will notice subtle and very powerful messages displayed in every element of the design.In this conversation John shares his story, career, transition to veganism and approach to activism. We talk in detail about the concept behind Neon Tiger and what it symbolizes, we discuss our experiences with veganism, and our values. Join the conversation!Follow John and Neon Tiger:Neon Tiger: @neon_tiger_John: @chephotelWebsite: neontiger.com
Next stop on our virtual holiday tour is Wales. We make Welshcakes and Rarebit, and talk about past holidays to Wales.
The one and only Rarebit is interviewed! Hit me up: email:datanodeonepodcast@gmail.com Discord: DeaconBlue#9567 Twitter:DataNodeOne Instagram:DataNodeOne --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/datanodeone/support
Velšská pochoutka, ke které nesmí chybět pravé černé irské pivo Guinness. Exkluzivně pro stanici Český rozhlas Dvojka připravil Roman Vaněk.
MIXED BY: KevinMa // GENRE: Tech House, Minimal, Deep Tech // PLAYING TRACKS BY: Pra Jescu, Rarebit, ANOTR, Bassel Darwish, Nicola D'Angella, Alberto Dimeo, Daniel Palmas and more. ›› fb.me/djkevinma
Dream Of A Rarebit Fiend by Edwin S. Porter
Featuring Professor Timothy A. Davis! // Professor Davis's playlist: Take On Me - a-ha / This Night - Billy Joel / Waterloo - ABBA / Saved By Love - Amy Grant / The Great Adventure - Steven Curtis Chapman / Seize The Day - Carolyn Arends / Walking on Sunshine - Katrina and the Waves
Tunde Adebimpe is a musician, actor, director, and visual artist best know for being the frontman of the band TV On The Radio. Kim Dorland is a painter and artist based in Vancouver, Canada.
This week travel editor Rhiannon chats to digital editor Alex about her recent trip to Miami. She reveals the best places to eat and drink on glitzy South Beach as well as other neighbourhoods such as edgy Wynwood and vibrant Little Havana. Then later on Janine catches up with food writer Anna Glover to find out how to use beer as an ingredient in cooking, including a brilliant recipe for cheesy rarebit roasties. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Mia Bergeron is a figurative oil painter that oscillates between classical and expressionistic painting. Rooted in her upbringing in New York City with continuous exposure to modern art, her paintings also reveal her choice to study classical painting in Florence, Italy under Charles H. Cecil in her twenties. Heavily influenced by historical artists such as Diego Velázquez, Titian, Anthony van Dyck and John Singer Sargent, her paintings are also shaped by current artists such as Alex Kanevsky, Ann Gale, and Adrian Ghenie. Mia’s education was rooted in formal portraiture from life- she spent thousands of hours painting people and watching tweaks in eyebrows, mouths that shifted with fatigue, shoulders that grew heavy. These changes were minuscule, and yet were the markings and delineations of time. She is enamored with the nuance, variation, and subtlety that observation provides. Although narrative has been an undercurrent in Mia’s work for years, it is only recently, after being consumed with the purely visual tools she continues to discovered, that she has made it her focus. Mia has been published numerous times in international magazines. Her paintings have placed repeatedly in both national and international competitions, notably in The Portrait Society of America’s International Portrait Competition (2013, 2015). She has participated in the traveling museum show “Women Painting Women”. She has also tried her hand as curator for the successful show “Unfurl” at Gallery 1261 in Denver in 2015. She has served as advanced painting adjunct professor at the University of Tennessee, Chattanooga, and is a continuing instructor through Townsend Atelier, also in Chattanooga, where she resides. Topics Discussed In This Episode: How Justin and Mia met Death of a Coworker The currency of respect How Mia got into figurative painting Mia growing up in NYC Introverted vs. extroverted tendencies How Mia got into oil painting An artist vs. a painter’s mindset Painting as a meditative practice Quitting painting then returning to it years later with a fresh perspective The necessity for a compulsion to create art The symptom of a true calling Work-a-holism and obsession “The Pool Filter Analogy” Addressing fear Transcending grief and fear www.artistdecoded.com
Artist and curator Justin Hopkins joins me on Synchronicity to discuss the essence of the artist. http://www.nohwave.co/ http://rarebitprojects.com/ https://www.instagram.com/_lo_collective/ https://soundcloud.com/alphapup
"Making pictures is one of the earliest memories I recall. Before learning to write the alphabet I was drawing from my imagination in crayons. And over all the years that followed, there has never been a period where I didn’t continue the practice. I remember for example just after graduating high school and living on my own as a dishwasher with no ambitions in life but to get drunk and high. But when the party was over I would be in the kitchen of a house I didn’t live in, drawing past dawn. Or even when I was a student at the University of California Berkeley, on my way towards a corporate life, having never conceived even the possibility where art could be a profession, I filled my notebooks not with words from lectures, but with sketches of teachers and classmates. And though later I would become a ‘professional artist’, I sometimes look back at such moments if confused with the roots of my creativity. It started purely as an act of autonomy, where nothing outside myself influenced or affected it. I simply drew because I enjoyed it above all else. Sure, like anyone I’ve had plenty of typical life experiences that have brought their own joy, but nothing compares in consistency and meaningfulness that making art has provided. Even