Podcast appearances and mentions of taryn simon

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Best podcasts about taryn simon

Latest podcast episodes about taryn simon

English Academic Vocabulary Booster
4871. 299 Academic Words Reference from "Taryn Simon: Photographs of secret sites | TED Talk"

English Academic Vocabulary Booster

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2023 270:15


This podcast is a commentary and does not contain any copyrighted material of the reference source. We strongly recommend accessing/buying the reference source at the same time. ■Reference Source https://www.ted.com/talks/taryn_simon_photographs_of_secret_sites ■Post on this topic (You can get FREE learning materials!) https://englist.me/299-academic-words-reference-from-taryn-simon-photographs-of-secret-sites-ted-talk/ ■Youtube Video https://youtu.be/bloG1n_ulN4 (All Words) https://youtu.be/vujeuIVkNBA (Advanced Words) https://youtu.be/6Swh2GqFhuY (Quick Look) ■Top Page for Further Materials https://englist.me/ ■SNS (Please follow!)

English Academic Vocabulary Booster
4479. 286 Academic Words Reference from "Taryn Simon: The stories behind the bloodlines | TED Talk"

English Academic Vocabulary Booster

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2023 258:49


This podcast is a commentary and does not contain any copyrighted material of the reference source. We strongly recommend accessing/buying the reference source at the same time. ■Reference Source https://www.ted.com/talks/taryn_simon_the_stories_behind_the_bloodlines ■Post on this topic (You can get FREE learning materials!) https://englist.me/286-academic-words-reference-from-taryn-simon-the-stories-behind-the-bloodlines-ted-talk/ ■Youtube Video https://youtu.be/i6-kRATxFDk (All Words) https://youtu.be/JwIcbclmWQc (Advanced Words) https://youtu.be/9RBWVOeDiGk (Quick Look) ■Top Page for Further Materials https://englist.me/ ■SNS (Please follow!)

Art Is Awesome with Emily Wilson
Photographer Shao Feng Hsu

Art Is Awesome with Emily Wilson

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2023 14:16


Welcome to Art is Awesome, the show where we talk with an artist or art worker with a connection to the San Francisco Bay Area. Today, Emily chats with photographer Shao Feng Hsu.About Artist Shao Feng Hsu:Shao-Feng Hsu is a photographer whose work around the world mainly focuses on the interaction of humans and aquatic environment. From his native Taiwan — where he trained as a competitive swimmer — to Australia, Cambodia, Japan, and beyond, Shao-Feng Hsu has immersed himself in aquatic cultures in an ongoing study of the impact of the Anthropocene Era on our waters. In December 2017, he was selected to participate in Angkor Photo Festival Workshop, where he documented life in a village without proper sanitation and running water. Expanding on the project's themes back in Taiwan, he collaborated with the environmental NGO, RE-Think, on projects to illustrate shoreline pollution. His project, Inner Tidal Zones, combines color photograms and digital images to capture the perspective of aquatic creatures and the emotions of the water. He is a graduate of the Creative Practices program at the International Center of Photography and a recipient of Rita K. Hillman Award of Excellence. During the pandemic lockdown he co-founded Fotodemic.org and cademy.biz. He is currently a Fellow at the Headlands Center of the Arts and teaches B&W darkroom at California College of the Arts (CCA) Photography Program.Visit Shao's Website: ShaoFengHsu.comFollow Shao on Instagram: @ShaoFengHsuFor more about the Headlands Graduate Fellowships HERE.Pictures of You: Headlands Center for the Arts Graduate Fellowship Exhibition at The LabSF Camerawork --About Podcast Host Emily Wilson:Emily a writer in San Francisco, with work in outlets including Hyperallergic, Artforum, 48 Hills, the Daily Beast, California Magazine, Latino USA, and Women's Media Center. She often writes about the arts. For years, she taught adults getting their high school diplomas at City College of San Francisco.Follow Emily on Instagram: @PureEWilFollow Art Is Awesome on Instagram: @ArtIsAwesome_Podcast--CREDITS:Art Is Awesome is Hosted, Created & Executive Produced by Emily Wilson. Theme Music "Loopster" Courtesy of Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 LicenseThe Podcast is Co-Produced, Developed & Edited by Charlene Goto of @GoToProductions. For more info, visit Go-ToProductions.com

