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Podcast: Collaboration: A Potential History of Photography
In this episode, Wendy Ewald, Susan Meiselas and Laura Wexler - three of the co-authors of 'Collaboration: A Potential History of Photography' – delve behind the scenes of their groundbreaking book, exploring the genesis of the project and its ambitious aim. They offer up an alternative understanding of photography as something that is inherently collaborative, and explore the countless complex relationships between photographer, subject, viewer, camera and more.
This wide-ranging conversation spotlights a revolutionary experiment in portraiture by Frederick Douglass, questions the fixed nature of history, and celebrates where ‘the human spirit collaborates with the camera’.
'Collaboration' is also co-authored by Ariella Aïsha Azoulay and Leigh Raiford.
12/1/2023 • 27 minutes, 37 seconds
Podcast: Splendour, water, and light: The immense art history of Venice
In this episode, art critic Martin Gayford takes us on a breathtaking journey through five centuries of art history in Venice, exploring masterpieces of the Italian Renaissance, Peggy Guggenheim’s palazzo, and the kaleidoscopic Venice Biennale.
Martin Gayford’s book 'Venice: City of Pictures' takes readers on a visual journey through five centuries of Venetian image making, including works by Titian, Canaletto, Ruskin, Turner, Monet, Manet and more. In this episode, Gayford takes us through the canals and palazzos of this ‘uniquely pictorial’ place, and its many incarnations throughout history.
This episode was presented by Eliza Apperly. Intro and outro audio by Eliza Apperly and Benjamin Nash.
11/20/2023 • 26 minutes, 29 seconds
Podcast: The surreal and defiant life of Leonora Carrington
Joanna Moorhead’s engrossing new biography 'Surreal Spaces' offers an intimate look at the life and art of her late cousin, the pioneering artist Leonora Carrington. Leonora continually defied the expectations of her family and society, turning away from British upper class life and casting away comfort in the name of freedom, declaring that ‘safety, under any circumstances, is an illusion’.
In this episode, we sit down with Joanna to explore the bond she forged with Leonora over five unforgettable years in Mexico City, reflecting on the spaces and locations that infused Leonora’s art.
The journey begins with Leonora’s childhood at Crookhey Hall, a gothic, turreted home whose menacing character influenced her early years. We explore her time in Paris, where she held her own in the cafés of Saint-Germain alongside Picasso, Breton, Duchamp and Dali.
The conversation moves on to the St-Martin d'Ardèche farmhouse Leonora shared with Max Ernst, with whom she enjoyed a profound romantic and creative bond, and where the two artists embedded art into the fabric of their home.
Joanna describes Leonora’s terrifying experiences in a sanatorium in Spain, and finally explores Leonora’s Mexico City home, where she was able to live on her own terms, in ‘the most surreal nation on the planet’.
6/8/2023 • 43 minutes, 38 seconds
Land, Sky, Home podcast series: A breathtaking archaeological tour: Home
In this special podcast trilogy, archaeologist and Thames & Hudson author David Miles takes us on an immersive tour of the cromlechs and tombs near his home in France, to explore three themes from the past that shape the preoccupations of our present.
Each recorded in a different season, episodes Land, Sky, and Home reflect David Miles’s deep knowledge of archaeology and the natural world, suffused with birdsong and sounds from the landscapes of the Cévennes.
Here in the third episode, Home, David visits the ruins of a Copper Age village to examine how our idea of home emerged.
5/3/2023 • 29 minutes, 50 seconds
Land, Sky, Home podcast series: A breathtaking archaeological tour: Sky
In this special podcast trilogy, archaeologist and Thames & Hudson author David Miles takes us on an immersive tour of the cromlechs and tombs near his home in France, to explore three themes from the past that shape the preoccupations of our present.
Each recorded in a different season, episodes Land, Sky, and Home reflect David Miles’s deep knowledge of archaeology and the natural world, suffused with birdsong and sounds from the landscapes of the Cévennes.
Here in the second episode, Sky, David encounters a shepherd and a tomb to explore the impact of the heavens on prehistoric social arrangements—and how our modern relationship with the sky needs mending.
4/26/2023 • 25 minutes, 44 seconds
Land, Sky, Home podcast series: A breathtaking archaeological tour: Land
In this special podcast trilogy, archaeologist and Thames & Hudson author David Miles takes us on an immersive tour of the cromlechs and tombs near his home in France, to explore three themes from the past that shape the preoccupations of our present.
Each recorded in a different season, episodes Land, Sky, and Home reflect David Miles’s deep knowledge of archaeology and the natural world, suffused with birdsong and sounds from the landscapes of the Cévennes.
Here in the first episode, Land, David investigates a stone circle, and meets a stonemason, to reflect on how prehistoric land clearances relate to anxieties about environmental degradation today.
4/11/2023 • 28 minutes, 24 seconds
Podcast: Personal conversations with modern art’s liveliest minds
Art historian Michael Peppiatt explores his friendship with Francis Bacon, lunch with Lucian Freud, and unforgettable encounters with the likes of Sonia Delaunay and more.
