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    The Sculptor's Funeral

    The Sculptor's Funeral is the only podcast dedicated to figurative sculptors living and working today. Art history, tech talk, news, and interviews for those working in the Western European tradition of figurative sculpture, along with a social media forum and listener mail/questions/comments make this podcast required listening for any sculptor who knows the Fine Arts aren't dead, they just smell a little funny.
    en96 Episodes

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    Episodes (96)

    Episode 90 - The Mystery of Messerschmidt

    Episode 90 - The Mystery of Messerschmidt
    Meet one of the most enigmatic and anachronistic sculptors in history - Franz Messerschmidt. His work looks modern, but that's a few centuries off the mark! He's not what you would expect from a sculptor from the Rococo period... So what gives? Why were these strange heads made? Learn the startling answer here.
    The Sculptor's Funeral
    enNovember 22, 2022

    Episode 89 - Anna Hyatt Huntington and Brookgreen Garden

    Episode 89 - Anna Hyatt Huntington and Brookgreen Garden
    Huntington was a prolific American sculptor in the early 20th century, but her greatest legacy may be the extensive and unique sculpture park she built, the first of its kind in the United States. Listen here to learn about the past and future of Brookgreen Garden; with interviews with Bryan Rapp and Robin Salmon.
    The Sculptor's Funeral
    enJuly 23, 2022

    Episode 88 - Greco-Roman Wrestling

    Episode 88 - Greco-Roman Wrestling
    The Venus De Milo, the Torso Belvedere, The Winged Victory, The Laocoon - some of the most famous Antique sculpture in the world. Strange that we know so little about who made them and why! So what makes them so famous? Find out the unexpected reasons here.
    The Sculptor's Funeral
    enSeptember 19, 2021

    Episode 87 - The Colossus of Rhodes

    Episode 87 - The Colossus of Rhodes
    It's often hyperbole to describe something as 'colossal' - but when you're talking about the statue for which the word 'colossal' was coined, you get a pass. Learn what there is to know about how and why the Colossus of Rhodes was built, and how it rightly earned its place as one of the Seven Wonders of the World - the original Bucket List.
    The Sculptor's Funeral
    enJanuary 30, 2021

    Episode 86 - Quiz Show Finals

    Episode 86 - Quiz Show Finals
    The Sculptor's Funeral Podcast is finishing off this strange and terrible year with the final round of the quiz show! Listen to Lubov, David, and Liz test their knowledge of the history of sculpture, in their quest to attain the coveted Sculptor's Funeral coffee mug.
    The Sculptor's Funeral
    enDecember 26, 2020

    Episode 82 - The Road to Hellenism, Part II

    Episode 82 - The Road to Hellenism, Part II
    Praxiteles and Lysippos - the two giants of 4th century Greece, and they are both covered in this episode. Learn what happened to the first classical nude female statue! Learn why eight heads are better than seven! And does Alexander succeed in Making Attica Great Again? Find out here.
    The Sculptor's Funeral
    enMarch 28, 2020

    Episode 81 - The Road To Hellenism, Part One

    Episode 81 - The Road To Hellenism, Part One
    If 'Classic' derives from the Greek word for 'Best', then what comes after the time of Classical Athens? Something not as good for Athens, of course. But despite the fall of the world's first democracy, the arts in Athens and all of Greece continued and even flourished. In the first of this two-part episode, we'll cover the sculptors Alkamenes, Kresilas, and Skopas. In the second part, look out for Lysippos and Praxiteles.
    The Sculptor's Funeral
    enJanuary 26, 2020

    Episode 80 - Polykleitos

    Episode 80 - Polykleitos
    In this episode. Jason discusses the sculpture of Polykleitos and the ideas behind them. One of the most celebrated sculptors in history, Polykleitos devised a new formula for the creation of figurative sculpture, known as the Kanon, which set the standard for generations of Greek sculptors following in this giant's wake. Want to be a Classicist in sculpture? The Kanon of Polykleitos is Classicism 101.

