Episode 1: Gaye Chan
By Weston Teruya“I think that the Free Store allows us to see our irrational fear of the stranger.”
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(un)making is a podcast hosted by visual artist, Weston Teruya. He welcomes artists, arts administrators, and cultural workers of color to get real about their lives, practices, and careers. Each episode is an in-depth look into how art gets made, but more importantly how these folks are seeing to the system of art’s (UN)making.
“I think that the Free Store allows us to see our irrational fear of the stranger.”
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“I want other people of color to have a space to create this sort of dialogue or network...that’s where the real stuff is going to actually happen.”
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“[The work is] really about indigenous self determination. Whatever form that takes. It’s really about celebrating that, acknowledging it, and connecting those narratives to the public.”
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"How do I tell the stories of blue--and tell the histories and all the research of blue, but by using other colors?"
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Unraveling the destructive politics and rhetoric shaping public understanding of migration and immigration in the United States.
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“Part of what we’re trying to focus on is: what does it mean to be visionary in the midst of a storm?"
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“I like the idea that you can build more of an artillery of images and things that you have to base your own taste levels off of.”
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Taraneh Hemami builds platforms for artists and activists to gather, find ways to address past traumas, create work, and weave together a collective institutional memory.
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Trisha Lagaso Goldberg creates platforms to support artists in Hawaiʻi through exhibitions, programming, and her work as the Public Art Project Manager for the Hawaiʻi State Foundation on Culture & the Arts.
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The Berkeley South Asian Radical History Walking Tour guides people across downtown Berkeley as they share stories that explore the multigenerational and intersectional work of South Asian Americans in the region.
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By Jeanne Gerrity
By John Zarobell
By Matthew Harrison Tedford
By John Zarobell
By Theo Konrad Auer
By Terri Cohn
A series developed in collaboration with Lucas Artists Residency Program at Montalvo Arts Center.
what are you looking at? is a podcast featuring two queer black women in the Bay Area talking about art, art crushes, art world gossip, regular gossip, and millennial woes. Writer and art critic, Elena Gross, is joined by artist and selfie-queen Jay Katelansky as co-host. Together they take on art, popular culture, and queer black shit!
Featured Episodes: Episode 1: Rooting for Everybody Black Episode 3: What's the deal with California? Episode 4: Black Hoooooles Episode 8: Bittersweet End NotesEight contributors examine the role of art during times of social and political turmoil.
A space to reflect, listen, and struggle to comprehend the impact of Ghost Ship through music, art, and writing.
Seven contributors consider how citizenship relates to cultural and political systems as they intersect with artistic practices, institutions, and diverse publics.