Explain Me

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Rating
4.7
from
58 reviews
Categories
This podcast has
34 episodes
Language
Explicit
No
Date created
2017/10/03
Average duration
90 min.
Release period
66 days

Description

Politics, art, and a general disappointment with how things are going.

Podcast episodes

Check latest episodes from Explain Me podcast


Defining Contemporary Kitsch: Part 2 of The New York Art Fairs
2022/06/21
What does contemporary kitsch look like? In this episode, Paddy and William use a discussion of the art fairs and New York gallery scene to lead a defining of the term. From its generic definition of objects described to be in poor taste because of excessive garishness or sentimentality, to the current nostalgia driving a tasted for recycled art movements, all kitsch lacks in originality.  Listen in for the whole conversation.    THE INDEPENDENT Kenny Schachter at Allouche Benias Gallery  Renate Druks at The Ranch, Olivia Reavey at Helena Anrather   1-54 CONTEMPORARY AFRICAN ART FAIR Sanaa Gateja at 50 Golborne WonderBuhle at BKhz Gallery   VOLTA Michael Foley   GALLERIES  Judith Linhares at PPOW  JTT Gallery Anna-Sophie Berger and Sam McKinniss Sky Hopinka at Broadway Gallery  Paul Mpagi Sepuya at Bortalami  Nora Turato at 52 Walker Gallery   ARTICLES The Downward Spiral: 59th Venice Biennial by Dean Kissick 
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What The New York Art Fairs Tell Us About Art
2022/06/14
Art media does a great job at looking forward to art events, yet rarely looks back to reflect on what these happenings say about the cultural moment. In this episode of Explain Me, co-hosts Paddy Johnson and William Powhida do a deep dive into the fairs to discuss the deeply conservative sales landscape we've been sinking into over the past ten years.   ARTISTS DISCUSSED Carlos Jacanamijoy’s 2020 ab ex painting “Carminos de Luz” at Harper’s Laurie Reid’s “Ballast” at Et Al. Gallery The Baboon Chair by  Margaux Valengin at Pact Paul Gabrelli’s “Everyday Objects” at New Discretions Elliot Reed at Anonymous Gallery Dan Colen at Gagosian Al Freeman at 56 Henry Tessa Lynch’s text-based compositions at Patricia Fleming Gallery Scott Lyal at Migeul Abbreu Gallery Aaron Garber-Maikovska Casja von Zeipel’s Celesbian Terrain   Kevin McCoy’s corporate-sponsored display of Quantum and some generative artworks by Jennifer and Kevin McCoy.  Pedro Reyes, Alex da Corte, Nayland Blake, Alex Katz, Matthew Wong, 
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Whitney Biennial Report: Care and Caution
2022/05/03
We're baaaaack! After a four month break William and Paddy return with some big news about the podcast and an in depth conversation on The Whitney Biennial. We do the full dive here: What are the themes? How is it organized? Is it worth seeing? Is it too cautious? Who are the notable omissions? Why do these omissions matter?     Artist discussed: Cy Gavin Rebecca Belmore Guadalupe Rosales Lucy Raven Kandis Williams Raven Chacon Na Mira Alex Da Corte Trinh T. Minh-ha Coco Fusco Dave McKenzie Jacky Connolly Alfredo Jaar WangShui Daniel Joseph Martinez Jason Rhoades Rick Lowe Pao Houa Her Nayland Blake Awilda Sterling-Duprey Matt Connors Leidy Churchman Monica Arreola James Little Ralph Lemon Jane Dickson
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Flux Factory Buys Building, Retains Soul
2021/11/23
How many times have we seen artist-centered communities lose their grass roots identity when they buy property? High profile organizations that have shed their founders vision as they gained visibility such as the New Museum and Meow Wolf serve as cautionary tales. The quality of the work they produce suffers and their poor treatment of employees makes headlines. That's to say nothing of personality-less art complexes like The Shed, which cement the wealth of their funders while meagerly contributing to the city's cultural life. But these types of cultural outcomes are a choice and not an inevitable destiny, a reality made clear in this episode's interview with Flux Factory's Nat Roe. In his role as residency Executive Director, Roe recently secured $5 million from the city to purchase the building the organization has been working out of since 2009. Additionally, the organization will now operate a new satellite location, Flux IV, a the 3000 square foot ground floor gallery space on the ground floor of Gotham Point’s South Tower building. At no point in our discussion did we talk about significant changes that needed to be made to Flux's DNA to make this acquisition happen. Rather we talked about the importance of sound proofing their building so they don't disturb the neighbors. In the midst of LIC, a homogenized tech-enclave for Manhattan commuters, this grass roots artist organization and residency program will now serve as a permanent beacon of creative energy for the community. Can the DCLA support other smaller arts organizations in New York by helping them purchase real estate? Nat Roe gives us the skinny, going full wonk on city policy, while offering a history of Flux Factory and its place in the New York City arts landscape.   SHOW LINKS   Help Launch Flux Factory's new venue, Flux IV    The Western Queens Community Land Trust—artist Jenny Dubnau is a co-chair of the board.    NY Times Tribeca Art Galleries, June   NY Times Tribeca Art Galleries, October article    How many times have we seen artist-centered arts organizations lose their NYC Club Scene debt? New York Times   Secret Project Robot    NYC Commercial Rent Law 
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What Does a Return to the Art World Mean?