PhotoWork with Sasha Wolf
Aaron Schuman - Episode 49

PhotoWork with Sasha Wolf

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2022 50:17


To start off season 3 of PhotoWork with Sasha Wolf, Sasha and photographer, writer, curator and educator, Aaron Schuman discuss Aaron's monographs including, SLANT and his latest, SONATA, both published by MACK. Aaron reveals how he was approached to create a Masters program at the University of the West of England and how the idea of research is more than just a singular conscious effort to pursue an idea but a lifelong endeavor that permeates your work. https://www.aaronschuman.com/index.html AARON SCHUMAN is an American photographer, writer, curator and educator based in the United Kingdom. He received a BFA in Photography and History of Art from New York University's Tisch School of the Arts in 1999, and an MA in Humanities and Cultural Studies from the University of London: London Consortium at Birkbeck College in 2003. Schuman is the author of several critically-acclaimed monographs: SONATA, published by MACK in the summer of 2022; SLANT, published by MACK, which was cited as one of 2019's "Best Photobooks" by numerous photographers, critics and publications, including The Guardian, Internazionale, American Suburb X, Photoeye (Jason Fulford / Rebecca Norris Webb), Photobookstore (Vanessa Winship / Mark Power / Robin Titchener), and Deadbeat Club Press (Raymond Meeks / Brad Feuerhelm); and FOLK, published by NB Books, which was cited as one of 2016's "Best Photobooks" by Alec Soth (Photoeye), Sean O'Hagan (The Guardian), and Jason Fulford (TIME), and was long-listed for the Deutsche Börse Photography Prize 2017. His work has been exhibited internationally - at institutions such as Tate Modern, Hauser & Wirth, Christie's London, Christie's New York, the Institute of Contemporary Arts London, the Ethnographic Museum Krakow, Format Festival and elsewhere - and is held in many public and private collections, including the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, The British Library, the National Art Library, and the Museum of Modern Art Library. In addition to to his own photographic work, Schuman has contributed essays, interviews, texts and photographs to many other books and monographs, including Matteo Giovanni: I Had to Shed My Skin (Artphilein, 2022), OK No Response (Twin Palms, 2021), Keeper of the Hearth: Picturing Roland Barthes' Unseen Photograph (Schilt, 2021), Photo No-Nos: Meditations on What Not to Shoot (Aperture, 2021), Amak Mahmoodian: Zanjir (RRB, 2019), Aperture Conversations: 1985 to the Present (Aperture, 2018), Another Kind of Life: Photography on the Margins (Prestel / Barbican, 2018), George Rodger: Nuba & Latuka, The Colour Photographs: The Color Photographs (Prestel, 2017), Alec Soth: Gathered Leaves (MACK, 2015), Visions Anew: The Lens and Screen Arts (University of California Press, 2015), Storyteller: The Photographs of Duane Michals (Prestel / Carnegie Museum, 2014) and The Photographer's Playbook (Aperture, 2014), amongst many others. He has also written and photographed for a wide variety of journals, magazines and publications, such as Aperture, Foam, ArtReview, Frieze, Magnum Online, Hotshoe, The British Journal of Photography and more. Schuman has curated several major international festivals and exhibitions, including: In Progress: Laia Abril, Hoda Afshar, Widline Cadet, Adama Jalloh, Alba Zari (Royal Photographic Society, 2021), Indivisible: New American Documents (FOMU Antwerp, 2016), In Appropriation (Houston Center of Photography, 2012), Other I: Alec Soth, WassinkLundgren, Viviane Sassen (Hotshoe London, 2011), and Whatever Was Splendid: New American Photographs (FotoFest, 2010). In 2018, he served as co-Curator of JaipurPhoto Festival 2018. In 2014, he served as Guest Curator of Krakow Photomonth 2014 - entitled Re:Search, the main programme featured solo exhibitions by Taryn Simon, Trevor Paglen, David Campany / Walker Evans, Clare Strand, Forensic Architecture, Jason Fulford and more. Schuman was the founder and editor of the online photography journal, SeeSaw Magazine (2004-2014). He is Associate Professor in Photography and Visual Culture, and the founder and Programme Leader of the MA/Masters in Photography programme, at the University of the West of England (UWE Bristol). Find out more at https://photowork.pinecast.co

