
Photographers of Color Podcast (Aaron Turner)
Explorez tous les épisodes de Photographers of Color Podcast
Date | Titre | Durée | |
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10 Sep 2020 | Raymond Thompson Jr. | Ep. 12 | 01:01:15 | |
Raymond Thompson Jr. is a photographer whose work focuses on race, identity and contested histories. He currently works as a Multimedia Producer at West Virginia University where is is also pursuing his MFA in photography. He received his MA in journalism from the University of Texas at Austin and a BA in American studies from the University of Mary Washington. His freelance clients include The New York Times, ProPublica, Google, Buzzfeed News, Merrell, NBC News, and the Associated Press. In the 1930s, migrant laborers came from all over the region to work on the construction of a 3-mile tunnel to divert the New River near Fayetteville, WV. During the process, workers were exposed to pure silica dust due to improper drilling techniques. Many developed a lung disease known as silicosis, which is estimated to have caused the death of nearly 800 workers. Up to two-thirds of those workers were African American. Besides a small plaque at the Hawks Nest State Park, which lists a significantly lower number than the actual number killed, there is very little to mark the site. There is also sparse visual documentation available about the event. There has been an effort to erase this tragic moment in history from the memory of West Virginia.
My research also focused on working with non-visual resources that inspired the creation of new works. I researched news clips, letters, poetry and other cultural resources looking for information that described the experience of working in the tunnel. I was particularly struck by a poem from Muriel Rukeyser’s book The Book of the Dead called “George Robinson: Blues:”
Rukeyser’s book, along with other primary-source documents, inspired a series of images that focuses on the silica dust that covered everything at the work site. http://www.raymondthompsonjr.com/ https://www.rustbeltbiennial.com/#winners https://www.epistemmag.com/reclaiming-the-black-image-in-nature-and-in-photography/ https://www.photographersofcolor.org/ https://www.instagram.com/photogsofcolor/ https://twitter.com/photogsofcolor
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01 May 2020 | Sama Alshaibi | Ep. 9 | 01:45:26 | |
Sama Alshaibi’s practice examines the mechanisms displacement and fragmentation in the aftermath of war and exile. Her photographs, videos and immersive installations features the body, often her own, as either a gendered site or a geographic device, resisting oppressive political and social conditions. Alshaibi’s monograph, Sama Alshaibi: Sand Rushes In (New York: Aperture, 2015) presents her Silsila series, which probes the human dimensions of migration, borders, and environmental demise. http://www.ayyamgallery.com/artists/sama-alshaibi https://crystalbridges.org/exhibitions/state-of-the-art-2/ https://www.artsy.net/artwork/sama-alshaibi-the-cessation https://www.artpace.org/works/iair/iair_spring_2019/until-total-liberation https://www.photographersofcolor.org/ https://twitter.com/photogsofcolor | |||
04 Aug 2020 | Akea Brionne Brown | Ep. 11 | 01:21:08 | |
24 Aug 2019 | Rachelle Mozman Solano | Ep.5 | 00:53:41 | |
BIO: Mozman is a Fulbright Fellow, and has exhibited at the National Portrait Gallery at Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C, the Americas Society, New York, New York, National Hispanic Cultural Center, Albuquerque, New Mexico, The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, New York, the Chelsea Museum, New York, New York, The DeCordova Sculpture Park and Museum, Lincoln, Massachusetts, the Museum of Latin American Art, Long Beach, California, the Shore Institute of Contemporary Art, Long Branch, New Jersey, Festival de la luz at the Centro Cultural Recoleta, Buenos Aires, Argentina the Instituto Cultural Itau, São Paulo, Brazil, the Friese Museum, Berlin, Germany, the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Santiago, Chile, Museo Nacional de Artes Visuales, Montevideo, Uruguay, Centro Cultural de España, Mexico City, Mexico, Festival Biarritz, Biarritz, France, as well as the IX Bienal de Cuenca, Ecuador. This podcast is made possible by the University of Arkansas School of Art endowment. http://www.rachellemozman.com/ https://www.instagram.com/rachellemozman/?hl=en https://twitter.com/photogsofcolor?lang=en https://www.instagram.com/photogsofcolor/ | |||
