Today Maybe Forever

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 18:21:59
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Sinopsis

Today Maybe Forever is a conversation experience featuring compelling ideas and extraordinary people, highlighting the importance of context and cultural memory in the arts, sciences, design and pop culture. Hosted by @floydintl.

Episodios

  • PUBLIC TALK: THEASTER GATES - BLACK SPACE

    09/03/2018 Duración: 37min

    Multidisciplinary artist Theaster Gates gave a public talk at Emory University in 2016 entitled "Black Space", in which he talked about his approach to framing ideas and building altars to the everyday Black experience.

  • PUBLIC TALK: SHAMIM MOMIN - LOS ANGELES NOMADIC DIVISION

    14/02/2018 Duración: 01h15min

    Shamim M. Momin, director and curator at public art organization Los Angeles Nomadic Division, gives a public talk at Atlanta Contemporary. Momin discusses some of her organization's philosophy on public art, some of the memorable projects, and her personal journey to this stage in her career after an initial stint at the Whitney Museum.

  • "This or Nothing" with Jamaal Barber

    14/12/2017 Duración: 46min

    Printmaker Jamaal Barber talks about how he got his start as a printmaker, finding his point of view as an artist, and why Emory Douglas’ work inspires him. Barber also shares some thoughts on his book, “Color Theory”, and his exhibition “ BRIGHT BLACK.”

  • “The Art of Winfinity” with The Galbreath Unit

    25/10/2017 Duración: 59min

    George and Esohe Galbreath discuss their art careers, their relationship, collecting art, and the many roles they play in the arts ecosystem. "Every time we buy a piece of artwork, we support a small black business entity." Music Composed by: Santiago Paramo (@santiago-paramo)

  • "Love, War, Work and Ourselves" with Sara Santamaria

    01/07/2017 Duración: 33min

    Being in transit. Grappling with the inside and outside versions ourselves. Dealing with the process of immigrating to America. Negotiating different cultures and notions around what it means to be a stranger. Being both present and absent. The invisible and permanent line. Bitterness and Rejection. In this conversation, visual artist Sara Santamaria discusses all of the above in the context of her most recent exhibition, “Who Comes Today and Who Stays Tomorrow”. MARTA trains // Room Temperature Water// Art Forms. Raising empathy toward immigrants. “At the end of the day, immigrants are very vulnerable. And they are being very courageous; they’re just trying to change their own destinies. People are immigrating for three main reasons—love, war, or work—and all of those three reasons imply a lot of hopes and expectations.”

  • "Substance in the Marginal Carnival" with Shanequa Gay

    10/06/2017 Duración: 34min

    Shanequa Gay joins Floyd to talk about motherhood, negotiating ownership of black bodies, coping with communal PTSD and more. “As an artist i’m always looking for spaces of safety…when i feel safe then i can create, and when I can create then I’m happy…”

  • "Water in New Mexico" with Danielle Gilmore

    05/06/2017 Duración: 35min

    Floyd chats with Danielle Gilmore about walking to find water in New Mexico, embracing fear as part of our journey, her next tattoo, and the meaning of “Today Maybe Forever”.

  • "Collective Consuming Stereotypes" with Katrina Andry

    15/04/2017 Duración: 26min

    Recorded at the Hammonds House Museum, visual artist and printmaker Katrina Andry talks about her favorite things about New Orleans, how she began her career as a printmaker, and how she addresses race and culture in her work. Andry delves deeply into how society shapes stereotypes around people of color, the trigger words used by the media to frame those stereotypes, and how those stories get perpetuated over time. She also gives some context to the use of the term "Watermelon Face" and why she's very intentional with word choices in the titles of her work.

  • "Wild as the Wind" with Ayana V. Jackson

    29/03/2017 Duración: 29min

    "It's never about trying to create beautiful images..." Visual Artist and Photographer Ayana V. Jackson talks about how she works with history and memory in her work, as well as when she feels most powerful. Jackson also discusses her work, "Wild as the Wind", and how she interprets moments of protest in black communities around the world, what the City of Atlanta means to her, and how she grapples with the transactional nature of selling work that represents the black body. This conversation is presented in conjunction with the National Black Arts Festival and Arnika Dawkins Photographic Fine Art Gallery.

  • "L.A. Confidential" with A Not-So-Silent Partner

    13/01/2017 Duración: 17min

    We ride around Los Angeles to get some insight on the other side of chasing the Hollywood dream.

  • "Names You Can Trust" with DJ Santiago Paramo

    05/01/2017 Duración: 15min

    DJ Santiago Paramo talks about some of his favorite songs from his most recent DJ set, which artists he finds interesting right now, and what keeps him excited as a DJ.

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