Peppiatt reflects on more than fifty years of writing about art, bringing to life his friendships with some of the best-known artists of the modern age.
Following a life-changing encounter with Francis Bacon in a Soho pub in 1963, Peppiatt found himself suddenly immersed in the lives of extraordinary artists. Here, Peppiatt describes what it was like to interview Sonia Delaunay in Paris – beginning with her ‘complete denunciation of Picasso’ – and his near-miss of Giacometti, who passed away before Peppiatt could deliver a letter of introduction from Francis Bacon himself.
Peppiatt also shares the experience of assembling his new book 'Artists’ Lives', which he likens to planning a dinner party, playing host to some of the biggest personalities in art.
4/4/2023 • 20 minutes, 1 second
The enduring legacy of Chloé
To celebrate the publication of Chloé Catwalk on November 8th, Lou Stoppard and Ayo Ojo explore the fascinating story of one of the world’s most infamous female-led brands.
11/1/2022 • 34 minutes, 47 seconds
Podcast: How to slay your creative demons and have fun doing it
Writers, artists, designers, musicians, filmmakers and more – creatives of all stripes know the perils of creative demons. Whether it’s self-doubt, fear of failure or procrastination, the challenges can seem insurmountable. In this episode, Richard Holman, author of 'Creative Demons and How to Slay Them', shares unexpected antidotes and practical tips to help unleash your creativity, including surprising techniques from the likes of Michelangelo, Margaret Atwood, Maggi Hambling and more.
2/24/2022 • 36 minutes, 28 seconds
Versace Catwalk with Tim Blanks
In this episode, Central Saint Martins student Ayo Ojo sits down with ‘Versace Catwalk’ author Tim Blanks, offering an inside look at the world of Versace – from the house’s opulent collections to its most iconic moments, and the brand’s celebrity fans.
10/27/2021 • 24 minutes, 46 seconds
The Kingdoms at the Centre of the Earth: From The Sister Who Ate Her Brothers by Jen Campbell
In 'The Sister Who Ate Her Brothers', Jen Campbell’s collection of terrifying stories, fourteen of the most gruesome fairy tales from around the world are re-told for contemporary readers and restored to their original, grisly versions.
Here, Jen reads 'The Kingdoms at the Centre of the Earth', just one of the delightfully grim tales from the book.
10/20/2021 • 8 minutes, 6 seconds
Sex work’s enthralling hidden history
In this unmissable episode, writer Eliza Apperly speaks to Harlots, Whores & Hackabouts author Dr. Kate Lister, exploring the complex and compelling history of sex work from medieval London to the Moulin Rouge, ancient Greece to Edo Japan, and right up to the present day.
In this wide-ranging and insightful conversation, Kate sheds light on the ‘pleasure quarters’ of Renaissance Italy, the wealthy courtesans of ancient Rome, and how royal mistress Nell Gwynne became one of England’s most powerful women.
Giving long-overdue recognition to the truths of sex work, Kate explores historical and contemporary attempts to regulate the sale of sex, and spotlights landmark moments of revolt by sex workers, including the occupation of a Lyon church in 1975 – widely considered the birth of the sex workers’ rights movement.
10/6/2021 • 31 minutes, 2 seconds
What should an art museum be?
In this unmissable episode, ‘The Art Museum in Modern Times’ author Charles Saumarez Smith takes us inside the world’s leading galleries, exploring the ‘Disneyfication’ of the art museum, how architecture influences art, the uniquely contemporary role of the museum café, and why COVID might have lasting impacts on curatorial creativity.
As Former Director of the National Portrait Gallery and National Gallery, Charles Saumarez Smith is well-versed in the making of a museum. Here, he traces a profound evolution over the last several decades in how we experience art and what we think an art museum should be. Once acting as ‘public schoolrooms’ that prioritised education and linear display, art museums have undergone radical shifts in recent decades, making ‘a switch from coherence to exploration’.
From more commercialised Western galleries like the Tate Modern, MoMa and the Guggenheim, to the Japanese museums centering reflection and serenity, Saumarez Smith explores key questions about these extraordinary spaces. How does the architecture of a museum shape its visitors’ experience of art? Can a building ever distract from the collection that it houses? And how will museums emerge from their current existential crisis?
This episode was produced and presented by Eliza Apperly and edited by Benjamin Nash.
4/29/2021 • 28 minutes, 16 seconds
Abstract Art: A Global History: 'Not your grandfather’s history of art'
In this unforgettable episode, writer Eliza Apperly joins in conversation with Pepe Karmel, art history professor and author of ‘Abstract Art: A Global History’, and Kyla McDonald, curator and art historian. Together they embark on a myth-exploding mission through the history of abstraction.
Abstract art, Pepe argues, did not unfold as a neat sequence of ‘isms’, as art history textbooks might have us suppose. The truth, he explains, is bolder, messier, and has much more to do with the real-life experiences of artists. This truer history also includes the work of artists who, because of gender and racial bias, have been traditionally overlooked, undervalued and othered. 'Abstract Art: A Global History' shines a light on some of the extraordinary women artists and artists of colour who are finally getting their due.