during those unavoidable periods with living that challenges us most, drastic life change/loss/death, art has functioned as a medium with giving meaning to suffering, transforming it into an experience with healing. This I hope, begins to describe the art I make. The drawings and paintings you see on this site, are similar to snapshots with the lens pointed in Life's direction with penetrating force. I hope you enjoy any of what's reflected back. Thanks for visiting." - Akira Beard Topics Discussed In This Episode: Identity His Japanese American heritage Akira’s self portraiture work where he addressed the theme of identity The idea of “self, culture, nature” Self-realization The Buddhist concept of impermanence The difference between a technician and a fine artist “The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying” The enigma of love His body of artwork called “Love In Spite of Everything” His 4 year path of discovery Marcus Aurelius Stoicism Daily rituals Anais Nin www.artistdecoded.com
Steve Kim is an artist and illustrator. Born in Seoul, Korea, he immigrated to the states at the age of two and currently resides in Oxford, Mississippi. He received his undergraduate degree from Art Center College of Design in 2006 and his masters from Claremont Graduate University in 2010. He has shown in Korea, Italy, London, Amsterdam, Krakow and throughout the United States and clients include The Outline, FRAMƎ, Matter/Medium, Adobe, Hohe Luft, The New Republic, Arc/New Scientist, and The Verge. His work has been featured in print in Quiet Lunch, New American Paintings, Computer Arts, Beautiful Decay, PRINT Magazine, and American Illustration and online on Hi-Fructose, Juxtapoz, BOOOOOOOM!, The Fox Is Black, Supersonic Art, and Tumblr's Radar. Most recently he completed a 3 month residency at the Red Bull House of Art in Detroit. www.artistdecoded.com
Colin Chillag, born in 1971, is a painter based out of Phoenix, AZ. Topics Discussed In This Episode: Personal approaches to creating artwork Meditation The challenges of commercialization Realism Painting from found photographs Colin’s “girlfriend” series Black Mirror Ray Kurzweil Museum of Jurassic Technology Psychedelics The realities of being an artist www.artistdecoded.com www.nohwave.bigcartel.com
Casey Gleghorn grew up in Williamsport, Pennsylvania. He is the Director @ Booth Gallery and Last Rites Gallery in New York City. He has been a gallery owner/director for over 9 years, has curated international museum exhibitions, and currently works with various international established and emerging artists. Topics Discussed In This Episode: How he became the director of Booth Gallery Jesse Draxler Richard Prince Stress and overworking Creating balance in your life Meditation NOH/WAVE Modern technology effecting the way galleries operate Extinction of the mid-tier gallery Artist run spaces Adapting to the changes in the art market Eric Lacombe Odd Nerdrum Social media marketing for artists Casey’s opinion on art fairs Remembering Gregorio Escalante www.artistdecoded.com www.nohwave.bigcartel.com
Ian Daniel is a filmmaker, producer, writer, and curator. He is the Co-host and Executive Producer of the Emmy-nominated television show GAYCATION on VICELAND, where he and actress Ellen Page explore LGBTQ culture around the world. He is currently in post-production on a feature-length documentary film he directed and is developing other documentary, television, and art projects. Daniel is also the former Director of Artistic Programs at The Civilians, a theater company in NYC that derives their work from intensive investigations into today’s vital questions, on topics such as death, crime in the US, LGBTQ issues, the porn industry, and the Women’s Prison in Bogota Colombia. As a curator, he has organized several exhibits and multimedia events at Eyebeam Art and Technology Center, Exit Art, LaMaMa Gallery, Storefront Bushwick and the Waterpod Project in NYC and Brooklyn. www.artistdecoded.com nohwave.bigcartel.com
Dave Elitch first garnered attention with his band Daughters of Mara’s debut album “I am Destroyer” in 2007, but his time touring with the American progressive rock band The Mars Volta in 2009-2010 is what really put him on the map. He has since worked with Miley Cyrus, Justin Timberlake, M83, The 1975, Juliette Lewis, Big Black Delta, as well as many others. He is a regular in the LA session scene, including performing on various records, syncs and film scores for major motion pictures, (most recently “Trolls” and “Logan.”) In addition to playing, he also conducts master-class lectures worldwide and keeps a busy private teaching practice in Los Angeles where he has developed a reputation as THE technique/body mechanic specialist who has helped many of the industries top players as well as educators. “Ever since I decided that I was going to be a drummer, I wanted to be the best I could possibly be, and I put all my faculties toward that. Eventually that can take a toll, so I kind of hit a wall and needed a break. I’ve always had an appreciation for art, and luckily where I live in LA there are all these rad galleries – the Getty, the Hammer, Thinkspace, C.A.V.E., Giant Robot – so I frequent those. I get a different vantage point on the creative experience. I started getting inspired by documentaries about artists, like The Radiant Child about Jean-Michel Basquiat, Rivers and Tides about Andy Goldsworthy, the Gerhard Richter documentary Painting, Francis Bacon movies on YouTube… It’s just such a fascinating take on making sense of the world around you. Plus, I’ve dedicated my life to knowing all there is to know about drums, and I’m expected to know everything, With art, I can just go from my gut, so there’s a huge sense of freedom and escape for me there.” – Dave Elitch Topics Discussed In This Episode: The pitfalls of formalized education The realities of being a musician Over exposure of art through technology Distractions of social media How Dave became a professional drummer Andy Goldsworthy “Rivers and Tides” Drawing similarities and differences between his approach to music and his approach to art The compulsion for knowledge and exploring Understanding the veil of perception Creative adaptability Spirituality in art Breaking free of systematic thinking Branding within the art world The ripple effect of art and commerce interacting with each other www.artistdecoded.com
