Couverture de Art and Obsolescence

Art and Obsolescence

Art and Obsolescence

De : Cass Fino-Radin
Écouter gratuitement

À propos de cette écoute

Conversations with artists, collectors, and professionals shaping the past, present, and future of art and technology.© 2024 Art and Obsolescence Art Sciences sociales
Les membres Amazon Prime bénéficient automatiquement de 2 livres audio offerts chez Audible.

Vous êtes membre Amazon Prime ?

Bénéficiez automatiquement de 2 livres audio offerts.
Bonne écoute !
    Épisodes
    • Pippi Zornoza
      Mar 28 2024

      A very special episode! Today we are chatting with Pippi Zornoza, co-founder of the Dirt Palace, a feminist artist-run collective/residency program/space that has been a pivotal part of the artistic community in Providence for over 20 years, and this interview is part two of a three part series focused on the Dirt Palace and its two co-founders: Xander Marro and Pippi Zornoza.

      Pippi’s art and music defy boundaries of media, genre, and context, embodying an intensity and a meticulous approach to detail, often exploring the intricate, macabre, and the obsessive. Pippi’s work spans textiles, embroidery, lace-making, knitting, sculpture, electronics, and performance — be it within an exhibition context, on stage, or, or in a dark and cavernous warehouse. Pippi’s musical projects are almost too numerous to name: Throne of Blood, Sawzall, Vulture, Bonedust, RETRIX, and currently HARPY.

      This series was made in collaboration with Voices in Contemporary Art (VoCA), and was recorded in December 2022 in Pippi’s studio. In a first for the pod, you can *watch* the interview, including clips of Pippi’s work here. In our chat we delve into Pippi’s origins as an artist, her early years in Providence, and how her creative practice has evolved to its current interdisciplinary state that refreshingly blurs the boundaries between contemporary art, performance, and music

      Stay tuned for the final episode in the series where we sit down with both artists to discuss their decades long collaboration.

      Links from the conversation with Pippi
      > Pippi’s Bandcamp: https://bonedustprov.bandcamp.com/
      > HARPY: https://harpyprovidence.bandcamp.com/album/a-sacrifice
      > A SACRIFICE (music video): https://youtu.be/kpo_PRLyuYI?si=8ZkNzf8Rni3QVXP4
      > https://www.dirtpalace.org
      > https://www.dirtpalace.org/wchbnb

      Get access to exclusive content - join us on Patreon!
      > https://patreon.com/artobsolescence

      Join the conversation:
      https://www.instagram.com/artobsolescence/

      Support artists
      Art and Obsolescence is a non-profit podcast, sponsored by the New York Foundation for the Arts, and we are committed to equitably supporting artists that come on the show. Help support our work by making a tax deductible gift through NYFA here: https://www.artandobsolescence.com/donate

      Afficher plus Afficher moins
      53 min
    • Xander Marro
      Feb 9 2024

      A very special episode! Today we are chatting with Xander Marro, co-founder of the Dirt Palace, "a feminist cupcake encrusted netherworld located along the dioxin filled banks of the Woonasquatucket river, which is to say in Providence, RI USA". The Dirt Palace is a feminist artist-run collective/residency program/space that has been a pivotal part of the artistic community in Providence for over 20 years, and this interview is the first in a three part series focused on the Dirt Palace and its two co-founders: Xander Marro and Pippi Zornoza.

      This series was made in collaboration with Voices in Contemporary Art (VoCA), and was recorded in December 2022 in Xander's studio. In a first for the pod, you can *watch* the interview, including clips of Xander's work here: https://vimeo.com/889901548
      In the interview, we discuss Xander's creative origins, explorations in puppetry, animation, printmaking, film, live performance, and community arts organizing. 

      We don't normally share guest-written bios, but Xander's is a work of art in its own right, so we simply must: "Xander Marro has been living the good life in the feminist sub-underground for too many years to count on her long bony fingers.  She draws pictures (usually narrative), makes movies (usually not narrative), produces plays with elaborate sets and costumes (usually narrative, but confusing), and then makes stuff like posters, quilts and dioramas (probably narrative?). Her work is often about spiritual relationships to the material stuff of this world. Co-founder of the Dirt Palace in 2000 (feminist cupcake encrusted netherworld located along the dioxin filled banks of the Woonasquatucket river, which is to say in Providence, RI USA). Her studio (and heart) is there still. Xander currently serves as co-director of Dirt Palace Public Projects. She cut her teeth in community arts management serving as the Managing Director of Providence’s legendary AS220. She teaches a class on poster design at RISD and serves as The Board Chair of One Neighborhood Builders, a community development/affordable housing organization."

      Stay tuned for our conversation with Pippi, and the final episode in the series where we sit down with both artists to discuss their decades long collaboration.

      Links from the conversation with Xander
      > http://xandermarro.com
      > https://www.dirtpalace.org
      > https://www.dirtpalace.org/wchbnb

      Get access to exlusive content - join us on Patreon!
      > https://patreon.com/artobsolescence

      Join the conversation:
      https://www.instagram.com/artobsolescence/

      Support artists
      Art and Obsolescence is a non-profit podcast, sponsored by the New York Foundation for the Arts, and we are committed to equitably supporting artists that come on the show. Help support our work by making a tax deductible gift through NYFA here: https://www.artandobsolescence.com/donate

      Afficher plus Afficher moins
      51 min
    • Jean Cooney
      Nov 8 2023

      Help shape the future of the show! Take our listener survey: https://forms.gle/Pr8kThnNUGU6hasF6

      If you listen to this show chances are you are familiar with some iconic images of time-based media art that has taken place in Times Square — in fact I think perhaps the first image I ever saw of Jenny Holzer’s work  was a grainy black and white photo of one of her truisms on display on an LED sign in Times Square. Public art has been occurring in Time’s Square for many decades, but in fact, as we’ll hear from guest Jean Cooney, Time Square Arts has only existed for about 12 years. Before serving as their director, Jean was deputy director at Creative Time, another organization of course that is absolutely central to public art in NYC — I was really keen to sit down with jean to hear how she came to work within this particular niche, and in this convo we get to hear some really cool behind the scenes ins and outs of what it takes to help artists create art for the public, in perhaps one of the most public locations in the US, as well as, how the heck do artists create video art for 65 displays of various shapes and sizes in Times Square? All this and more in today’s chat with Jean Cooney.

      Links from the conversation with Jean
      > http://arts.timessquarenyc.org/times-square-arts/index.aspx
      > https://creativetime.org/

      Get access to exlusive content - join us on Patreon!
      > https://patreon.com/artobsolescence

      Join the conversation:
      https://www.instagram.com/artobsolescence/

      Support artists
      Art and Obsolescence is a non-profit podcast, sponsored by the New York Foundation for the Arts, and we are committed to equitably supporting artists that come on the show. Help support our work by making a tax deductible gift through NYFA here: https://www.artandobsolescence.com/donate



      Afficher plus Afficher moins
      1 h et 4 min
    Aucun commentaire pour le moment