This episode was produced and presented by Eliza Apperly and edited by Benjamin Nash.
2/25/2021 • 22 minutes, 58 seconds
The Landscape of Love and Solace: The extraordinary life of John Nash
In this unmissable episode, writer Eliza Apperly joins in conversation with Andy Friend, author of ‘John Nash: The Landscape of Love and Solace’, and Sara Cooper, Head of Collections and Exhibitions at Towner Eastbourne, to explore the extraordinary life and work of 20th-century painter John Nash.
Younger brother of Paul Nash, John’s remarkable life was marked both by great tragedy and by deep, enduring love. This episode offers insight into the traumatic deaths of his mother and young son, his experience of frontline horror in the First World War, his nearly 60-year marriage to Christine Kühlenthal – which allowed for ‘outside loves’ – plus the rich network of artists who were John’s friends and contemporaries, and how John found refuge in his art and in the bucolic British landscape.
‘John Nash: The Landscape of Love and Solace’ by Andy Friend and David Dimbleby is available at: https://thamesandhudson.com/john-nash-the-landscape-of-love-and-solace-9780500022900
The Towner Eastbourne’s retrospective exhibition of the same name will run from 1 May to 26 September 2021. More info can be found at: https://www.townereastbourne.org.uk/exhibition/john-nash-the-landscape-of-love-and-solace/
This episode was produced and presented by Eliza Apperly and edited by Benjamin Nash.
1/19/2021 • 36 minutes, 47 seconds
Has Art History Misrepresented Lee Krasner?
Listen to our new podcast in which writer and broadcaster Louisa Buck interviews Eleanor Nairne, curator of the Barbican’s acclaimed exhibition ‘Lee Krasner: Living Colour’, and Gail Levin, Krasner’s longstanding friend and author of Lee Krasner: A biography.
6/28/2019 • 28 minutes, 49 seconds
Modernists and Mavericks: Martin Gayford on Bacon, Freud, Hockney and the London Painters
Jasper Rees speaks to Martin Gayford, art critic for The Spectator, about Bacon, Freud, 'the school of London Painters', and his new book, 'Modernists and Mavericks'.
Buy the book: https://bit.ly/2HiYlUO
4/18/2018 • 22 minutes, 18 seconds
Firecrackers: Fiona Rogers & Max Houghton on Female Photographers Now
Authors Fiona Rogers and Max Houghton discuss their new book: a vivid showcase of work by more than thirty of the world’s leading contemporary female documentary photographers.
Buy the book: https://bit.ly/2htGeyR
8/24/2017 • 13 minutes, 42 seconds
Shoreditch, Hackney and Beyond: Charles Saumarez Smith on East London
Charles Saumarez Smith, author of 'East London', talks about how this area of the city has changed since he moved there in 1982.
Describing his book not as a guide, but as a historical journey from Wapping in the south through Spitalfields and Bethnal Green to Hoxton, Haggerston and Hackney in the north.
Buy the book: https://bit.ly/2F7Msei
7/6/2017 • 14 minutes, 25 seconds
Tales of Our Times, From Apple to Isis: Peter Conrad on 'Mythomania'
Building upon his much-praised BBC Radio 4 series '21st Century Mythologies', Peter Conrad examines the enduring place of myth in contemporary culture and society.
Buy the book: https://bit.ly/2Hm26F4
3/21/2017 • 17 minutes, 30 seconds
Hip-Hop Raised Me: Joe Muggs chats to DJ Semtex
DJ Semtex talks about this definitive volume on the essence, experience and energy that is hip-hop and its massive and enduring impact over the last 40 years.
Buy the book: https://bit.ly/2vyHlnU
3/21/2017 • 20 minutes, 35 seconds
A Humument: A Treated Victorian Novel 1966-2016, read by Tom Phillips
In 1966 the artist Tom Phillips set himself a task: to find a second-hand book for threepence and alter every page, by painting, collage or cut-up techniques, to create an entirely new version. He found his threepenny novel in a junk shop on Peckham Rye, south London. It was A Human Document (1892), an obscure Victorian romance by W. H. Mallock.
First published in 1973, A Humument—as Phillips titled his altered book—quickly established itself as a cult classic. Since then, Phillips has been working towards a complete revision of the original A Humument, replacing pages in successive editions. This process is now finished. This final edition presents, for the first time, an entirely revised and complete version of A Humument and brings to a close half a century of artistic endeavor.
Tom Phillips writes: “I took a forgotten novel found by chance. I mined, and undermined its text to make it yield alternative stories, erotic incidents and surreal catastrophes, which lurked within its wall of words. I replaced with visual images the text I’d stripped away. A Humument began to tell, amongst other memories, dreams and reflections, the sad story of Bill Toge, one of love’s casualties.”
Find out more at www.tomphillips.co.uk