With iconic photography of young iconoclasts, musicians, and bands like the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Tom Waits, Nick Cave, The Circle Jerks, Ice Cube, and Bad Religion, as well as hundreds of other early punk and hip hop bands, Edward Colver was an insider to the turbulent and burgeoning underground music scene of early-eighties Los Angeles. Since active in photography for more than forty years, he first documented an average of five local shows a week using only a 35mm camera, flash, and Kodak Tri-X film. Colver’s book, Blight at the End of the Funnel, collects some of the best of his hardcore punk and promotional work for record companies. His shot of Henry Rollins for the cover of Black Flag’s “Damaged” album was used on billboards and lamppost flyers throughout Los Angeles during the Annenberg Space for Photography’s Who Shot Rock and Roll installation in 2012, curated by Brooklyn Museum curator and author Gail Buckland. In addition to numerous other openings, including Shepard Fairey’s Subliminal Projects gallery and a solo show at Lethal Amounts this last year. Topics Discussed In This Episode: The punk rock revolution in Los Angeles Edward’s experience shooting Henry Rollins for Black Flag’s “Damaged” album cover His run in with Jerry Lee Lewis Working with Ice Cube Suing Interscope Records His experiences shooting photographs for 36 years Shooting the Circle Jerks “Group Sex” album cover www.artistdecoded.com
Winning the Archibald Prize as Guy Maestri did in 2009 would be a defining moment in most artist’s careers, but he is quick to cite physical immersion in the landscape as revolutionary to his painting practice. It’s easy to gloss over the history of plein-air as a European tradition, born of gentle grasses and mild sunlight. Practiced in Australia, away from the slip of green coastline, plein-air demands rigor of vast dimensions. For Maestri, the material and temporal challenges of extended painting sessions in the hard country around Hill End, Wilcannia and Broken Hill has been instrumental in a new understanding of local art histories and ecologies, as well as the atmospheric and elemental qualities of landscape. Beholden to intimacies of place, the artist stakes out a subtle void or stillness in these dry landscapes without surrendering his animated, almost kinetic approach to paint. Masquerading as a shady retreat, the studio retains its disciplinarian attitude but demands a different kind of focus. Here the void is more theatrical, Maestri’s compositions orchestrated with operatic tempo. Desiccated road-kill (the anti-trophy of inland highways) perform as contemporary Gothic vanitas, shot through with equal measure of beauty and pathos, the eye and the heart facing off. A graduate of the National Art School, Maestri won the 2014 Kings School Art Prize and the 2013 Premier’s Plein Air Painting Prize. He is a regular finalist in the Wynne Prize for Landscape at the Art Gallery of NSW and his work is held in several public collections, including the National Portrait Gallery and Parliament House collections. Topics Discussed In This Episode: His experience studying at The National Art School in Sydney Education in the arts Exploring mediums within your artistic practice How his work has evolved over the years His paintings of road kill Discussing self portraiture How he began experimenting with sculptures His process creating his sculptures Morbid curiosities Wes Anderson www.artistdecoded.com
Virginie Picot – originally from Paris – has devoted the last 17 years of her career to talent management and visual creations, specializing in the fashion and music industries. Currently living in NYC, she is an agent and Executive Producer for Iconoclast Image and leads the print department. She represents emerging photographers such as Olivia Bee, David Uzochukwu, and Mathieu Cesar, as well as established talents such as Jean-Baptiste Mondino, Cyrille de Vignemont, and Gus Van Sant. She has worked alongside globally renowned recording artists such as Katy Perry, Future, and Kesha, as well as fashion designers including Riccardo Tisci at Givenchy, Damir Doma, and Zaid Affa. Topics Discussed In This Episode: Starting her career directly out of university within the music industry Working for V2 Music Her experience working at a photo gallery in London Working for Givenchy in Paris Magic vs magick Her love for the work of Francis Bacon and Alexander McQueen Working for Iconoclast Image in NY The balance between art and commerce Servicing clients Changes going on in the entertainment industry Understanding the creative vision before developing a project How to stay true to your creativity while taking a brief from a client The realities of commercializing your artwork Floria Sigismondi Creating a body of work that defines your creative vision Creating long term relationships vs. creating short term networks www.artistdecoded.com
