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    guggenheim

    Explore " guggenheim" with insightful episodes like "#14 - Coleccionista: La hipocresía en el mundo del arte | Benedicta M. Badia", "Planning the UAE’s biggest gig", "Las noticias de la tarde del martes 16 de enero de 2024", "Kameelah Janan Rasheed isn't interested in being legible" and "Class Trip" from podcasts like ""Arte en Diálogo", "The Agenda", "KISS FM NOTICIAS", "This Being Human" and "A Look Behind in Rewind"" and more!

    Episodes (28)

    #14 - Coleccionista: La hipocresía en el mundo del arte | Benedicta M. Badia

    #14 - Coleccionista: La hipocresía en el mundo del arte | Benedicta M. Badia

    Explora el fascinante mundo del arte contemporáneo en este episodio de 'Arte en Diálogo' con Benedicta M. Badia, coleccionista, gestora cultural y comisario. Con más de dos décadas de experiencia, Benedicta comparte su pasión por el arte y dedicación por crear una colección con un enfoque socio político y sostenible. Descubre cómo su práctica coleccionista se extiende a la promoción, educación y apoyo del ecosistema artístico, representando galerías, participando en comités de adquisiciones y apoyando proyectos de investigación. Sumérgete en la visión de una filántropa dedicada a enriquecer el diálogo cultural y artístico a nivel global.

    💡 Conéctate con la vibrante comunidad artística de Arteinformado: https://www.arteinformado.com/

    📍Sigue a Benedicta M. Badia en Arteinformado:

    📰Descubre más sobre su colección: https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-collector-benedicta-badia-de-nordenstahl-drawn-art-appalls

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    Las noticias de la tarde del martes 16 de enero de 2024

    Las noticias de la tarde del martes 16 de enero de 2024

    El Congreso ha aprobado la toma en consideración de la iniciativa impulsada por el PP y el PSOE para reformar el artículo 49 de la Constitución y eliminar el término 'disminuidos' para sustituirlo por 'personas con discapacidad', en un momento en que el PSOE y sus socios catalanes apuran la negociación para intentar blindar la ley de amnistía y que Podemos exige negociar directamente con el PSOE.

    El Gobierno ha llevado a cabo la desclasificación "parcial" de documentos sobre el espionaje al presidente de la Generalitat, Pere Aragonès, con el programa Pegasus. Sin dejar los tribunales, el Constitucional anula la condena de inhabilitación a Alberto Rodríguez.

    El Gobierno ha aprobado este martes el real decreto que equipara la regulación del tabaco calentado al tradicional, y el Ministerio de la Presidencia y Justicia ha llevado al Consejo de Ministros el 'Informe sobre protección integral de menores frente al acceso a la pornografía en internet'.

    En la página cultural, la Fundación Contemporánea ha presentado el Observatorio de la Cultura 2023. Y tras conocer el cierre demercados, y la previsión del tiempo para mañana, ya tenemos fecha para el estreno de la cinta de animación, escrita y producida por el cantautor Juan Luis Guerra.

     

    Edición: Ismael Arranz
    Realización: JL García

     

     

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Kameelah Janan Rasheed isn't interested in being legible

    Kameelah Janan Rasheed isn't interested in being legible
    Kameelah Janan Rasheed is an artist whose work focuses on Black knowledge production, re-shaping history, and unlearning the things we think we know. Her projects, spanning photography, installations, text, sound, and more, have been shown around the globe and earned her a 2021 Guggenheim Fellowship.

    She joins us to talk about resisting easy definitions, finding new ways to think about the marks that we leave on the world, and her lifelong engagement with emerging technologies.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Class Trip

    Class Trip

    Season 2, Episode 26:  From the long-lost Boardwalk of Linden, NJ, to Revolutionary War sites in Morristown, to New York City art museums, to the monuments of Washington, DC, our school trips were a wild and crazy assortment of adventures that lived on in our memories for years afterwards.  In this podcast series, Tom Nielson tells stories, shares memories, and concocts whimsical, light-hearted tales inspired by his own life experiences, channeling the styles of Jean Shepherd, Garrison Keillor, Mark Twain, Jerry Seinfeld, and other famous storytellers.  And by the way, as we often do in these stories, the names are changed to protect the innocent.