Art Farts
#12: One Olive Garden Long

Art Farts

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2022 85:02


On this episode of Art Farts, we further define an art genre we have looked at time and time again. Kourtney spirals down a rabbit hole into Taryn Simon's (happy birthday!) life and her most monumental work. Come to learn what the word semiotics means, stay for the awkward applause! Keep that hole cold! Please check out Taryn's website to see reference pics and deeper dive into her work: tarynsimon.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/evan-hansen037/support

Cerebral Women Art Talks Podcast

Episode 88 features Kate Fowle, the Director of MoMA PS1. From 2013-2019 she was the inaugural chief curator at Garage Museum of Contemporary Art in Moscow and director-at-large of Independent Curators International (ICI) in New York, where she was the executive director from 2009-13. Prior to this she was the inaugural international curator at the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing (2007-08). In 2002 she co-founded the Master's Program in Curatorial Practice for California College of the Arts in San Francisco, for which she was the Chair until 2007. Before moving to the United States, Fowle was co-director of Smith + Fowle in London from 1996-2002. From 1994-96 she was curator at the Towner Art Gallery and Museum in Eastbourne, East Sussex. Fowle's recent projects include solo exhibitions with David Adjaye, Rasheed Araeen, John Baldessari, Sammy Baloji, Louise Bourgeois, Marcel Broodthaers, Urs Fischer, Rashid Johnson, Irina Korina, Robert Longo, Anri Sala, Taryn Simon, Juergen Teller, and Rirkrit Tirivanija, as well as extended essays on Ilya Kabakov, Sterling Ruby, and Qiu Zhijie, and numerous extended articles on curating and exhibition histories. Fowle has written three books: Exhibit Russia: The New International Decade 1986-1996 (2016); Rashid Johnson: Within Our Gates (2016); and Proof: Francisco Goya, Sergei Eisenstein, Robert Longo (2017) Photo by James Hill MoMA Bio https://www.moma.org/about/senior-staff/kate-fowle PS1 https://www.moma.org/ps1 NYTimes https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/14/arts/design/greater-new-york-new-museum-performa-biennial.html Artnet News https://news.artnet.com/art-world/art-world-works-home-kate-fowle-1892064 Architect Magazine https://www.architectmagazine.com/practice/kate-fowle-appointed-director-of-moma-ps1_o Call for Curators https://callforcurators.com/blog/kate-fowle-appointed-director-of-moma-ps1/ Auckland Art Gallery https://www.aucklandartgallery.com/page/judge-announced-for-the-walters-prize-2021-opening-this-weekend-at-auckland-art-gallery-toi-o-tamaki

Prix Pictet: A Lens on Sustainability

In the 19th century it was Thomas A. Edison no less who said “I'd put my money on the sun and solar energy”, but what does power mean for sustainability in the 21st century? Just a single word that, in different contexts, commands vastly distinct significations. Join acclaimed photographer, Taryn Simon, co-founder of the Eden Project, Sir Tim Smit, and the leading economist, Baroness Minouche Shafik, as they discuss what power means to them and how we can wield it for good. View the accompanying e-book to this episode on our Instagram @prix_pictet.

eden project thomas a edison sir tim smit taryn simon
Helga
K. Anthony Jones

Helga

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2021 34:07


"I want to push those limitations. Push them." Researcher, writer and critic K. Anthony Jones discusses what it means to make your own way and how to carve a path where one does not exist.  K. Anthony Jones researches and writes on the history, theory, and criticism of late modern art and architecture. His research interests include the media cultures of the Cold War; modernism and war; art and globalization; science and technology studies; visual culture; critical race theory; political anthropology; imperialism; postcolonial studies; art and technology; methods of historiography; and archival science. Jones received a Master in Design Studies degree from the Harvard University Graduate School of Design in 2020; and a Bachelor of Art degree from Morehouse College in Sociology in 2010. And here are 5 books that offer a glimpse into his world: 1. The House That Race Built: Original Essays by Toni Morrison, Angela Y. Davis, Cornel West, and Others on Black Americans and Politics in America Today by Wahneema Lubiano 2. Home by Toni Morrison 3. The Middle Passage: White Ships / Black Cargo by Tom Feelings 4. Taryn Simon: The Color of a Flea's Eye: The Picture Collection by Taryn Simon (Author, Photographer), Joshua Chuang (Author), Tim Griffin (Author) 5. The People Could Fly: Black American Folktales by Virginia Hamilton (Author) Leo Dillon (Illustrator), Diane Dillon Ph.D. (Illustrator)  

Writers and Company from CBC Radio
A vision of the world through the lens of Taryn Simon: probing the uncertainty of memory and truth

Writers and Company from CBC Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2021 53:54


In this conversation from 2013, the American photographer and conceptual artist talked to Eleanor about mixing camerawork, writing and graphic design to raise questions about truth and certainty.