Brad Kunkle was raised in rural Pennsylvania and graduated from Kutztown University with a BFA in painting in 2001. Rather than continue his artistic pursuits in an academic environment, he became a house painter. That dubious, professional beginning however, taught him valuable lessons that became crucial to his later success. Having taught himself how to gild with precious metals for some of those residential projects, he later implemented those skills in his personal, fine art works. His debut, fine art exhibition in 2010 at Arcadia Contemporary in NYC sold out before the show's opening night and was followed by a second sold-out exhibition two years later. Since then he has exhibited his paintings in New York, Los Angeles, Berlin, London, Miami, and his works can be found in private collections all over the world. His paintings have twice graced the cover of American Art Collector Magazine and have been published extensively online and in print in such highly read publications as Hi-Fructose, American Arts Quarterly, Lapham’s Quarterly, Juxtapoz and Fine Arts Connoisseur. Kunkle continues to be represented by Arcadia Contemporary in Los Angeles, where he had his debut, West Coast solo exhibition in November of 2016. More recently, Kunkle collaborated as an Art Director with the award-winning, special effects house, Imaginary Forces as his paintings became the foundation for the main title sequence of the Netflix original series, “Anne With An E.” He lives and works in New York's Hudson Valley. Topics Discussed In This Episode: Reflecting on his 2016 show “Invisible” Muses Social media misconceptions “The Invisible Man” by H.G. Wells Technical elements behind his work Dreaming and lucid dreaming The benefits of listening to music while you work Meditation Intention in creation Elevating vs. entertaining www.artistdecoded.com www.twitter.com/yoshinostudios
“What I want is to open up. I want to know what's inside me. I want everybody to open up. I'm like an imbecile with a can opener in his hand, wondering where to begin—to open up the earth. I know that underneath the mess everything is marvelous. I'm sure of it.” - Henry Miller Digging beneath the mess of the world to find the beauty underneath is perhaps the most consistent theme in Chelsea Wolfe’s expansive discography—a theme that ties together her ceaseless explorations in unorthodox textures, haunting melodies, and mining the grandeur embedded within ugliness and pain. With her sixth official album Hiss Spun, Wolfe adopts Miller’s quest to become empowered by embracing the mess of the self, to control the tumult of the soul in hopes of reigning in the chaos of the world around us. “I wanted to write some sort of escapist music; songs that were just about being in your body, and getting free,” Wolfe says of the album before extrapolating on the broader scope of her new collection of songs. “You’re just bombarded with constant bad news, people getting fucked over and killed for shitty reasons or for no reason at all, and it seems like the world has been in tears for months, and then you remember it’s been fucked for a long time, it’s been fucked since the beginning. It’s overwhelming and I have to write about it.” Hiss Spun was recorded by Kurt Ballou in Salem, Massachusetts at the tail end of winter 2017 against a backdrop of deathly quiet snow-blanketed streets and the hissing radiators of warm interiors. While past albums operated on the intimacy of stripped-down folkmusic (The Grime and the Glow, Unknown Rooms), or the throbbing pulse of supplemental electronics (Pain Is Beauty, Abyss), Wolfe’s latest offering wrings its exquisiteness out of a palette of groaning bass, pounding drums, and crunching distortion. It’s an album that inadvertently drew part of its aura from the cold white of the New England winter, though the flesh-and-bone of the material was culled from upheavals in Wolfe’s personal life, and coming to terms with years of vulnerability, anger, self-destruction, and dark family history. Aside from adding low-end heft with gratuitous slabs of fuzz bass, longtime collaborator Ben Chisholm contributed harrowing swaths of sound collages from sources surrounding the artist and her band in recent years—the rumble of street construction at a tour stop in Prague, the howl of a coyote outside Wolfe’s rural house in California, the scrape of machinery on the floor of a warehouse at a down-and-out friend’s workplace. Music is rendered out of dissonance—bomb blasts from the Enola Gay, the shriek of primates, the fluttering pages of a Walt Whitman book are manipulated and seamlessly integrated into the feral and forlorn songs of Hiss Spun. The album opens with the sickening bang of “Spun”, where a lurching bottom-heavy riff provided by Chisholm and Troy Van Leeuwen (Queens of the Stone Age, Failure) serves as a foundation to a sultry mantra of fever-dream longing and desire. The first third of Hiss Spun—whether it’s the ominous twang and cataclysmic dynamics of “16 Psyche”, the icy keyboard lines, restless pulse and harrowing bellows of Aaron Turner (Old Man Gloom, SUMAC) on “Vex”, or the patient repetition and devastating choruses of “The Culling—all carry the weight of desperation, lost love, and withdrawal. Wolfe’s introspection and existential dread turns outwards to the crumbling world around us with “Particle Flux”, an examination of the casualties of war set against an aural sea of static. White noise is a constant thread through Hiss Spun, with Wolfe finding solace in the knowledge that radio static is the sound of the universe expanding outwards from the Big Bang—a reminder that even dissonance has ties to creation. The electronic thump of “Offering” serves as an ode to the Salton Sea and the encroaching calamities stemming from climate change. The obsession with white noise and global destruction carries over into “Static Hum”, where the merciless percussive battery of Wolfe’s former bandmateand current drummer Jess Gowrie helps deliver the dire weight of a sonnet dedicated to a “burning planet.” By the time the album closes with “Scrape”, Wolfe has come full circle and turned her examinations back inward, reflecting