    If you enjoyed this podcast, you're invited to hear more of our episodes at "A Look Behind in Rewind." And feel free to share our link with friends, family, and others, as well as following us on Buzzsprout.com, Apple, Pandora, or wherever you get your podcasts.

    Support the show

    EXCLUSIVE! Get notified immediately, whenever a new episode goes online — sign up to be one of our loyal supporters. It’s easy — just click on the convenient “Support The Show” link above to subscribe. Your contribution helps us to continue cranking out these whimsical nostalgia stories, allowing fans like you to reminisce about old times, putting a smile on your face and a twinkle in your eye. PLUS - when you subscribe, we’ll mention you by name in an upcoming podcast. Thanks for your support!

    Anders Byriel on Redefining the Idea of “Company Culture”

    Anders Byriel on Redefining the Idea of “Company Culture”

    Over his 25 years as CEO of the Danish textile company Kvadrat, Anders Byriel has turned what was once a small, fairly dusty family design business into a global giant. Perhaps just as notably, he’s taken a radical, and even artistic, approach to building and cultivating the brand’s culture, partnering with designers such as Raf Simons, Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec, and Peter Saville; arts institutions like the New Museum in New York, the Tate Modern in London, and the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Humlebaek, Denmark; and brands including Adidas Originals, Bang & Olufsen, and Jaguar Land Rover. On this week’s episode of Time Sensitive, Byriel talks about why the best design has an artistic edge, the importance of making space for emotion within a corporate environment, and his deep and lifelong passions of poetry and photography.

    Special thanks to our Season 7 sponsor, 

    L’ÉCOLE, School of Jewelry Arts.

    Show notes:

    Anders Byriel [01:04]

    Annie Ernaux [04:25]

    “Vermeer” at the Rijksmuseum [06:04]

    Kvadrat [06:56]

    Raf Simons [12:05]

    Peter Saville [13:24]

    David Adjaye [14:05]

    Thomas Demand [14:14]

    Louisiana Museum of Modern Art [14:17]

    Rosemarie Troeckel [14:20]

    Olafur Eliasson [14:27]

    Jean Nouvel [14:40]

    Massimiliano Gioni [18:06]

    Pipilotti Rist [18:39]

    Wu Tsang [19:07]

    “The Triple Folly” [19:33]

    Danh Vo [24:20]

    Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec [27:09]

    Giulio Ridolfo [30:41]

    “Materializing Color” [30:43]

    Adidas Originals x Kvadrat Stan Smith [39:03]

    Konstantin Grcic [43:06]

    Verner Panton [49:29]

    “Pop Art Design” exhibition at Vitra Design Museum [50:20]

    Robert Adams [01:03:08]

    Henrik Nordbrandt [01:03:52]

    Nan Goldin [01:10:39]

    Ocean Vuong [01:04:54]

    Ocean Vuong’s “Time Is a Mother” book of poems [01:05:01]

    “Your Brain on Art” book [01:05:09]

    Hiroshi Sugimoto [01:11:37]

    “Ai Weiwei In the Elevator When Taken Into Custody by the Police” (2009) [01:12:00]

    Ansel Adams [01:12:44]

    Robert Adams’s “Around the House” book [01:13:01]

    Robert Adams’s "A Road Through Shore Pine" book [01:13:30]

    Nick Cave on Art as a Means of Working Through Grief and Trauma

    Nick Cave on Art as a Means of Working Through Grief and Trauma

    On this week’s episode of Time Sensitive—our first of Season 7—Chicago-based artist Nick Cave talks about his career-spanning retrospective, “Forothermore,” currently on view at the Guggenheim (through April 10), which takes over three floors and features installation, video works, and sculpture, including recent iterations of his famous Soundsuits; his improvisational approach to work and life; how his art seeks to find brightness in darkness; and what the world might be like if everyone sat in silence for an hour each day.

    Special thanks to our Season 7 sponsor, L’ÉCOLE, School of Jewelry Arts.

    Show notes: 

    Épisode 25 : Philippe Laprise

    Épisode 25 : Philippe Laprise

    L'humoriste Philippe Laprise nous raconte comment un Van Gogh exposé au Guggenheim l'a chaviré et lui a ouvert une porte sur l'art.