2021/09/21
In this episode artist Chloe Bass’s tweet pointing to the hypocrisy of the art world leads to a discussion of labor, the New York art fairs, and unions.  We discuss: Max Lankin’s observations for ArtForum on the Armory Fair about how the new digs at the Javits Center improve upon the Piers, which were literally falling into the water.  Funny how easy it is to forget that the Javits Center, just two months ago, served as a mass vaccination center, and the year prior a makeshift hospital for COVID victims. Mostly people were just happy to see each other again.  Dana Kopel’s piece in the Baffler Magazine, Against Artsploitation, which chronicles the unionization efforts at the New Museum, and the museum executive’s endless gaslighting of employees.  The New York Art Fairs. We talk about the art at The Armory Show, The Independent, and Spring Break. The work discussed below:    THE ARMORY SHOW Jeffrey Gibson at Tandem Press Wendy Redstar at Sargent’s Daughters Tau Lewis at Night Gallery Tony Matelli - Maruani Mercier Theresa Chromati at The Kravets Wehby Gallery Jennifer Bartlett at Locks Gallery Kamrooz Aram at Green . Art . Gallery Jose Davilas at Sean Kelly Sara Greenberger Rafferty at Rachel Uffner Susumu Kamijo at Jack Hanley Hayley Barker at Shrine Dontae Hayes at Mindy Solomon Gallery Michael Rakowitz at Jane Lombard INDEPENDENT Julian Schnabel at Vito Schnabel Sedrick Chisom at New American Painting Jo Nigoghossian at Broadway Gallery Erik Parker at Ross+Kramer Amy Feldman at Galerie Eva Presenhuber The Ranch SPRING BREAK Guy Richards Smit  Jennifer Catron and Paul Outlaw - curated by Magda Sawon Chapel - curated by M. Charlene Stevens with work by Sophie Kahn and Colette Robbins Outliars, curated by Elisabeth Smolarz, work by Angie Waller Gather Rusted Satellites curated by Amanda Nedham Tristam Lasndwone, Kyle Hittmeirer Nicholas Cueva  Loren Erdrich Willa Wasserman James Razko Tammie Rubin Steve Locke
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Explain Me with Laura Raicovich: Art and Museums in An Age of Protest
2021/07/16
This week hosts William Powhida and Paddy Johnson sit down with curator, writer, and former museum director Laura Raicovich to discuss her new book Culture Strike: Art and Museums in An Age of Protest. We do a deep dive with her not just on the subjects in the book, but her latest project, The Art and Society Census. Relevant links below.  Culture Strike: Art and Museums in An Age of Protest, VERSO The Art and Society Census, HYPERALLERGIC AND THE BROOKLYN PUBLIC LIBRARY Deinstutitional Research Team. (A project William Powhida worked on mentioned in the book.) LINK StrikeMoMA LINK The Whitney Staff letter central to the Kanders' protests. HYPERALLERGIC A good policy-based companion for Laura Raicovich's project. THE PEOPLE'S CULTURAL PLAN A non-profit with a board structure worth promoting as a positive example. RECESS Back story on Laura Raicovich's resignation from the Queens Museum of Art- ARTNET NEWS
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The NFT Explain Me with Marina Galperina and Amy Whitaker
2021/03/09
On this episode of Explain Me we do a deep dive on Non-Fungible Tokens, NFTs, pronounced Nifty, by also N-F-T. Joined by guests Marina Galperina, features editor of Gizmodo, and former curator and writer on digital art, and Amy Whitaker, author and assistant professor of visual arts administration, hosts William Powhida and Paddy Johnson navigate the headlines generating news around this new digital currency, the basic definitions, and the potential and dangers it poses to artists.    Timestamped resources   6' 21'' Explain Me's episode Related Utopias: Bitcoin and the Artworld with Kevin McCoy.   7' NFT definitions and the blockchain    13 Do artists need to care?    21' The Guardian features Marina Galperina's Vine Show.  26' Beeple Mania and aesthetics discussion - Liberal Jon McNaughton or early digital art maximalism in the style of Cliff Evans and Kenneth Tin-Kin Hung?    40' NFT platforms and markets. Massimo Franceschet and Sparrow Read's The Inconvenient Truth About Secondary Markets, Part II  43' Legacy Russell tweets about the toxic white male culture dominating NFT conversation. Follows up with a shout out to QTPOCIA+ and female-identified people engaging NFTs.   44' Who is the face of NFTs? Kenny Schachter. His NFT article on Artnet.    47' Kenny Schachter's "Scam Likely" on Nifty Gateway. 51' Alternatives - Casey Reese's Artist-to-artist exchange with Bitmark.com, Feral File. Goes live March 19. Also relevant: Reese's Medium article, Collecting Art in the Age of Digital Reproduction  57' - NFT and blockchain carbon footprint 1 hour 10' Reasons for optimism 1 hour 16' Art pricing and Greg Allen's Facsimile Objects   1 hour 22' Amy Whitaker discusses valuation and commensuration sociological studies   Read and Watch   Amy Whitaker, A New Way To Pay Artists, TEDXfoggybottom Amy Whitaker and Roman Kraussl, Fractional Equity, Blockchain, and the Future of Creative Work, Management Science, July 2020 Amy Whitaker, Art and Blockchain: A Primer, History, and Taxonomy of Blockchain Use Cases in the Arts, Artivate: A Journal of Entrepreneurship in the Arts. Summer 2019 Amy Whitaker, Hannah Grannemann, Artists’ Royalties and Performers’ Equity: A Ground-Up Approach to Social Impact Investment in Creative Fields, CMSE Vol 3, no 2, pg 33-51. Memo Atkin, The Unreasonable Ecological Cost of #Cryptoart, Dec 14 2020 Rea McNamara, How Crypto Art Might Offer Artists Increased Autonomy, March 2, 2021  
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Explain Me With Art Critic Ben Davis: The Year That Wasn't, Part Two