over her own mortality with arguably the most commanding vocal performance in her entire oeuvre. “The album is cyclical, like me and my moods,” Wolfe says of Hiss Spun. “Cycles, obsession, spinning, centrifugal force—all with gut feelings as the center of the self.” And it’s an album that Wolfe sees as a kind of exorcism. “I’m at odds with myself… I got tired of trying to disappear. The record became very personal in that way. I wanted to open up more, but also create my own reality.” Every Chelsea Wolfe album is cathartic, but never before has both the artist and her audience so desperately needed this kind of emotional purging. Sargent House is proud to release Hiss Spun to the world on September 22nd, 2017. Topics Discussed In This Episode: Her radio show through Red Bull Music Academy called "Hypnos Hour" The process of discovering yourself as an artist The novel "1Q84" written by Haruki Murakami The film "The Sevent h Seal" directed by Ingmar Bergman Writing lyrics and song writing Psychedelics opening up access portals Her collaboration with Converge Her new album "Hiss Spun" www.artistdecoded.com
Nika Roza Danilova has been recording and performing as Zola Jesus for more than a decade. As a classically trained opera singer with a penchant for noisy, avant-garde sounds, she launched her career with a series of lo-fi releases that pitted her soaring vocals against harsh industrial clatter and jittery synths. The signature Zola Jesus sound became more hi-fi as she began to explore her own skewed vision of pop music on releases like Stridulum, Valusia, and Conatus. With the release of Conatus, Danilova was propelled to regular appearances on festival stages all around the world, as well as a special performance at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York. That era culminated in the release of Versions, a collection of string quartet interpretations of her most beloved work, conducted by J.G. Thirlwell (Foetus). That album and subsequent tour were followed by her most hi-fi outing to date, Taiga. Now, coinciding with her return to both the Wisconsin woods in which she was raised and her longtime label, Sacred Bones Records, Zola Jesus has produced Okovi, her darkest album yet. It is, in Danilova’s words, “a deeply personal snapshot of loss, reconciliation, and a sympathy for the chains that keep us all grounded to the unforgiving laws of feral nature.” Topics Discussed In This Episode: Depression Dissecting sections of her creative process from an emotional and technical standpoint Creative resourcefulness Identity Her thoughts on constructing honest lyrics Yoshino and Zola Jesus’s collaboration together Kindred spirits in collaborative creative partners Exploring morbid curiosities and ideas surrounded around death Understanding human suffering Collaborating with David Lynch Finding your own path Resilience through failure www.artistdecoded.com www.twitter.com/yoshinostudios
"Jesse Draxler is an artist best known for his collage and mixed media works, though with his new exhibition "Tire Fire" we find him returning to the medium that sparked his love of image making, drawing. As a child growing up in rural Wisconsin Draxler drew incessantly. Being that his father was a mechanic he would spend hours upon hours drawing cars, trucks, and engine parts. Later in adolescence, his attention changed as circumstances became bleak. Draxler’s mother was in a near-fatal car accident when he was nine. Upon her recovery, over a year later, his parents were divorced. His mother, whom he was now living with, soon remarried. Then just months after the wedding she was ran over and killed by her new husband in his truck, an event to which he arrived just moments later. In the following years, Draxler states that he barely remembers a thing. These times of pervasive uncertainty and loss changed him forever and his focus shifted to much darker interests. He was always an outcast from his peers, but from this time on Draxler leaned into his outsider lot in life. It wasn’t until almost two decades later that he began to see a light at the end of a very dark tunnel. Themes of bewilderment, isolation, ambiguity, and absurdity are all strongly represented in Draxler’s work, along with frustration and aggression. Yet these are not endpoints but have rather become the in-roads to deeper understanding and acceptance. It is clear he has spent the better part of his life straddling the line between fear and ecstasy, the beautiful and the grotesque. The result is Draxler’s unique ability to present a point of view in which the subtle nuances of the human condition are concisely illuminated, satisfying a psychological and emotional itch that so seldom gets scratched." Topics Discussed In This Episode: Talks about his show TireFire Containing multitudes Finding the balance between commercial work and personal work Developing a point of view Susan Rothenberg Viewing the entirety of your life as an artistic practice Listening to music as a tool for creating art Billy Corgan “The Inner Game of Tennis” by Timothy Gallwey The intersection of physical activities and artistic practices www.artistdecoded.com www.twitter.com/yoshinostudios
"Photographer John Kilar’s site will tell you, simply, that he is a nomad. Portraits and landscapes by Kilar will show you that too, with a raw presentation of untamed characters and equally wild and beautiful locations. Variety does not shake the colorful, documentary aesthetic that is true to his photos, which show a curious admiration for each subject. John Kilar’s images can be found in Oyster Magazine, VICE, Dazed & Confused, Purple Fashion, and DIS Magazine. His client list includes Heineken, Urban Outfitters, The Cobra Snake, and several other lifestyle-saavy brands which Kilar worked with while living in Venice Beach, California." Text by Linnea Stephan @ Juxtapoz Topics Discussed In This Episode: His journey into a nomadic lifestyle Synchronicities Following your bliss Deactivating technology to be more focused on the present moment Expanding consciousness Identity Having empathy towards others www.artistdecoded.com www.twitter.com/yoshinostudios