    Production : MNBAQ
    Animation et réalisation : Marie-Hélène Raymond
    Montage et conception sonore : Jean-François Roy
    Recherche et coordination : Julie Morin

    Le balado L'art dans ma vie s'inscrit dans le cadre de la mise en œuvre du Plan culturel numérique du Québec (PCNQ) du ministère de la Culture et des Communications.

    EP027: Art Not War

    EP027: Art Not War
    In order to break the algorithms of youtube and the social media tech overlords who continuously censor us over the pettiest things, I have made an extremely entertaining non-political episode about art to break the Algos. In Art is War I take two of my friends, art royalty John Solomon and and Shlome Hayun, and we walk through a gallery collection of 40 magnificent pieces of art in both private and public collections containing untold personal stories of Andy Warhol, Cristo, Nam June Paik, Drake and many more. We discuss the artists process, some amazing street art all over the globe, and there is a lot of humor. Within the first 5 minutes of this panel of guests you will realize you are hearing history, and it is art. There is nothing political about this show, and that is why Art is War, because we will break the Algo's with our art, our memes, and our culture. SPREAD!!!

    How the Metaverse will change brands | Teemu Suviala, Reality Labs - Tech at Meta

    How the Metaverse will change brands | Teemu Suviala, Reality Labs - Tech at Meta

    In Episode #65, Ross is joined by Teemu Suviala, Global Head of Brand Design for Reality Labs at Meta.

    Reality Labs is a diverse group of developers, researchers, engineers, and designers that leads the expansive work being done at Meta in building the next computing platform and bringing the metaverse to life. Before joining Meta Teemu led creative work at brand and design agencies, Collins, as ECD and Wolff Olins as CD in New York. He is also a co-founder of design agencies Kokoro & Moi and Syrup Helsinki and a partner at footwear brand Tarvas.

    In this episode, Ross and Teemu discuss the history of surrealism and its return to mainstream attention, and how the Metaverse will change brands. He also shares what he’s learned by being at the intersection of creativity and technology.

     

    Highlights from the conversation

    The metaverse will accelerate surrealistic fantasy-shaped ideas

    AI tools that are connected to the metaverse will change how we design

    It comes down to making sure that [your] core positioning and values are in a great place

    Dada and Surrealism were reactions to similar things that we're seeing today

    Oddness, surrealism, and escapism are starting to bleed out into popular culture

    As reality was getting weirder and weirder and sometimes even unrecognizable art did the same thing

     

    More about Teemu Suviala 

    Teemu Suviala is the Global Head of Brand Design for Reality Labs at Meta. This diverse group of developers, researchers, engineers and designers leads the expansive work being done at Meta in building the next computing platform to help people connect, find communities and grow businesses - bringing metaverse to life. Reality Labs' work spans a number of breakthrough technologies such as Meta Quest, Meta Horizon, Meta Portal and Ray-Ban Stories and touches sectors ranging from entertainment and gaming to commerce, education and work. Teemu sits in the creative intersection of product and marketing focusing on strategic and conceptual foundations for how these brands come to life. He and his team develop brand strategies, design & identity systems as well as brand elements and experiences from custom typography and sonic logos to immersive retail environments and in-product brand moments across AR and VR, among other things. At Meta, brand design teams work at the very edge of the discipline, imagining how brands will be expressed in emerging environments — including some that don’t yet exist.

    Before joining Meta Teemu led creative work at brand and design agencies Collins as ECD and Wolff Olins as CD in New York. He is also a co-founder of design agencies Kokoro & Moi and Syrup Helsinki and a partner at footwear brand Tarvas.

    Find Teemu here: Twitter | LinkedIn | Instagram

     

    Show Notes

    People:

    Companies and organisations:

    Miscellaneous:

     

    How you can help

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    4. Tell us who you’d like to hear on the podcast. Suggest someone that you think we should interview.

    One More Question is a podcast by Nicework. We are on a mission to build purposeful Web3 brands that people care about.One of the things we do best is to ask the right questions. This podcast exists because we want to share some of the best answers we have heard over the last 15 years. Our clients range from a venture studio and Hollywood film producers to the inventors of the hamburger, to name a few. We have had the honour of talking to guests like Micheal Bierut, Natasha Jen, Bruce Mau, Jack Butcher, Aaron Draplin, Marina Willer and Fredrick Öst. Their work has shaped our industry over the last 40 years. The aim is to share useful perspectives, insights and inspiration you can use as you go about building your brand. Hosted by our founder Ross Drakes.