Arts & Ideas
The Liverpool Biennial debate

Arts & Ideas

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2021 44:44


Slavery and empire building shaped Liverpool's development. Can art works help give a new understanding of the city's history? In a discussion organised in partnership with the Liverpool Biennial, Anne McElvoy is joined by the Festival curator Manuela Moscoso, by the artist Xaviera Simmons, the historian Dr Diana Jeater and the composer Neo Muyanga. The Biennial runs from 20 March to 6 June 2021 with art works sited around the city. Neo Muyanga is a composer and sound artist whose work traverses new opera, jazz improvisation, Zulu and Sesotho idiomatic songs. His project A Maze in Grace is a 12'' vinyl record and a video installation at the Lewis’s Building, inspired by the song “Amazing Grace”, composed by English slaver-turned-abolitionist John Newton, who lived in Liverpool. The piece was co-commissioned by Fundação Bienal São Paulo, echoing some of the trading links which operated in the transatlantic slave trade. Xaviera Simmons has previously spent two years on a walking pilgrimage retracing the transatlantic slave trade with Buddhist monks. Her installation at the Cotton Exchange Building uses images and texts set against backdrops of the American landscape to explore ideas about "whiteness". It's co-presented by Liverpool Biennial and Photoworks Curator Manuela Moscoso has worked at the Tamayo Museo in Mexico City and has come up with a framework for the Biennial -The Stomach and the Port- that uses the body as an image to think about the city Historian Diana Jeater, from the University of Liverpool, is also Emeritus Professor of African History at the University of the West of England, Bristol, and teaches themes that help understand African history such as witchcraft and territorial cults, healing systems, nationalist movements and religious institutions. Producer: Torquil MacLeod You can find a playlist of programmes exploring the visual arts on the Free Thinking website, include discussions with museum curators held in partnership with Frieze Art Fair and interviews with artists including Michael Rakowitz, Taryn Simon, William Kentridge and Sonia Boyce amongst others https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p026wnjl And our 2021 New Generation Thinker Vid Simoniti is hosting a podcast talking to some of the Biennial artists called Art Against the World which you can find here https://www.biennial.com/

Ahali Conversations with Can Altay
Episode 3: Ahmet Öğüt

Ahali Conversations with Can Altay

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2020 44:22


In this episode, we host globetrotter artist Ahmet Öğüt. With many trades in his pocket, Ahmet is a tireless people’s person as well as a hacker of sorts whose art-making competence allows him to infiltrate institutions from within to create parasitic organizations that instigate change!Ahmet Öğüt is an internationally acclaimed artist. His works often delve into topics such as religion, social norms, and politics using humor. Ahmet is the founder of the "Silent University", a roaming learning platform that aims to empower undocumented people through employing them as tutors. He is also the co-initiator of the "Code of Acquisitions" (with Burak Arikan), a watch-dog for ethical practices of art institutions, galleries and studios.LinksAhmet’s website is packed with further readings and additional material on his works. http://www.ahmetogut.comInitiated by Ahmet in 2012, The Silent University is a mobile and iterative institution. As a solidarity school run by refugees, asylum seekers, and migrants, it facilitates knowledge exchange dedicated to academics that cannot share their knowledge due to bureaucratic or juridical obstacles. https://thesilentuniversity.orgCo-founded by Ahmet with Burak Arıkan, Code of Acquisitions is an ongoing investigation about good and bad practices of art institutions, galleries, and studios. It’s inquiries address published policies as well as cases of misconduct and abuse. https://codeofacquisitions.orgTokyo based collective Chimpom invited artists such as Ai Weiwei, Taryn Simon, Trevor Paglen, and Ahmet Öğüt to contribute to an exhibition at Fukushima. These works are installed and waiting to be discovered by future settlers for years to come. More information about the “Dont follow the wind” exhibition. http://chimpom.jp/project/dfw.htmlThe Guardian’s Jonathan Jones was critical of this exhibition. https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/jonathanjonesblog/2015/jul/20/fukushima-exclusion-zone-art-politicsFind out how one of the curators Jason Waite revisited the project. https://www.e-flux.com/architecture/at-the-border/325747/the-entropic-silence-of-fukushima/Episode recorded on Zoom on April 21st 2020. Interview by Can Altay.Produced by Asli Altay and Sarp Renk Özer. Music by Grup Ses.