Originally hailing from Toronto, Canada, Michelle Groskopf is a Los Angeles based photographer. Her work is a mix of photo journalism, portraiture and street photography. She holds a BFA in film and video production from the School Of Visual Arts in New York where she also taught as an adjunct professor in the graduate film and video dept. She is a member of the celebrated flash photography collective Full Frontal Flash. Michelle is dedicated to empowering youth through photography and education initiatives working with the Lucie Foundation, Educare and Youth Arts to inspire the next generation of photographers and artists. Her work has been shown around the world and featured in publications such as The British Journal Of Photography, American Photo, The Huffington Post, Vice Magazine and It’s Nice That, among others. Her clients include, Refinery 29, Bloomberg Businessweek, Vice Magazine, Marie Claire France, Aftenposten, and Stern Magazine. Her first monograph is being published by The Magenta Foundation and will be released in the fall of 2017. Topics Discussed In This Episode: Making thematic work Her early life/work as a filmmaker and producer How she became a photographer Visual iconography Outside forces polluting ideas Her experiences living in Hollywood The path of least resistance Physical and emotional stress Larry Sultan Thinking about life as a marathon as opposed to a sprint Changing the idea of success Romanticizing the artist lifestyle Seeing the light at the end of a dark and hopeless tunnel Looking at other mediums of art for inspiration Over intellectualizing artwork The “Full Frontal Flash” photography collective Finding a community www.artistdecoded.com
Writer / photographer, Scot Sothern, bounced around for forty years. In 2010, at 60, his first solo exhibit, LOWLIFE, photos and stories of life with street prostitutes, was held at the notorious Drkrm Gallery in Los Angeles. His first book of the same title was published in the U.K. by Stanley Barker in 2011. The British Journal of Photography called LOWLIFE, “The years’ most controversial photobook.” Scot’s work has since been exhibited in Los Angeles, New York, Miami, London, and Paris. In 2013 he began a biweekly column, Nocturnal Submissions, for VICE Magazine, and Curb Service: A Memoir, was published by Soft Skull Press. STREETWALKERS, stories and photographs was published by powerHouse Books in February 2016. Writer, Jerry Stahl, called it “An absolutely amazing and essential book." BIG CITY, published in 2017 by Stalking Horse Press, is Sothern’s first novel. Guest Interviewer: Nolwen Cifuentes www.artistdecoded.com
GEMS is the evolving ethereal pop project of former lovers Lindsay Pitts and Clifford John Usher. After an agonizing romantic split, the duo are continuing to make music together with the project: ‘Every Full Moon’. The full moon represents a time of culmination and fulfillment, of coming full circle, and a symbolic illumination in our inner lives that is mirrored in the night sky. GEMS will be releasing a new song with every full moon as they work through the ghosts of their past and face the uncertainty of the future. Their hope is that the music they create can serve as a vehicle to transform the pain and work through things that otherwise seem totally overwhelming. Topics Discussed In This Episode: Being able to separate yourself from your art Constantly investigating and navigating the world Neil Young, David Bowie, Joni Mitchell Astrology Releasing their songs at the end of the full moon cycle Changes the duo has been going through both personally and with their musical career Technological advances The music industry Getting trapped in systematic styles of living / thinking Social and emotional education Positivity through individuality Artwork affecting culture www.artistdecoded.com
"I'm an art director, motion designer, and illustrator from Buenos Aires, Argentina. I've been working online since 2003 with an extensive list of creatives in music videos, live visual packages, lookbooks, and everything art related. I have studied Beauty Arts in Bachillerato de Bellas Artes in my natal city, La Plata. I also have a teaching degree in Beauty Arts." - Gustavo Torres (aka Kidmograph)." Topics Discussed In This Episode: His beginnings as a painter then transitioning to digital art Juxtaposing disparate elements together His daily flow Staying disciplined Looking inward for inspiration www.artistdecoded.com
John F Simon Jr. is a multimedia artist and software art pioneer who work and installations are found in the permanent collections of The Whitney Museum of American Art, The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, and The Museum of Modern Art in New York, among others. In 2011, he collaborated with Icelandic singer Bjork to write an app for her album, Biophilia. Simon's newest publication, Drawing Your Own Path: 33 Practices at the Crossroads of Art and Meditation, is out now by Parallax Press. Simon grew up in central Louisiana and currently lives and works in Sugar Loaf, New York. Topics Discussed in this Episode: Creative ruts leading to personal creative breakthroughs His experiences going to Brown and SVA How he started to experiment with digital imaging Communal VR and AR spaces "Snowcrash", a book by Neal Stephenson Classic panopticons His research into AI The "no-self" experience Discussing the idea behind his book "Drawing Your Own Path" Understanding and dissecting meditation "Secret of the Golden Flower" (book) Mindfulness being executed when the verbal and non-verbal parts of the brain sync up The personal narrative Bruce Lee Creating your own reality www.artistdecoded.com www.instagram.com/artistdecoded www.twitter.com/yoshinostudios
