Carnegie Museum of Art สาธารณะ
[search 0]
ดาวน์โหลดแอปเลย!
show episodes
 
Artwork

1
Artists in the World

WQED Multimedia, Carnegie Museum of Art

Unsubscribe
Unsubscribe
รายเดือน
 
A new series that opens conversations between artists and their contemporaries. "Artists in the World" uplifts artistic voices and explores multiple histories, geographies, and current events while creating space for new ideas and possibilities. Hosted by Carnegie Museum of Art's director of education and public programs, Dana Bishop-Root, and WQED-FM's artistic director, Jim Cunningham, the new podcast series features cross-disciplinary conversations, artist talks, readings, and performance ...
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
A IS FOR ANTHROPOCENE: Living in the Age of Humanity

Carnegie Museum of Natural History

Unsubscribe
Unsubscribe
รายเดือน
 
A is for Anthropocene: Living in the Age of Humanity is a bi-weekly podcast that digs into the multitude of questions about human impact on our planet. Host Sloan MacRae and Steve Tonsor interview experts in science and the arts to tackle tough issues like climate change and species decline without giving up hope that we can still leave the Earth in excellent condition for generations to come.
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
Mirror with a Memory

Carnegie Museum of Art

Unsubscribe
Unsubscribe
รายเดือน
 
The Mirror with a Memory podcast focuses on different facets of the conversation around artificial intelligence and photography—from biometrics and racial bias to the ways that we perceive the environment and international borders. Hosted by renowned American artist Martine Syms, the six-episode series features leading artists and thinkers in dialogue accompanied by excerpts from important artworks, unpacking the ways in which the collision of photography, surveillance, and artificial intell ...
  continue reading
 
Loading …
show series
 
In episodes seven and eight, we hear a sonic conversation recorded over three days activating Julian Abraham “Togar” artwork OK Studio, presented for the 58th Carnegie International. Togar, alongside musicians Rizky Sasono, Bri Dominique, Richard Nicol, and Herman “Soy Sauce” Pearl. The group met inside of met inside of OK Studio at Carnegie Museum…
  continue reading
 
In episodes seven and eight, we hear a sonic conversation recorded over three days activating Julian Abraham “Togar” artwork OK Studio, presented for the 58th Carnegie International. Togar, alongside musicians Rizky Sasono, Bri Dominique, Richard Nicol, and Herman “Soy Sauce” Pearl. The group met inside of met inside of OK Studio at Carnegie Museum…
  continue reading
 
How does knowledge become democratized through transmission? Writer, art historian, and curator Zahia Rahmani and Laurence Glasco, an associate professor of history at the University of Pittsburgh, respond to this question.โดย WQED Multimedia
  continue reading
 
In episode five, we hear from Ignacia Biskupovic, a visual artist, educator, and head of community engagement at the Museo de la Solidaridad Salvador Allende (MSSA), and Jennifer Josten, an associate professor of modern and contemporary art at the University of Pittsburgh. The two discuss resistance art and pedagogy, nomadic museums, and MSSA’s exi…
  continue reading
 
terra0 (founded 2016) is a group of developers, theorists, and artists exploring the creation of hybrid ecosystems in the technosphere. The group’s first work, the terra0 whitepaper (2016), based on research in areas of DLT technology, ecology, and economics, proposes technologically augmented ecosystems that are able to act as agents in their own …
  continue reading
 
By taking care of greenspace, we care for ourselves. Hear about best practices for getting young people involved in land stewardship, and about how fostering a relationship with the outdoors is essential climate action. Featuring Naturalist Educator Nyjah Cephas and two of her students from the Pittsburgh Parks Conservancy’s Young Naturalists progr…
  continue reading
 
James “Yaya” Hough has been heavily involved for more than a decade with Mural Arts Philadelphia, creating more than 50 works that have been installed at the State Correctional Institution–Graterford and the State Correctional Institution–Phoenix. In 2019, as part of a program supported by the Art for Justice Fund and Fair and Just Prosecution, Hou…
  continue reading
 
Tishan Hsu (b. 1951, Boston, MA; lives in New York, NY) has been probing the cognitive as well as physical effects of transformative technological advances on our lives since the mid-1980s. Through the use of unusual materials, software tools, and innovative fabrication techniques, his enigmatic paintings and sculptures explore and manifest poetic …
  continue reading
 