Arts & Ideas
Breaking Down the Barriers

Arts & Ideas

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2019 44:48


Rana Mitter hears about a project that assesses the experiences of Muslim women in the UK cultural industries and talks to political artist John Keane. Author Katherine Rundell explains why adults should be reading children's books. Plus New Generation Thinker Majed Akhter on the sailor and activist Dada Amir Haider Khan and why his global approach to workers' rights has lessons for us now. Beyond Faith: Muslim Women Artists Today which includes work by Usarae Gul is at the Whitworth, Manchester from Friday 14th June until October 2019 John Keane's exhibition If you knew me. If you knew yourself. You would not kill me. is at Snape Maltings, Aldeburgh as part of the Aldeburgh Festival until Sunday 23rd June. Why You Should Read Children's Books, Even Though You Are Old And Wise by Katherine Rundell is published on 13th June. New Generation Thinkers is a scheme run by the BBC and the AHRC to select ten academics each year who can turn their research into radio. You can hear more from the 2019 Thinkers in this launch programme https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0004dsv Majed Akhter teaches at King's College London. You find hear the discussion about representations of Rwanda on TV and how the country has moved on from the conflict here https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0001dt8 Taryn Simon https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b08q2pkg Producer: Torquil MacLeod

The Week in Art
Episode 29: Taryn Simon interview, and restoring a Renaissance masterpiece at the Met

The Week in Art

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2018 51:26


We talk to the American artist about her acclaimed work staged in New York and now London, An Occupation of Loss. We hear from a curator and conservator at the Metropolitan Museum of Art about resurrecting Moretto da Brescia’s final great painting. And Louisa Buck and Ben Luke appraise the Turner Prize shortlist. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

On Taking Pictures
287: If It Sounds Good Now, It'll Sound Good Later

On Taking Pictures

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2017 102:02


This week, when do great cameras (or any other tools for that matter) cease to be great? Many of us chase the latest and greatest, but even the older version was great once. Also, some thoughts on photos as objects, courtesy of Wim Wenders and his collection of thousands of Polaroids. Plus, managing expectations about what we put out into the world. Taryn Simon is our Photographer of the Week. As a teaser for next week, what defines a “cultural experience” for you?

On Taking Pictures
287: If It Sounds Good Now, It’ll Sound Good Later

On Taking Pictures

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2017 102:02


This week, when do great cameras (or any other tools for that matter) cease to be great? Many of us chase the latest and greatest, but even the older version was great once. Also, some thoughts on photos as objects, courtesy of Wim Wenders and his collection of thousands of Polaroids. Plus, managing expectations about what we put out into the world. Taryn Simon is our Photographer of the Week. As a teaser for next week, what defines a “cultural experience” for you?

The Long Island History Project
Episode 51: Jeremy Dennis: Long Island Indigenous Landscapes

The Long Island History Project

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2017 46:08


Jeremy Dennis is in pursuit of the past, intent on documenting the historical and sacred sites of indigenous people on Long Island. His project, On This Site, restores a map of an old heritage. Jeremy has walked forests, railroad tracks, and backyards to uncover and photograph the often overlooked and forgotten landscape of his Shinnecock ancestors and other Native Americans on Long Island. On this episode, Jeremy discusses the physical evolution of the sites he has visited as well as his travels through the historical record trying to decode long-forgotten place names and often biased accounts. We also talk about the photography projects that inspired him and what he would like to pursue next.   Further Research: On This Site Jeremy Dennis Fine Art Photography "On This Site: The Indigenous People of Suffolk County" Exhibit July 15th, 1:00 PM Opening Reception, Suffolk County Historical Society Running Strong for American Indian Youth Related Episodes: Tales of the Shinnecock A Walk Through Time With The Shinnecock An Island of History Under Our Feet Photography Projects: Vanishing Points, Michael Sherwin On This Site, Joel Sternfeld The Innocents, Taryn Simon       Save Save

Arts & Ideas
Free Thinking - Artist Taryn Simon. Deglobalisation. 2017 New Generation Thinker Eleanor Lybeck on the circus.