Casey is a painter based in New York City. Topics discussed in this episode: Accepting imperfections Explanation of his upcoming solo exhibit, "Exposed" Being honest with oneself Creating visceral and guttural artwork Absorbing inspiration and life experiences Taking risks Balancing artistic, creative, and business practices Setting up monetary systems to allow yourself the freedom to create art for a living Tony Robbins Films Comparing films to paintings www.artistdecoded.com www.instagram.com/artistdecoded www.twitter.com/yoshinostudios
Rebecca Farr (b. 1973, Los Angeles, California) Lives and works in Los Angeles, California. Rebecca Farr recently exhibited her most recent show at Klowden Mann, Out of Nothing and was reviewed by New American Paintings. In 2015, Farr was awarded a residency at Kaus Australis in Rotterdam, and was featured in a group exhibition at Kaus in the Fall of 2015. Farr has exhibited in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Miami, Houston, Istanbul, Rotterdam, and throughout the Pacific Northwest. Her work is held in private collections both nationally and internationally, and she recently completed two years as faculty artist in the education department at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art where she has been developing youth driven public works. Rebecca is the founder of CREATE/ACTION, an artist driven community organizing collective based in Los Angeles. www.artistdecoded.com www.instagram.com/artistdecoded www.twitter.com/yoshinostudios
Unit London is an arts space and gallery founded in 2013 by Joe Kennedy and Jonny Burt. Unit London was born from a desire to break down the barriers of elitism and to include people in the contemporary art world - whether they are enthusiasts, first-timers, new collectors, or seasoned collectors and institutions - they strongly believe that everybody should be able to enjoy the world's most amazing art. Topics Discussed In This Episode: The next generation of galleries Pop-up gallery experiences Making art more accessible Unit London was started with the approach of identifying 3 problems in the art world and a need to change these problems: art being exclusive and elitist, certain deserving artists not being celebrated, artists not having social recognition and relevancy. Defining your "why" and your "story" The importance of starting a business that connects with their audience on an emotional level www.artistdecoded.com www.instagram.com/artistdecoded www.twitter.com/yoshinostudios
Justin Hopkins interviews Martin Wittfooth and Sergio Barrale. Topics Discussed In This Episode: Being in control of yourself even if you're not in control of outside forces Sergio's car exploding while driving cross country Plant medicines Letting go of materialistic possessions The importance of family Not letting bad situations dictate your happiness Psychedelic experiences Martin leaving NYC to live in Woodstock Reflections on Martin's dog Luna Lessening one's own ego Being lost in a big city How Sergio and Martin met each other UFC Martin explains his work Terence McKenna www.artistdecoded.com www.instagram.com/artistdecoded www.twitter.com/yoshinostudios
Adam Lee is an Australian artist working from his country studio at the foothills of the Macedon Ranges just outside of Melbourne, Australia. His practice focuses on a re-interpretation of painting and drawing traditions and references a wide range of sources, incorporating biblical narratives, natural history, historical and colonial documentary photography, contemporary music and film, and varying literary sources. Employing new evaluations of landscape painting and old world portraiture Lee investigates humanity’s interface with the environment of the natural world and its relationship to ideas of a timeless zone of the divine. Topics discussed in this episode: Accepting the unexpected Allowing the process of creating artwork guide you Embracing inspiration Describes his newest body of work, "Lament Asunder" Anselm Kiefer Chris Ofili Creative problem solving within paintings Understanding writers block The business side of the gallery system Ben Abraham www.artistdecoded.com www.instagram.com/artistdecoded www.twitter.com/yoshinostudios
Daniele Bolelli is an Italian-born writer, martial artist, university professor, and podcaster. He is the author of several books including On the Warrior's Path. He's also known for his podcasts History On Fire and The Drunken Taoist. How martial arts and physical activity can change your life Developing mental toughness The ability and willingness to challenge yourself Making small improvements to your life Joe Rogan The reasons why he started his podcasts The Drunk Taoist and History On Fire Existing as yourself Living an unedited existence Tackling fear Understanding work from a conscious perspective www.artistdecoded.com www.instagram.com/artistdecoded www.twitter.com/yoshinostudios
Anthony Lister was born in Brisbane, Australia in 1979. He graduated from the Queensland College of Art in Brisbane in 2001 and traveled to New York soon after where he mentored under the auspices Max Gimblett, one of New Zealand's most influential living artists. Lister began painting on the streets at the age of 17; a location which has become a key part of his practice as a space where he can take pleasure in his 'hobby' of producing art rather than the 'craft' of studio work. He has since exhibited his work extensively within Australia and internationally both in the gallery and on the streets. He is considered to be one of Australia’s most renowned contemporary artists. Topics Discussed: The process of creating his artwork Exploring the idea of "adventure painting" A curious exploration of the dualities of life Skateboarding abstracting itself into artwork Creative and mental breakthroughs Tactility of art changing or being lost with the advent of technologies His virtual reality app Decorating the apocalypse Seeing artwork in the flesh His love for the work of Egon Schiele www.artistdecoded.com www.instagram.com/artistdecoded www.twitter.com/yoshinostudios
