POPULARITY
"Sincère" et "hypocrite" : quelle est l'origine de ces mots ? Retour sur ces deux expressions qu'on croit antagonistes et qui ne le sont peut-être pas tout-à-fait. La sincérité n'est pas toujours aussi innocente qu'on le croit.... Voici le lien vers ma chaîne Youtube : https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_LQGxzHudxAL0ZOPo8jt7w Merci pour votre écoute ! Pierre-Emmanuel Brault & Bonni le bonsaï
Bernar Venet ist ein französischer Künstler, dessen bisher größte und umfangreichste Retrospektive weltweit in der neu eröffneten Kunsthalle Berlin in den beiden großen Hangarhallen 2 und 3 des Flughafens Tempelhof zu sehen ist. Mit Lisa Zeitz spricht er über die Bedeutung von Tanz und Bewegung, seinen künstlerischen Werdegang sowie seine Verbindung zu Marcel Duchamp. Der "WELTKUNST-Podcast - Was macht die Kunst?" wird in Partnerschaft mit Christie's produziert.
The boys sit and vibe after a long night.
Junior sits down with Tanner & his wife Morghan Sirrine . Junior had the honor of building Tanner a custom Scuplture out of the parts from his legs from multiple surgeries. Tanner was in a Paragliding Accident August 29, 2020 Their story is truly Amazing what they have went through as a young couple & family & the love they have for each other. #27thhourpodcast #highlinetattoofabshop #highlinetattoo #localpodcaster #utahpodcaster #podcastcommunity #paragliding #paragliderscupture #paraglidingaccident #realtalk #supportlocal #slcpodcast #youtube#hepiusmed
Ginger Porcella talks about the experimental, contemporary sculptures that can be found at the Franconia Sculpture Park, a 43 acre park with over 100 sculptures.
CrowdA polish artist creates works that express her experiences growing up in communist Poland.
The five year behemoth is upon us! Episode 260 kicks off with a discussion with Mary Jane Jacob and Michelle Grabner about the artist and studio. Then we turn the camera on ourselves and have a discussion about where we are and where we are headed, if anywhere. Thanks for listening! It has been a great five years! P.S. Cauleen S. you are a sad, sad, petty whiner. Grow the hell up.
This week: We talk to Artist Nathan Carter who has a work in the current MCA Exhibition “Alexander Calder and Contemporary Art: Form, Balance, Joy”about his work, the youth perspective, and the secret trasmissions of numbers stations. Here is a slightly outdated bio I lifted: Nathan Carter’s wall reliefs, sculptures, collages, and hanging objects are inspired by myriad aspects of contemporary society: modes of transportation, mass communication devices, sports insignias, and architecture for mass gatherings like stadiums and parade grounds. At once gestural and reductive, his works amplify strategies first explored by modernist artists in the early 20th century. Deeply rooted in a fascination with how visual abstract codes represent a means of abbreviated, if not universal, communication, Carter’s free-form compositions are simultaneously non-objective and referential. Playful at first impression, Carter’s art contains allusions to mundane yet foreboding engagements, such as radio transmissions, encoded transcriptions, and other electronic communications that serve not only to link us to world networks, but also to place us under surveillance and deprive us of our privacy. Often our dependence on these tools and the despair that results from their failure to properly operate is a recurring leitmotif in his work. Nathan Carter was born in Dallas, TX, in 1970 and currently lives and works in New York, NY. He received his MFA from Yale University, New Haven, CT, in 1999. He has had solo exhibitions at Galería Pilar Parra, Madrid (2007); Casey Kaplan Gallery, New York (2006, 2004, 2001); and Esther Schipper, Berlin (2006). He also participated in Art 33 Basel, Basel, Switzerland (2002). Selected group exhibitions include Neo Baroque, DA2 Centre of Contemporary Art of Salamanca, Spain (2005-06); Greater New York 2005, P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center, Long Island City, NY; and GNS, Palais de Tokyo, Paris (2003).
This week: Something for everyone! Lori Waxman and Duncan do reviews. Terri and Joanna review "The Ask" by Sam Lipsyte. Duncan and Richard talk with Michael Perry the Marketing & Programming Project Coordinatorfor the Chicago Loop Alliance about Art Loop Open among loads of other things. The outro is a rare piece of unedited, pure, unadulterated Duncan. Stick around for it.