    Episode 79 - The Parthenon

    Episode 79 - The Parthenon
    In this follow-up on the episode concerning the Greek sculptor Phidias, we take a look at the sculptural program of Greece's most famous structure, the Parthenon: why they were made, what they meant then, and why they have remained relevant - and even controversial - right up to our own day.
    The Sculptor's Funeral
    enMarch 10, 2019

    Episode 78 - The Golden Age

    Episode 78 - The Golden Age
    Vision, talent, will, and money - the perfect combination for a Golden Age in sculpture. It's only happened a small handful of times, and it happened first in 5th Century BC Greece. In the first of a series of episodes covering this period, Jason discusses well-known landmarks of Classical Greece such as the Riace Bronzes, the Discus Thrower, and the life and work of the greatest of Old Masters - Phidias.
    The Sculptor's Funeral
    enDecember 29, 2018

    Episode 77 - The Rise of Athens

    Episode 77 - The Rise of Athens
    What did it take to move Greek culture forward into the Classical period from the Archaic? Just a few victorious battles against impossible odds, unexpected and fantastic wealth, military and political genius, and... - oh yeah, the complete destruction of Athens. Learn how luck, will, disasters, and mayhem strong enough to wipe the archaic smile off any Greek's face kickstarted the greatest era of Greek civilization.
    The Sculptor's Funeral
    enNovember 30, 2018

    Episode 76 - Naissance

    Episode 76 - Naissance
    Renaissance means 'Rebirth'. But we don't hear much about the original 'Naissance' in Ancient Greece that gave birth to what we call Classical sculpture. When were the first lifesized bronze figures cast? What were the first civic public monuments? Who invented Contrapposto? Find out here.
    The Sculptor's Funeral
    enNovember 04, 2018

    Episode 75 - Why Greece?

    Episode 75 - Why Greece?
    In the first of a new series of Sculptor's Funeral episodes focusing on the ancient Greeks, Jason looks at the fundamental question underlying the nature of the entire Western European Tradition of sculpture - Why Greece? Why did it all start there, and why do artists throughout history keep returning there -and not Egypt or Persia or another artistic tradition? It's actually a question with a straightforward answer - Nature. But the origins and motives behind this simple answer are more complex.
    The Sculptor's Funeral
    enSeptember 29, 2018

    Episode 74 - The Shrine of Democracy

    Episode 74 - The Shrine of Democracy
    Gutzon Borglum's masterpiece, the Mount Rushmore National Monument... Overblown tourist attraction, or a sculpture for the Ages? Listen to the unlikely story of its creation, and you might decide that somehow it's both.
    The Sculptor's Funeral
    enJune 02, 2018

    Episode 73 - Gutzon Borglum, The One Man War

    Episode 73 - Gutzon Borglum, The One Man War
    Who is Gutzon Borglum, you ask? How strange that the sculptor of the Mount Rushmore National Monument in South Dakota is practically unknown, even in the United States. In the first of this two-part episode, we look at the life and work of the man, before he met the mountain.
    The Sculptor's Funeral
    enFebruary 19, 2018

    Episode 72 - Confederate Statues and the Power pf Propaganda

    Episode 72 - Confederate Statues and the Power pf Propaganda
    This episode of the Sculptor's Funeral examines the controversy surrounding the removal of statues from public spaces around the United States. Why are statues commemorating the losing side of a civil war more prevalent than those commemorating the victors of other wars? What is the message they were designed to send - and who sent the message? Jason examines this fascinating case study in public art as propaganda.
    The Sculptor's Funeral
    enJanuary 14, 2018

    Episode 71 - The Lincoln Memorial

    Episode 71 - The Lincoln Memorial
    Daniel Chester French's greatest work is arguably the statue of Abraham Lincoln in the Lincoln Memorial on the National Mall in Washington, DC. but where does 'greatness' in art come from? Is it given to the artwork by its creator, or is it, like beauty, in the eye of the beholder?
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