Listen to the first episode of Carnegie Museum of Natural History's new podcast, We Are Nature. Episodes updated weekly. Subscribe to We Are Nature wherever you listen to podcasts. Learn more about the show! https://carnegiemnh.org/learn/we-are-nature-podcast/โดย Carnegie Museum of Natural History
  continue reading
 
Born in Istanbul to Iranian parents, Solmaz Sharif is the author of Customs (Graywolf Press, 2022) and Look (Graywolf Press, 2016), a finalist for the National Book Award. She holds degrees from U.C. Berkeley, where she studied and taught with June Jordan’s Poetry for the People, and New York University. Her work has appeared in Harper’s, The Paris…
  continue reading
 
Do we have the power to refuse mass surveillance? In our final episode, we speak with Forensic Architecture founder Eyal Weizman, who explains how artists, activists, and researchers can use the tools of photography, surveillance, and AI to hold corporations, governments, and other institutions accountable.…
  continue reading
 
What is the environmental impact of AI on our planet, and what colonial impulses does this technology enable? Episode Five zooms out and up with leading AI researcher Kate Crawford, technology writer Arthur Holland Michel, and photographer Richard Misrach to look at how cameras are used to divide, extract, survey, and surveil landscapes.…
  continue reading
 
In Episode Four, we talk about the algorithmic potential of storytelling. Artists Stephanie Dinkins and Stan Douglas discuss how they use the language of photography, surveillance, and AI to narrate different pasts and imagine different futures. Dinkins draws upon her own life experience, while Douglas incorporates moments from British history.…
  continue reading
 
If we know that it is impossible for a photograph to be objective, then why do we rely so heavily on photography as evidence? In Episode Three, we speak with artists Lynn Hershman Leeson and American Artist to consider how AI can complicate our relationship to pictures we would otherwise think of as visual “proof.”…
  continue reading
 
Episode Two explores the benefits and disadvantages of going unseen by surveillance technologies. We examine notions of visibility and invisibility in the context of AI imaging systems with author and professor Simone Browne, artist Sondra Perry, and artist and academic Mimi Onuoha.โดย Carnegie Museum of Art
  continue reading
 
Photography has been used as a tool to record our bodies from the creation of the first mugshots in the late 19th century to recent developments in facial recognition technology. In the first episode of Mirror with a Memory, artist Zach Blas and filmmaker and scholar Manthia Diawara will discuss what it means to leave it to machines to verify our i…
  continue reading
 
The Mirror with a Memory podcast focuses on different facets of the conversation around artificial intelligence and photography—from biometrics and racial bias to the ways that we perceive the environment and international borders. Hosted by renowned American artist Martine Syms, the six-episode series features leading artists and thinkers in dialo…
  continue reading
 
Meet Grant Ervin, Pittsburgh’s Chief Resilience Officer, and Dr. Nicole Heller, the world’s first Curator of Anthropocene Studies. Listen to “Whose Garden Was This” by Tom Paxton here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=msKYLHwqvW4โดย Carnegie Museum of Natural History
  continue reading
 
And we’re … back? Meet some of the new podcast team as they discuss this even newer age of humanity (from home) and learn what kind of vital work remains when a museum with a collection of 22 million items is closed to the public.โดย Carnegie Museum of Natural History
  continue reading
 
Eric and Sloan discuss the enduring inspiration of Walden Pond, ecotourism, and a potential new biofuel. Mason Heberling, the museum’s curator of botany, shares his recent work and what Thoreau’s journals reveal about the effects of climate change on wildflowers.โดย Mason Heberling
  continue reading
 
Eric and Sloan address eco-anxiety, discuss innovative green sewage solutions, and interview Jennifer Sheridan, Carnegie Museum of Natural History’s curator of amphibians and reptiles, right before she boards a plane for an expedition to Borneo.โดย Jennifer Sheridan
  continue reading
 
Welcome to our very first episode! Hosts Eric and Sloan recap the climate strike, find inspiration in Generation Z, and welcome our listeners to the Anthropocene. Later, Sloan discusses the borders of art, nature, and science with acclaimed artist and photographer Catherine Chalmers.โดย Catherine Chalmers
  continue reading
 
Loading …

คู่มืออ้างอิงด่วน