06 Jul 2019 | Claire A. Warden | Ep. 4 | 01:09:55 | |
Claire's work explores intersecting ideas of identity, the other, and the psychology of knowledge and power. The constructed photograph is integral to her arts practice. She received her BFA in Photography and BA in Art History from Arizona State University. Claire’s work has been exhibited in the United States and abroad including solo exhibitions of Mimesis at the Center for Fine Art Photography, the Colorado Photographic Arts Center and Art Intersection. She received an Artist Research and Development Grant from the Arizona Commission on the Arts, an Individual Artist Grant Award supported by the Creative Capacity Fund and the Contemporary Forum Artist Grant. Most recently she has been in residence at LATITUDE in CHICAGO, and had a solo exhibition at the Philadelphia Photo Arts Center. Claire will also be giving a lecture at the Society for photographic education north west conference this September. Website: https://www.claireawarden.com https://www.instagram.com/photogsofcolor/ | |||
07 Nov 2021 | Arkansas Photographer: Geleve Grice w/ Robert Cochran, Ph.D. | 01:16:20 | |
Geleve Grice was born on January 16, 1922, in Tamo, a small farming town located fifteen miles from Pine Bluff. At thirteen, Grice moved with his parents, Toy and Lillie, to Little Rock, where he graduated from Dunbar High School in 1942. An accomplished sportsman, Grice made the all-state football team his senior year of high school and later played for a service team during his four-year stint in the Navy. Grice entered the U.S. Navy immediately after graduation in the heat of World War II, eventually serving in the Pacific, where he guarded Japanese prisoners.
Grice began his photography career as a high school senior. L. C. and Daisy Bates, publishers of the Arkansas State Press newspaper, encouraged his journalistic interests by creating a column that featured his images and writings about fellow Dunbar classmates. While in the Navy, Grice was stationed at Great Lakes Naval Air Station in Illinois and went to Chicago on leave, where he took photos of the city’s nightlife, capturing unique images of famous black Americans like Joe Louis, Louis Armstrong, and famed guitarist T-Bone Walker.
After completing his military service on April 23, 1946, Grice enrolled at Arkansas Agricultural, Mechanical, and Normal College (AM&N College), later to be known as UAPB, the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff where he majored in psychology. He also played football for the Golden Lions, served as yearbook photographer, and was eventually hired in 1947 as the campus photographer. In September 1949, Grice married his college sweetheart, Jean Bell of North Little Rock, a singer who became the first black graduate student in the music department of the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville. They had one son, Michael.
When he graduated in 1950, Grice had already opened the professional photography studio to earn his living for the next forty years. He frequently worked outside the studio for the Arkansas State Press and various local television stations. Grice’s photos also appeared in such national publications as Ebony, Jet, and Life magazines.
One of the highlights of Grice’s career came while still a college student in 1948, when he was asked to document the integration of the University of Arkansas Law School in Fayetteville. As a result, Silas Hunt, accompanied by attorneys Wiley Branton and Harold Flowers, became the first black student to enroll at an all-white Southern university since Reconstruction.
In 1958, Grice photographed Martin Luther King Jr.’s commencement address at AM&N College. Because Grice was often called upon to chronicle significant happenings in the black community, his collection includes images of other notable black Americans, such as Mary McLeod Bethune, Ray Charles, Thurgood Marshall, and Muhammad Ali.
In 1998, the UAPB art department sponsored an exhibit of his work, Those Who Dare to Dream: The Works of Arkansas Photographer Geleve Grice. The Old State House Museum in Little Rock followed in 2003 with a more extensive exhibition of his work, A Photographer of Note: Arkansas Artist Geleve Grice. In 2003, the University of Arkansas Press published a book of the same title by Robert Cochran, featuring many of Grice’s most captivating photos.
