In the Foreground: Conversations on Art & Writing
En podcast af Caro Fowler
58 Episoder
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“Perception is a Form of Sampling": Christoph Cox on Materialities of Sound
Udgivet: 23.3.2021 -
“The Sound Can Touch You Directly”: Christina Kubisch on Electronic Sound Art
Udgivet: 16.3.2021 -
“When is This?”: Brian Michael Murphy on Media Archaeology and Preservation
Udgivet: 9.3.2021 -
“A Database is an Argument”: Anne Helmreich on Digital Humanities and Art History
Udgivet: 2.3.2021 -
“A Gesture of Reciprocity”: Souleymane Bachir Diagne on Translation and Restitution
Udgivet: 23.2.2021 -
“Unpacking My Identity”: Genevieve Gaignard on Race in America and the Impossibility of Home
Udgivet: 16.2.2021 -
“How to Look with Soft Eyes”: Darby English on Description as Method
Udgivet: 9.2.2021 -
“Philosophical Grounding”: Michael Ann Holly on Creating Visual Studies
Udgivet: 17.11.2020 -
"Can You Show Thinking?”: Mieke Bal on Film & Writing
Udgivet: 10.11.2020 -
"Refusal of Personality": Brigid Doherty on Rosemarie Trockel and Rorschach
Udgivet: 27.10.2020 -
“Looking as Knowing”: Svetlana Alpers on Critical Thinking and Photography
Udgivet: 20.10.2020 -
“An Art History Yet to Come”: Kirsten Scheid on Palestinian Art
Udgivet: 13.10.2020 -
“A Set of Ways of Engaging”: Lisa Lee on Thomas Hirschhorn & Materiality
Udgivet: 6.10.2020 -
“An Embodiment of Experience”: Steven Nelson on African Art and Writing History
Udgivet: 29.9.2020 -
“To Speak Across Time”: Gabriele Finaldi on Museums
Udgivet: 15.9.2020 -
“An Archive of Exchange”: C. Ondine Chavoya on Chicanx and Latinx Art History
Udgivet: 8.9.2020 -
“Surfaces of Projection”: Dell M. Hamilton on Performance Art and Black Embodiment
Udgivet: 1.9.2020 -
“The Nature of All Our Forms”: María Magdalena Campos-Pons on Performance Art
Udgivet: 18.8.2020
What does it mean to make art history? In the Foreground: Conversations on Art & Writing considers the role of art in society, how knowledge is shared (or obscured), and the way histories are made and unmade—while also considering the personal stakes of scholarship. Each episode offers a lively, in-depth look into the life and mind of a scholar or artist working with art historical or visual material. Discussions touch on guests’ current research projects, career paths, and significant texts, mentors, and experiences that have shaped their thinking. We invite you to join us and listen in on these conversations about the stakes of doing art history today.
