Brian R. Jonescast
- Autor: Podcast
- Narrador: Podcast
- Editora: Podcast
- Duração: 55:26:29
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Sinopse
A monthly podcast of conversations between artists. Produced by Brian R. Jones
Episódios
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ep.#33 Careen Stoll
06/06/2013 Duração: 01h05minCareen Stoll and I met years ago at Silvie Granatelli's studio. She had been a studio assistant for Silvie at the Penland School of Crafts and I was wrapping up my time as Silvie's studio assistant. Careen made her way to Portland in 2006 and has been working at establishing herself as both a business person and as someone who is actively participating in her community. Her interest in permaculture leads her to seek relationships that both grow and deepen her studio practice. As an artist Careen has worked tirelessly and with a certain amount of flexibility to get to a place where she has some stability. She has paved the way for American functional pottery to be found in supermarkets by redefining her role as a maker and designer. The struggle of dealing with the life that she has chosen has proved her tenacity and independent nature. She is honest and open and has provided me with a very good conversation. Enjoy.
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ep.#32 Lauren Gallaspy
23/05/2013 Duração: 01h05minLauren Gallaspy is a Southern artist who recently moved to Utah to teach at the University of Utah. She grew up in the middle of Nowheresville, TN after her parents retired from the spy business. As interesting as her life story is, her work conveys its own sense of depth, life, organics, and a kind of decay that is found in parts of the world that are humid, hot, and teeming with life. In her own words, Lauren says that "my work is about that imbalance: the vulnerability of living things and the sometimes violent, sometimes pleasurable, almost always complex consequences that occur when bodies and objects in the world come into contact with one another. I use ornamentation, obsessive mark-making, and decorative imagery as a kind of devotional or transformational act, a way to render interior spaces and intense psychological experiences physically." It was a pleasure to talk to her at NCECA in Houston (she was an Emerging Artist this year) and I look forward to seeing what comes out of her studio in the futur
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ep.#31 Isaac Watson
25/04/2013 Duração: 57minIsaac Watson is a facilitator. He's the guy who can see how to build the structure that others move about in order to connect, share, and learn from. Hailing from Portland, Isaac has been involved in the craft world as both a maker and as a founder of I Heart Art, a collaboration between Etsy, Pacific Northwest College of Art, Museum of Contemporary Craft and the Portland Etsy Team. He doesn't accept the idea that some people are right-brained and others left-brained, and he expects a high bar to be set in terms of individuals doing more for themselves. All that being said, Isaac is also magnanimous, articulate, and open. Incidentally, I feel like I did so much talking because I see Isaac as having lots of answers for questions that I have had over the years. His latest project, Maker's Nation, is set to give creative people an outlet to help give them business skills, connect with other makers, and a chance to not be so self-isolating...and hopefully in the future a health care plan. Keep an eye on him. If t
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ep.#30 Clayton Bailey
11/04/2013 Duração: 58minMaybe it's that all good comedy comes from the same kind of place: a willingness to be honest but cloaking it in a jest. Realness and comedy, or knowing which side of the joke is up or if the thing that you're seeing is a joke at all (Andy Kaufman). That's where Clayton Bailey comes in. Clayton was this year's NCECA fellow and gave the closing lecture. A California artist, Clayton's worked in a way that both confirms his greatness as an artist and also pokes fun that the field he's been involved in for 50 years. His humor is more tounge in cheek than ironic, dryer than silly. He operated as a teacher at the univeristy level for years and his work was based on pulling academia's seriousness apart...or at least jabbing it for some life. Subversion can be taken any number of ways and Clayton's version of it includes alter-egos, fake science, and asking his audience to join in on the bit (seriously, it's just clay. It's okay to make fun of how uptight we sometimes/always are about it. again, liberals usually don'
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ep.#29 Chris Lyon
28/03/2013 Duração: 01h55sChris Lyon is one half of the team who founded Mudshark Studios. In just a few years, they've gone from pouring molds in a garage to working in a huge semi-industrial space. Chris and I talk about how things started at Mudshark, their recent growth, and what the future might hold for his business. We also get into his upbringing, introduction to clay, and why working in the manner that he does fits him. Chris and his partner, Brett Binford, are helping to restart American industry in their own way and our conversation is a nice little window into the process. Enjoy!
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ep. #28 Matt Ziemke
06/03/2013 Duração: 01h02minI met Matt Ziemke last year in Philadelphia. He is a guest artist-in-residence at The Clay Studio, and when we met he had just come out of graduate school. We actually sat down and talked on mic for a podcast interview, but decided to throw it out. It just didn't work, didn't feel right, and listening back to it confirmed my sense during the conversation. Part of that could've been my skill as a host/interviewer, the time of day, the environment, but I felt that Matt might've been in a head space that was mostly taken up with working his way out of the post-graduate school fog that some of us have gone through. He came to visit Portland back in January, and we talked about that time when working is just about getting oneself through a stage of life, his stance on being political within his work, and the water fight that takes place in the mid-West and mountain states. Enjoy!
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ep.#27 Victoria Christen
14/02/2013 Duração: 01h23sVictoria Christen is a Portland, OR potter and a friend. We had a great talk back in December at Vic's home and we covered quite a bit of material. She took a somewhat indirect road to making pots and being a potter, which we get into. She had an idyllic childhood in Montana and was raised in an environment of making, creating, and exploring. Her work reflects her upbringing, and in Victoria's own words: I come from a tradition of seamstresses. As a young girl, my grandmother designed and sewed clothing for families at neighboring homesteads. My grandmother's skills passed to my mother, who sewed all our family clothes, and then to myself. As a ceramic artist, my process is not so different than that of my mother and grandmother. Like them, I transform my ideas into patterns cutting, folding, and joining various pieces to create a physical object. Enjoy this episode, it's a good one!
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ep.#26 Ginger Lukas
31/01/2013 Duração: 56minGinger Lukas is an artist from the mid West, by way of Baltimore, who I met briefly in Philadelphia at The Clay Studio while we crossed paths as resident artists. She has since moved back to Wisconsin and has continued to make work and decorate cakes (we get into that during our conversation.) Enjoy!
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ep.#25 Sunshine Cobb
17/01/2013 Duração: 01h20minSunshine Cobb is a potter currently working at The Archie Bray Foundation in Helena, MT. She seemed to appear out of nowhere (maybe it just seemed that way from my perspective) and was on magazines, in galleries, and presenting workshops. I met Sunshine at Arrowmont for Utilitarian Clay back in September and I found her sweet, smart, easy to talk to, and focused like a laser. We talk about her beginnings in ceramics, establishing a career and a life and the balance between the two, and the reality of limits. I really enjoyed our conversation and I look forward to seeing her work move forward in the future. Enjoy!
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ep.#24 Amy Halko
13/09/2012 Duração: 43minI met Amy Halko in Dallas, TX back in 2005. We were able to catch up recently in San Francisco and we talked about boredom, drive, and isolation, among other things.