Grice died on August 17, 2004. https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/geleve-grice-1161/ https://digitalcollections.uark.edu/digital/collection/Civilrights/id/157 https://news.uark.edu/articles/9559/diane-blair-and-geleve-grice-papers-donated-to-mullins https://arkansasresearch.uark.edu/a-photographer-of-note-arkansas-artist-geleve-grice/ https://fulbright.uark.edu/departments/english/directory/index/uid/rcochran/name/Robert-Cochran/ https://youtu.be/bUqlnPFeFew
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23 May 2020 | Dannielle Bowman | Ep. 10 | 00:55:01 | |
Bowman’s work investigates the histories of people left out of the grand historical narratives with which we are more familiar. Previous to this project, she photographed monuments, artifacts of antiquity, and landscapes of historical significance in the U.S. In What Had Happened, Bowman returns to where she grew up (the Baldwin Hills, Inglewood, and Crenshaw neighborhoods of Los Angeles, CA), opening her own history to ask questions about the role location and landscape play in personal evolution. The images recall the events, objects, and sites that mold us in order to explore themes of displacement, family history, and notions of home. Bowman asks how we remember what has marked us in a place we once called home and how that place informs who we are in the present. Memories of place are nuanced, emotional, atmospheric, historical, and geographical; when we return to these sites they are never exactly as remembered and fail to fully complete the retelling of history. In these photographs the passing of time reveals itself in the shadows drifting over a backyard, in a carpeted staircase worn by years of feet treading its fibers, in the shifting earth cracking the sidewalk that lays over it. The double exposures and repeated imagery draw attention to the way that time alters our perception of locations. Collectively the images render parts of ourselves and the place we once called home lost to time. Dannielle Bowman received a BFA from The Cooper Union and an MFA from the Yale School of Art, where she was awarded the 2018 Richard Benson Prize. She was recently awarded the 2020 Aperture Portfolio Prize and was a contributor to the New York Times Magazine's 1619 Project. Bowman has been an artist in residence at Baxter St at the Camera Club of New York; The Center for Photography at Woodstock; and PICTURE BERLIN. https://www.baxterst.org/what-had-happened/ https://aperture.org/blog/2020-portfolio-prize-dannielle-bowman/ https://www.photographersofcolor.org/ https://twitter.com/photogsofcolor https://www.instagram.com/photogsofcolor/ https://fulbright.uark.edu/departments/art/ Thumbnail Image: ©Kathy Ryan
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05 Dec 2020 | Andre Ramos-Woodard | Ep. 14 | 00:58:01 | |
Raised in the Southern states of Tennessee and Texas, André Ramos-Woodard (he/ they) is a contemporary artist who uses their work to emphasize the repercussions of contemporary and historical discrimination. Primarily working with photo-based collage, text, and drawing, they convey ideas of communal and personal identity centralized within internal conflicts. Ramos-Woodard is influenced by their direct experience with life – he is queer and African American, both of which are obvious targets for discrimination. They use their art to accent spaces of both communal understanding and disconnect between them and the viewer, specifically those of Black liberation, queer justice, and those in positions of power and privilege that lack the information to critically recognize problems within minority groups in contemporary culture. Ramos-Woodard received his BFA from Lamar University in Beaumont, Texas, and is currently pursuing his MFA at The University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, New Mexico. https://www.andreramoswoodard.com/ https://www.instagram.com/andreduane/?hl=en https://www.inthein-between.com/andre-ramos-woodard/ http://lenscratch.com/2020/07/andre-ramos-woodard-a-mediocre-ass-nigga/ https://www.photographersofcolor.org/ https://www.instagram.com/photogsofcolor/ https://twitter.com/photogsofcolor
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06 Jul 2019 | Andrew Jackson | Ep.3 | 01:34:05 | |
Andrew Jackson is an artist interested in exploring the challenges of selfhood, representation and narration. His works focus on transnational migration, home, belonging, relatedness, space & place, memory, family and storytelling. As well as the ways in which photography can challenge, reshape, revise and disseminate history, and it's telling, within discreet, intimate and personal ways. He is an award-winning recipient of the Autograph ABP /Light Work (AIR) International Photography Residency in Syracuse, New York and a graduate of the MA Documentary photography program at Newport in Wales. In 2018, he was shortlisted for the Elliott Erwitt Fellowship and the Magnum Foundation Social Justice fellowship. His most recent work, titled Another Place Like Home a photographic and text-based work that explores our inherent desire to belong, was commissioned by Multistory. Website: https://www.andrewjackson.photography https://www.instagram.com/photogsofcolor/ | |||
