Glasstire

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 140:22:30
  • Mas informaciones

Informações:

Sinopsis

Expanding the conversation about art in Texas.

Episodios

  • On Location at the Satellite Art Show: Day 1

    15/03/2019 Duración: 45min

    For day one of Glasstire's podcast from the Satellite Art Show in Austin, we talked to Houston-based performance artist and Experimental Action festival co-organizer Julia Claire Wallace, and Satellite's performance art curator and Performance Is Alive founder Quinn Dukes, about the challenges of producing performances at an art fair, Texas' performance art community, and their advice for budding artists. We also talked to Houston artist Henry Sanchez about his upcoming project along Houston’s Buffalo Bayou. This is the first in a series of podcasts brought to you by Glasstire from Satellite. https://glasstire.com/2019/03/15/on-location-at-the-satellite-art-show-day-1/

  • Art Boors: Daedelus Hoffman and Lindsay Starr

    16/10/2018 Duración: 56min

    Neil Fauerso talks to Austin's Daedelus Hoffman and Lindsay Starr run Cattywampus Press and Dirty Dark Place, among other art endeavors.

  • Art Dirt: Banksy Prank Fail

    13/10/2018 Duración: 23min

    Rainey Knudson and Christina Rees discuss all the ways the Banksy prank of half-shredding a painting during a Sotheby's auction was unimpressive.

  • Art Dirt: Pete Gershon and Houston's Wild Art history

    30/09/2018 Duración: 56min

    A conversation with author Pete Gershon on the publication of his book Collision: The Contemporary Art Scene in Houston, 1972-1985. With Rainey Knudson and Christina Rees.

  • Art Boors: Artist Hills Snyder

    29/08/2018 Duración: 32min

    Neil Fauerso talks to Hills Snyder — a Texas and New Mexico-based artist and Glasstire contributor — about the draw of the American West, alternative ways of talking about and teaching art, and how a small New Mexico town differs from Marfa. “In my class at UTSA, I’m a sort of homeopathic tincture that’s an alternative to the usual Western art history trip you get at an American university art program.” Glasstire is a Digital Publication that examines Visual Art in Texas. Find our weekly Top 5 Art Exhibits, features on Texas based artists, and news. Keep in touch at glasstire.com

  • Art Boors: Veronica Ortuño of Las Cruxes in Austin

    14/07/2018 Duración: 37min

    Neil Fauerso talks to Veronica Ortuño — owner and director of Las Cruxes in Austin (a gallery, shop, performance and community space) — about aesthetic development, her new interior projects in Detroit, and actualizing your vision.

  • Art Dirt: Texas Shows We'd Like to See, and the Point of an Art Writing Prize

    08/07/2018 Duración: 35min

    Rainey Knudson and Christina Rees discuss the big Texas shows we'd most like to see, and why we're launching the Glasstire Art Writing Prize. “If you give the the strongest artists in Texas the space to stretch out and perform, and the resources to make really great work, they do it. They bring their game.”

  • Introducing Neil Fauerso, with guest Christina Rees

    20/06/2018 Duración: 42min

    Neil Fauerso, based in San Antonio, is Glasstire's Guest Features Editor this summer. In this podcast, Neil chats with Glasstire's Editor-in-Chief Christina Rees about the first art they were exposed to, the vitality of horror, the Trump movie trailer, and the art-political landscape of Texas.

  • The Czar Of Bizarre: an Interview with Johnny Meah

    02/06/2018 Duración: 19min

    In this podcast, Brandon Zech interviews circus performer and artist Johnny Meah about his life, his work, and how carnivals have changed over the past 50 years.

  • #9 with David McGee: The Eastman Effect

    22/05/2018 Duración: 51min

    Julius Eastman was a provocative, outspoken composer active in the 1970s experimental music scene in New York. His titles for his works, including Gay Guerrilla, Evil Nigger, and Crazy Nigger, created an uproar at the time among academic circles and continue to provoke discomfort. His infamous 1975 performance of John Cage's Song Books, in which Eastman undressed a male volunteer onstage and made sexual overtures to him, incensed Cage and created a permanent rift with the elder statesman. Things would go downhill from there for Eastman, who struggled to make ends meet and was eventually evicted from his Lower East Side apartment, losing all his compositions and possessions in the process. As a promising young singer and pianist, Eastman had performed at Carnegie Hall and the Lincoln Center; but he died in 1990 at the age of 49, homeless and forgotten in Buffalo, NY. Recently, there has been a resurgence of interest in his work, with an exhibition and tribute at the Kitchen in New York earlier this year. Our

  • Art Dirt: Artists Don't Have To Be Do-Gooders

    06/05/2018 Duración: 27min

    Rainey Knudson and Christina Rees discuss whether artists really have to be politically engaged in their work.