    For cutdowns of the podcast visit our YouTube channel.

    Subscribe iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, Google Podcasts

    Music by: @dcuttermusic / http://www.davidcuttermusic.com

    To listen to previous episodes go to https://nwrk.co/omq.

    If you enjoyed this episode, please leave a review and share this episode with your friends.

    54: How to burn a painting and write an artist statement in Iceland with Michele Kishita

    54: How to burn a painting and write an artist statement in Iceland with Michele Kishita

    Michele Kishita is a Philadelphia-based artist who uses colors found in

    nature that are not typically associated with “natural” colors and focuses

    on landscape as her primary subject. Her paintings are strongly influenced

    by the graphic stylizations and compressed spaces of Japanese ukiyo-e.

    Kishita’s paintings are in a number of private/corporate collections,

    including Toyota, Capital One, and Kaiser Permanente, and her work is

    featured in Create Magazine, on the Poetry Foundation blog, and Studio

    Break podcast, as well as in several literary journals. She exhibited at the

    Sharjah Art Museum in the United Arab Emirates and the Museum of

    Non-Conformist Art in St. Petersburg, Russia. Kishita received both her

    BFA and MFA in painting from the University of the Arts.

    Was so great chatting with Michele Kishita, artist, writer and teacher about living in Japan and how that time has influenced her art, how her view of artist residencies has shifted and some of her resident highlights. She also discusses her experiences working with gallerist Bridgette Mayer and synchronicities that occurred that made it feel like the right choice to work with an art coach. She teaches writing and gives some great tips for cleaning up your artist statement and she has some great book recommendations and unconventional tips for gowing tomatoes.

    About her recent body of work: Absent Futures

    Absent Futures is a new body of work on shou sugi-ban (burnt timber)

    panels that addresses the current state of deforestation and the

    opposing concepts of resilience and devastation. While our forests and

    natural spaces continue receding due to industry and suburban sprawl,

    the more catastrophic losses are occurring in the rainforest where

    swaths the size of forty football fields disappear each minute.

    Suggestions of landscape painted onto the burnt surfaces depict a

    memory of what was while at the same time highlighting what remains

    and can still be salvaged. It is a reminder of the persistence and

    vitality of nature and our role in choosing its success or failure, which

    ultimately determines our own.

    Her work in general:

    “My current work investigates the dialogue between the wooden surfaces on which I paint and the trees from which those panels were built. I highlight the interconnectedness of humans and nature, while addressing life’s impermanence and transience. Industry's straight lines and angles try to control nature, transforming a tree’s rounded mass into flat rectangular sheets; yet, the wood grain’s undulations, marking the tree’s growth and annual water intake, emerge despite its new, boxy confines. A tree's experiences are indelibly written on its interior and at the same time are a historical account of the landscape itself. In my paintings, I strive to conjure the landscape that no longer exists but is inherently contained in each panel while expressing the visual contrast and harmony where human-made structures and nature intersect.” from www.michelekishita.com

    I also want to speak the name of Jacob Blake and send prayers to his family and loved ones. Yes we still need to  disarm the police and restructure the law enforcement and justice system in this country. Oh and the medical and education systems could use an overhaul too. We have work to do. Please register to vote and please do whatever is in your power to vote. 

    https://www.vote.org/

    So excited to share with you the conversation I had with Michele Kishita

    Links:

    www.michelekishita.com

    https://www.instagram.com/michelekishita/

    Thymelights:

    NES Artist Residency, Skagaströnd, Iceland

    https://neslist.is/

     

    SPAR, St. Petersburg, Russia

    https://artresidency.ru/

     

    virtual residency at SPAR right now

    https://virtualresidency.p-10.ru/author/michele-kishita/

    Pasha Meskhiev aka Norkus - @norkusupdates

     

    : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HO-0eJH9DMM

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EfhQJVegyGY

     

    Sueyeun Juliette Lee -

    https://silentbroadcast.com/

    https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/sueyeun-juliette-lee

     

    Links mentioned:

    The Hidden Life of Trees

    https://www.amazon.com/Hidden-Life-Trees-Communicate_Discoveries-Secret

    The Spell of the Sensuous

    https://www.amazon.com/Spell-Sensuous-Perception-Language-More-Than-Human

    Crispins Artwell “Six Names of Beauty”

    https://www.amazon.com/Six-Names-Beauty-Crispin-Sartwell

    https://www.instagram.com/crafting_the_future/

    Thyme in the Studio links:

    https://www.patreon.com/thymeinthestudio

    https://www.instagram.com/thymeinthestudiopodcast/

    https://www.instagram.com/aida.zea.arts/

    https://www.facebook.com/groups/403582056803336/

    www.thymeinthestudio.com

    https://www.aidazea.com

    Contact me: sara@aidazea.com

    Music by komiku

    ‘Pillaged’ with ‘First Cow’ Director Kelly Reichardt

    ‘Pillaged’ with ‘First Cow’ Director Kelly Reichardt

    We recorded this episode back in February and have been anxiously waiting to release it since. On this week’s episode, we had the good fortune to talk with one of the greatest directors of the 21st century, Kelly Reichardt. She is on to discuss the obscure 1967 French film, Pillaged. She also discusses her newest film, First Cow. Kelly takes April through the adaptation process and explains how she made First Cow a unique story from the novel. She also chats about making westerns and utilizing the tropes of the genre. Kelly is a true master of cinema, but she’s also genuinely hilarious. This is one of our most entertaining episodes and one you should not miss.

    Please consider financially supporting our show by becoming a Maximum Fun member at Maximumfun.org/join

    You can watch First Cow on VOD now.

    If you haven’t seen Pillaged, you can watch this crappy version on YouTube.

    With April Wolfe and Kelly Reichardt

    Shamel Pitts

    Shamel Pitts

    Princess Grace Award winning choreographer and former Batsheva dancer Shamel Pitts discusses Black Series, which explores the "colorfulness of blackness." The trilogy includes BLACK BOX, BLACK VELVET, and BLACK HOLE

    UnSequenced is a podcast in which we discover the stories and emotions behind the movement. Each episode dives deep into the creative process with a choreographer, documenting what compels them as an artist, what drives their artistic decisions for a particular work, and what unexpected things come up along the way.

    Creativity Sparks: Hilma af Klint + The Diderot Effect

    Creativity Sparks: Hilma af Klint + The Diderot Effect

    Susan Blackwell and Laura Camien reach into their personal Spark Files and share inspiration from artist Hilma af Klint, a woman whose other-worldly work was way ahead of her time (and her male contemporaries'), and their fascination with the The Diderot Effect, and how one man's spiraling consumption became his enduring legacy.

    Ep. 257: Bulletin #70: The Conroy Rises

    Ep. 257: Bulletin #70: The Conroy Rises

    Jishnu and Tejas can only talk about one thing. Kevin Conroy will finally play a live action Bruce Wayne, and that's it. As if this year could not get more epic

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    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Standing Up To The Sacklers

    Standing Up To The Sacklers

    Art organizations and sponsorship dollars have gone hand in hand for decades. But with backlash and protests over donors ethics, should cultural institutions begin looking into new funding streams? We look at the role of private dollars vs. public good in cultural art institutions. PLUS, A AUDIO EXCLUSIVE: The conversation continues with guest Jonathan H. Marks We discuss his new book “Perils of Partnership.” Music Featured: Reverend Billy & The Stop Shopping Choir, a radical activist performance community, with “Beatitudes”, from their premiere album “The Shopocalypse.”

    Guests: L.A. Kauffman, activist and member of Sackler P.A.I.N and Author, HOW TO READ A PROTEST
    Professor Jonathan H. Marks Director of the Bioethics Program at Penn State University, and affiliate faculty in law and international affairs. And author of a new book “Perils of Partnership”
    Jess Worth, Activist, co-founder of “BP or not BP”and the Art Not Oil coalitions and currently is the co-director of Culture Unstained.

    For suggested reading, research and links to our guests and issues featured in this episode, go to: Patreon.com/theLFShow

     

    The Laura Flanders Show Crew:  Laura Flanders, Sabrina Artel, David Neuman, Nat Needham, Rory O'Conner, Janet Hernandez, Sarah Miller and Jeannie Hopper

     

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    ACCESSIBILITY - The broadcast edition of this episode is available with closed captioned by clicking here for our YouTube Channel