2020/12/14
  Immersive Van Gogh In this episode of Explain Me, we continue our conversation with Artnet's National Critic Ben Davis as we take stock of 2020.  In this episode:  We discuss the biases of algorithm sorting Ben Davis coins the term cultural inflation, a term that refers to franchise media properties. We examine the relevance of ART CLUB 2000 the recent subject of Ben Davis' review, Why the New ART CLUB2000 Retrospective Offers Lessons for Today’s Artists That Transcend Pure ’90s Nostalgia We name check Davis' The State of Culture, Part One.
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Explain Me with Art Critic Ben Davis: The Year That Wasn't, Part One
2020/12/14
"Immersive Van Gogh" In this episode of Explain Me, we take stock of the year in art with Artnet's National Critic Ben Davis. What happened in the art world in 2020?  We ask this knowing that we obviously have not seen a lot of art or attended anything remotely like a normal opening. But, a lot happened this year, even if we experienced it all at a distance. We know that, with the vaccine slowly rolling out now, the art world will return, but what are the implications of the pandemic for the art world this coming fall and beyond? In part one of this episode we discuss:  The few upsides of the pandemic. Ben Davis on Phillip Guston Show Postponement Baltimore Museum Deaccessioning, two opposing views. Christopher Knight Nikki Columbus Three Tech Companies Locked in a Battle to Capture Your Attention With the World’s Best Immersive Van Gogh Experience. Brian Boucher, Artnet The Boundless Optimism of BTS, Esquire
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Explain Me with Andy Adams of FlakPhoto: From Idyllic Photos to The Surveillance State
2020/11/02
Image via: Andy Adams instagram.  In this episode of Explain Me we talk to Andy Adams (FlakPhoto on instagram), a culture producer and long time digital director. Andy is the founder of FlakPhoto Projects, an international community of photographers that operates in a parallel path to the one Powhida and Johnson come from—the New York based studio and museum world. Andy, William, and Paddy began working online around the same time—2003-2005, so we start our conversation there. We track through the exuberance and possibility we saw online in the early aughts, the economic collapse of the late aughts, and fraught political environment we’re now navigating. Subjects include: The signature Flak Photo style, the ethics of documentary photography, and the the postponed Guston show at the Tate.   References and reading: Instagram: @photographersvote #photographersvote Two Museums Tried to Sell Art. Only One Caught Grief About it. New York Times Guston Can Wait. Nikki Columbus, N+1 Contra-Internet, Zach Blas, e-flux Journal  
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Zombie Figuration Isn't a Thing: A Critical Autopsy with Antwaun Sargent
2020/08/04
  In this episode of Explain Me, critic and curator Antwaun Sargent joins us to discuss the effects of the pandemic and Alex Greenberger's Zombie Figuration, a confusing essay that appeared earlier this month in ARTnews. In the first half hour we discuss the disparate effects of the pandemic and general politics. Then we move on to art, zombies,  race,  and why art has limits.    BIOGRAPHY Antwaun Sargent is an art critic and a writer who has contributed to The New York Times, The New Yorker, Vice and more, as well as essays to multiple museum publications. His first book, “The New Black Vanguard: Photography between Art and Fashion” (Aperture) is out now. In April he announced a new partnership with Gagosian that will include working on four exhibitions and contributing features to their magazine.  Follow him on Twitter and Instagram.    LISTENER ADVISORY: In this episode, Paddy Johnson occasionally repeats Antwaun Sargent's words when his audio cuts out. This leads to periodic moments when Johnson and Sargent speak at the same time.    LINKS First There Was Zombie Formalism, Now There is Zombie Figuration Met Apologies to Glenn Ligon Noah Davis Barkley Hendricks Kehinde Wiley  Cinga Samson Peter Saul  Alice Neal Jordan Casteel Jordan Casteel at the New Museum EARLY WHITNEY BIENNIAL REVIEWS  Paddy Johnson Andrew Russeth Linda Yablonsky   Find us on Spotify, Stitcher, and Apple Podcasts  
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Institutional failure, Trump's Agenda, and Meme-Driven Conservative Movements: A Talk with Nayland Blake
2020/06/29
Artist Nayland Blake joins the podcast to discuss the murder of George Floyd at the hands of a white police officer, mass protests, and the resurgence of COVID as the backdrop for public art and how museums are addressing diversity.  Spearheaded in large part by Blake, we discuss all of these issues  through the lens of what people need and how art makers, art workers and arts institutions answer that need.  We started the conversation with Blake's recent twitter thread on art criticism.  "Art criticism is the activity of thinking with and through art objects," they wrote. "If you constantly reach for the same few objects to think with, you stagnate as a critic and simply reinforce your own bias."  Other relevant links mentioned in the show:  Nayland Blake's website Julie Mehretu's Goldman Saks mural Mark Bradford Social Abstraction What is the Boogaloo movement?  Dread Scott's Rebel Reenactment Marblecake Also the Game Gamergate Explainer   Support Explain Me by becoming a member on Patreon. 
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Podcast reviews