  • The Story of Houston's FIX OVEN A/C Signs

    01/05/2018 Duración: 25min

    Brandon Zech on a series of signs that are ubiquitous in the Houston landscape. For a written version of this story, and for more pictures of the FIX OVEN A/C signs, go here: http://glasstire.com/2018/04/30/the-story-of-houstons-fix-oven-a-c-signs/

  • #9 with David McGee: The Black Panther

    15/04/2018 Duración: 45min

    A conversation with host David McGee and guests Felicia Johnson and Stanford W. Carpenter about the cultural phenomenon of the movie The Black Panther, which as of writing is the top-grossing super hero movie of all time in the US, having surpassed $1.3 billion globally in revenues. Recording, mix, and original music by @cbeckermusic.

  • Art Dirt: Sacklers, Kochs, and Dirty Money

    25/03/2018 Duración: 36min

    Rainey Knudson and Christina Rees discuss controversies in the museum world about where the money is coming from. "If the Kochs want to make a $35 million donation to Glasstire, we'll certainly consider it."

  • Art Dirt: The Border Wall Doesn't Make Donald Trump A Conceptual Artist

    04/03/2018 Duración: 27min

    Rainey Knudson and Christina Rees discuss artist Christoph Büchel's proposal to designate the prototypes for a wall between the US and Mexico as a national monument, and whether any of this is art.

  • Art Dirt 12: The Ellsworth Kelly Chapel Is A Chapel

    18/02/2018 Duración: 27min

    Rainey Knudson and Christina Rees discuss the new, $23 million Ellsworth Kelly artwork titled "Austin" on the campus of the University of Texas at Austin, and why on earth the people in charge don't want it to be called a chapel.

  • 10 Not A Hobby: Daniela Antelo

    29/12/2017 Duración: 15min

    Daniela Antelo is an artist and realtor living and working in Houston. Her art is primarily performative uses the body to deal with ideas around communication, relationships, and the urban landscape. Originally from Caracas, Venezuela, she moved to Florida with her family at age 12, and after living abroad in Dubai, she moved to Houston in 2010 when her husband was relocated for work.  Together with Brenda Cruz-Wulf she started the Las Girls Collective in order to collaborate on site-specific performances and experimental dance films. Antelo is also The Marriage Story Collector, an ongoing project for which she interviews strangers about how they interpret marriage.

  • 09 Not A Hobby: Soledad Arias

    10/11/2017 Duración: 16min

    In this episode I interview Soledad Arias, an artist in New York who works as a medical interpreter. Originally from Buenos Aires, Argentina, Soledad has lived in NYC for almost 20 years. Being bilingual, her life, artwork, and (luckily) her job revolve around language. She is interested in exploring the human condition through the medium of speech. At a time when words seem to be thrown around blindly, accelerated by the speed of social media, Arias reminds us of the importance of empathy, practicing emotional listening, and that meaning and specificity still matter.

  • Art Dirt 11: David McGee

    29/10/2017 Duración: 34min

    In our latest Art Dirt podcast, Rainey Knudson speaks with Houston artist David McGee, who is the subject of two exhibitions in Houston this fall, at Texas Gallery and the Houston Museum of African American Culture. "Listen, Donald Trump should be the president of Sharknado."

  • Art Dirt 10: The Texas Biennial, Guggenheim Self-Censoring, Hugh Hefner

    03/10/2017 Duración: 39min

    Rainey Knudson and Christina Rees discuss the week's art news: the return of the Texas Biennial, the Guggenheim's decision to pull controversial videos from a new show, and the death of Playboy founder Hugh Hefner (that's Lauren Hutton in her bunny outfit from the 1960s).

página 11 de 13