Brian Shevlin is the owner and founder of The Con Artist Collective which is an artist community, creative co-working space and gallery founded in early 2010. The collective is located in The Lower East Side in New York City. They are an active community of creatives, curating group shows & social events, encouraging collaboration & inspiring imagination. Interviewer for this episode is photographer and podcaster, Michael Donovan. www.artistdecoded.com www.instagram.com/artistdecoded www.twitter.com/yoshinostudios
Ben Quilty was born in Sydney, Australia in 1973. He has an Honorary Doctorate from Western Sydney University, a Bachelor of Visual Arts from Sydney College of the Arts, a Bachelor of Visual Communication from the School of Design at the University of Western Sydney and certificate level studies in Aboriginal History and Culture from Monash University. Widely known for his thick, gestural oil paintings Quilty has explored a range of themes throughout his career. From the dangerous coming of age rituals of young Australian men, to the complex social history of our country, he is constantly critiquing notions of identity, patriotism and belonging. He won the 2002 Brett Whitely Traveling Art Scholarship, the 2007 National Self Portrait Prize, the 2009 Doug Moran National Portrait Prize, the 2011 Archibald Prize and most recently the Prudential Eye Award for Contemporary Art in Singapore. His work is represented in the collections of the National Gallery of Australia, the Art Gallery of South Australia, The Art Gallery of New South Wales, QAGOMA and the Museum of Contemporary Art along with numerous regional and private collections. Topics Discussed In This Episode: Making work about who you are Writer's block being a fallacy. How there's no shortage of things to talk about in your artwork. Curating your artistic vision His trip to Lebanon and following the Syrian border to view refugee camps Using writing as a creative medium while traveling His love and interest in human rights Myuran Sukumaran's story and Ben's involvement with teaching him how to paint while Myuran was imprisoned in Indonesia for drug trafficking. Myuran was later executed by firing squad for the charges. The debauchery of young masculinity Western cultures lacking rites of passage ceremonies The economic rationalization of education Contemporary trends in the art market Dissection of the survival and / or death of painting David Hockney's iPad art Spending time with his children Australian Frontier Wars Larrikinism Vincent Namatjira www.artistdecoded.com www.instagram.com/artistdecoded www.twitter.com/yoshinostudios
In their recap of Downton Abbey S6E3, Kelly & Tom discuss the cost of a sucking pig, forget that The Secret Garden is a musical, revel in another Isobel/Dowager fight, wonder why the twins from The Shining are at the Hugheson wedding, meet Tubby McFlopsweat & Rarebit, and wonder if Baron Julian is just flushing out a Google Doc of unused Dowager Quipz. Kelly covers the original hipsters–stamp collectors, Tom outlines the war of the Austrian succession, and everyone wonders what the opposite of narrative economy is. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
A look at Edwin S. Porter's 1906 classic, Dream of a Rarebit Fiend, National Film Registry entrant, 2015
A look at Edwin S. Porter's 1906 classic, Dream of a Rarebit Fiend, National Film Registry entrant, 2015
Bonus: Mye bakommateriale i anledning Lønsjteateret, avsløringer om neste teaterprosjekt, Alan Partridge-boksen (og -filmen), pantelånere og historien om mannen som ønsket seg vekk fra alt. Velbekomme!
Show #123 showcases some audio highlights from the first few months of 2012, including selections from Robert Glasper, Quantic and Alice Russell, Mo Kolours, Shortcircles, Matthew Dear, Bobby Womack, and many more. this episode is 100% WORKSAFE.
00:00 Kontigo – Desire 03:43 Clams Casino – Numb 07:34 Numan – Salute 10:55 Jon Phonics x BUG – Jack Duckworth 13:46 Morgan Zarate – Hookid 18:21 Bonobo – Eyesdown (Machinedrum Remix 5″ Edit) 22:33 hectic zeniths – then and now 24:50 Isaiah Toothtaker – Crime Killz x Human Suit (Mike Gao Remix) 29:04 Shag – Title Theme 31:24 Clear Soul Forces – Bubble Space 35:14 Mystro aka MysDiggi – Mystro – UK Rap Up 2011 44:09 Guilty Simpson – Close Curtaints 47:12 RareBit – Emergence 50:12 Arkaik – Head Skill (feat. MCXL) 54:34 D.F.T.F Feat. DRS – Need for mirrors 57:22 Yöt – Bitch Bender 1:01:34 Homeless & G Dot – The World Is In An Uproar, Ro, Ro, Roar (Prod. Ganzobean) 1:04:12 Planet Asia & Madlib – Masonic Vocals 1:05:49 yU – The Ohm 1:09:00 Ghost Mutt – Figure You Out 1:10:04 LAW – Abiding Citizen 1:12:49 Innobushu – Hello Jaco 1:15:27 Suff Daddy – Amazonas 1:19:43 Danny Drive Thru – Sexy Habit 1:23:38 Clams Casino – Real Shit From A Real Nigga [Lil B] 1:26:54 Alphabet’s Heaven – KOPS 1:29:50 Gregory Porter – 1960 What? (Opolopo Kick & Bass Rerub) 1:36:41 Zed Bias – Neigbourhood 09 (Roska Mix) 1:43:12 Ernest Gonzales – When Synchronicity Prevails (Dntel Remix) 1:46:28 Emika – 3 Hours (Album Version) 1:50:20 Small Professor – A Remix I Did Of F.A.N.S. By Phat Kat A.K.A. Ronnie Cash 1:51:15 Yungun – All Rise (Mr. Thing Re-Edit) 1:54:18 Stan Smith – Get Up Gospel 2:00:11 FUR – Ethio 2:04:53 Salva – Obsession (feat. B. Bravo) 2:08:03 David Bowie – Little Wonder
V2d1 -05 - French Rarebit
V2d1 -05 - French Rarebit