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4.7 out of 5
58 reviews
Amy Talluto 2022/06/21
Real talk and I’m here for it
I love love love this podcast that takes the NYC artworld and breaks it downnnn. The hosts are candid, funny and thoughtful and they often relish pok...
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Heart-Heart-Heart-1-2-3 2022/06/22
Great ... but a little classist and sexist
Truly appreciate this podcasts and deeply respect the hosts — but I would like to challenge some of the old fashioned, patriarchal vocabulary used in ...
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slice clooney 2022/06/14
Yes Please
Paddy is the best. I’ll attend carefully to anything she produces. We are lucky to have her. There’s so little actual criticism in the art world now, ...
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Laarubh 2018/08/26
Excellent
Currently listening to the mid-career artist show and felt compelled to write a review because I realized how much I missed this show. So refreshing t...
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Grin Gogh 2018/05/16
The Best Contemporary Art Podcast in Existence
There ain’t much competition, but these two really bring it. Opinionated and well-informed, Paddy and Bill are your point of access to the New York “a...
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Gamelan and on 2017/11/26
Great stuff
I have been listening to many of the fine interview art podcasts out there, but this is serving another slot that has been missing. Great back and for...
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Marion Gast 2017/11/07
It's about time!
As an artist and an avid podcast listener, I've been waiting for a podcast of this caliber about art for a long time- and here it is folks. Paddy and ...
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Fullmer 2017/10/18
Explain Me!
Essential listening for artists, critics, and audiences interested in what’s happening in the art world(s) and beyond.
paintchanger 2017/10/08
A welcome new podcast...
Two smart and engaging voices in art talking about current issues. A much needed podcast for those interested in contemporary art!
Silasroy 2017/10/08
Good editor needed
The content here is interesting but much too wordy. An hour is too long for a podcast. Invest in a qualified editor and your show will thank you.
check all reviews on aple podcasts

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