Arts & Ideas

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2017 44:01


Artist Taryn Simon, Master of Photography at this year's Photo London Art Fair, speaks to Matthew Sweet about her work including her latest project Image Atlas inspired by the top image results for given search terms across local engines throughout the world. 2017 New Generation Thinker Eleanor Lybeck from the University of Oxford on the artist Edward Seago and running away to the circus.What if globalisation isn't as unstoppable as once thought? As manufacturing technology advances will the push for cheap labour abroad cease? How will that change the location of factories? And how might that affect you? We consider the idea of deglobalisation with Finbarr Livesey, author of From Global To Local, and Stephanie Flanders, former BBC Economics Editor, now Chief Market Strategist for UK and Europe at J P Morgan.Taryn Simon's art work is on show as part of Photo London at the Embankment Gallery East in Somerset House. New Generation Thinkers is a scheme run by the BBC with the Arts and Humanities Research Council to find academics who can turn their research into radio and television. You can find more information, films and broadcasts on the Free Thinking website. From Global To Local: The making of things and the end of globalisation by Finbarr Livesey is published 18 May 2017.Producer: Zahid Warley

The Shoot With Matt Day
Photographer Kevin O'meara - IG @kevin__omeara

The Shoot With Matt Day

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2017 93:09


Artists mentioned: Jacob Holdt, Taryn Simon, Larry Clark, Marc Joseph, Ramon Muxter (Soth's article on it http://new.artsmia.org/stories/art-inspires-alec-soth-on-ramon-muxter/)  http://www.americansuburbx.com/2015/04/bruce-davidson-asx-interview.html Links to A Love Token Press http://www.kevin-omeara.com/store/second-best or https://www.alovetokenpress.com/products/second-best Find Matt on Youtube https://www.youtube.com/user/mattdayphotofilmshow Matt's website: http://www.mattdayphoto.com/ This episode of the shoot is brought to you by Shoot Film Co. Shoot Film Co. exists to celebrate the culture of film photography with lasting mementos like patches, stickers, pins, and to help spread the word about artists who are creating work with traditional film photography. head on over to shootfilm.co and be sure to enter “the shoot” to receive 20% off your entire purchase.  About The Shoot: The Shoot with Matt Day is all about photography and the process that each photographer utilizes to capture their images. Every interview will dig deep into the lives of the guest, learn about their process, pick their brains on how and why they love the art of photography, and hear some amazing stories. With guests such as Jason Lee, Garrett Remy, Nate Matos, and Ray Barbee, Matt guides each interview in a refreshing and insightful way to hear their journey. If you are a fan of Matt Day's work on YouTube, you will surely love The Shoot.    

Frieze
'Shooting Gallery - The Problems of Photographic Representation' (Frieze Talks London 2010)

Frieze

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2016 89:11


Adam Broomberg (artist, London); Oliver Chanarin (artist, London); Taryn Simon (artist, New York); Chaired by Christy Lange (writer & Associate Editor, frieze, Berlin) at Frieze London 2010

I Love Photography
Jennifer Lawerence Hacked Celebrity Nude Photos | I Love Photography | Ep. 31 | Sept 5, 2014

I Love Photography

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2014 33:56


Our weekly look at all things photographic with Sarah Jacobs and PhotoShelter co-founder Allen Murabayashi.   Get the podcast: http://bit.ly/ilovephoto Watch the broadcast: http://bit.ly/ilovephotoyt   1:00 Breed's Melissa Rodwell talks fashion photography 1:46 Hacked Celebrity Nudes of Jennifer Lawrence and Kate Upton 7:19 Tehching Hsieh’s hourly self portraits for one year straight 10:30 Rose Callahan photographs modern day dandies 13:16 Horace Poolaw’s Images of Kiowa Indians 15:51 Taryn Simon’s 007 photos in Birds of the West Indies 18:58 Sam Polcer’s New York Bike Style 20:34 75% of Ikea’s catalog is computer generated 24:00 Spy satellites used to drop film in buckets caught in mid-air by airplanes 26:38 Jeff Gates took photos of his Asian daughters and was stopped by Homeland Security 30:12 Upload your images directly from your PhotoShelter website builder

celebrities asian birds photography spies ikea images hacked upload jennifer lawrence nude photos jennifer lawerence sarah jacobs photoshelter tehching hsieh taryn simon rose callahan horace poolaw
Frieze
Taryn Simon

Frieze

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2012 52:58


Presents her recent work, A Living Man Declared Dead and Other Chapters I–XVIII (2012)

frieze new york taryn simon