20 Mar 2020 | Lonnie Graham | Ep. 8 | 01:13:58 | |
Lonnie Graham, is an artist, photographer and cultural activist whose work addresses the integral role of the artist in society and seeks to re-establish artists as creative problem solvers. Lonnie Graham is a Pew Fellow and Professor at Pennsylvania State University. Professor Graham is formerly Acting Associate Director of the Fabric Workshop and Museum in Philadelphia Pennsylvania. Graham also served as Director of Photography at Manchester Craftsmen’s Guild in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, an urban arts organization dedicated to arts and education for at risk youth. There, Graham developed innovative pilot projects merging Arts and Academics, which were ultimately cited by, then, First Lady Hillary Clinton as a National Model for Arts Education. Professor Graham also served as instructor of special projects and oral historian for the Original Barnes Foundation in Merion Pennsylvania. in 1986 Prof. Graham authored a project entitled, "A Conversation with the World" which has been commissioned in various iterations in a number of countries around the world. https://conversationwiththeworldcalgary.org/ https://sova.psu.edu/profile/lonniegraham https://www.lightwork.org/archive/lonnie-graham/ https://www.datzpress.kr/publications/aconverstationwiththeworld Episode thumbnail image: by Erin Hall | |||
05 Mar 2020 | Jamal Cyrus | Ep. 7 | 01:17:50 | |
Jamal Cyrus (born 1973, Houston, TX) received his BFA from the University of Houston in 2004 and his MFA from the University of Pennsylvania in 2008. In 2005 he attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, and in 2010 he was an Artist in Residence at Artpace San Antonio. Cyrus has won several awards, including the Driskell Prize, awarded by the High Museum of Art, Atlanta, GA; a BMW Art Journy; the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award; the Artadia Houston Award, and the Smithsonian Artist Research Fellowship. He has participated in national and international exhibitions, including Direct Message: Art, Language and Power at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, IL (2019); The Freedom Principle: Experiments in Art and Music, 1965 – Now, Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, Chicago, IL (traveled to ICA Philadelphia, 2016); Arresting Patterns, ArtSpace, New Haven, CT (traveled to the African American Museum in Philadelphia, 2016); two exhibitions at the Studio Museum, Harlem (both 2013); the Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston (2012); the New Museum, New York (2011); The Kitchen, New York (2009); the Museum of London Docklands, London (2009); and The Office Baroque Gallery, Antwerp (2007). In 2006 Cyrus was included in Day for Night, the 2006 Whitney Biennial at the Whitney Museum of American Art. Cyrus is also a member of the artist collective Otabenga Jones and Associates. As a member of the collective, Cyrus has exhibited at Lawndale Art Center, Houston (2014), Project Row Houses, Houston (2014), the High Museum of Art, Atlanta (2008), the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Washington, DC (2008), the California African American Museum, Los Angeles (2008), the Menil Collection, Houston (2007), the 2006 Whitney Biennial, and Clementine Gallery, New York (2006). Cyrus’s and Otabenga Jones's work has been reviewed in Artlies, The Houston Chronicle, Houston Magazine, and The New York Times. Cyrus participated in the New Orleans triennial, Prospect.4, with Otabanga Jones. Jamal Cyrus lives and works in Houston, TX. https://inmangallery.com/index.html https://inmangallery.com/artists/cyrus_jamal/bio.html https://twitter.com/photogsofcolor https://www.instagram.com/photogsofcolor/?hl=en | |||
10 Nov 2019 | Andrea Morales | Ep. 6 | 01:41:37 | |
Andrea Morales (b. 1984, Lima, Peru) is a documentary photographer based in Memphis, TN and a producer at the Southern Documentary Project at the University of Mississippi. She grew up in Miami’s Little Havana and earned a B.S. in journalism from the University of Florida, as well as a M.A. in photography from Ohio University. She is currently a candidate for an MFA in documentary expression at the University of Mississippi’s Center for Study of Southern Culture. Before the South, she moved around the country in between while working for different newspapers, including the El Sentinel (in South Florida) and The New York Times. Most recently, she was on staff as a photographer at the Concord Monitor in New Hampshire, where she covered barn dances, ox pulls and presidential elections, all with equal joy. http://www.andreamoralesphoto.com/ https://www.instagram.com/_andrea_morales/ https://www.photographersofcolor.org/ | |||
19 Nov 2020 | Jasmine Clarke | Ep. 13 | 00:49:01 | |
Jasmine Clarke is a 25-year-old photographer born (and based) in Brooklyn, New York. She graduated from Bard College in 2018 with a BA in Photography. Inspired by the surreal qualities of our waking world, her images play with the tension between fiction and reality. Her images have been shown at Howard Greenberg Gallery in Manhattan and are currently on view at Photoville in Brooklyn Bridge Park, the Photo Vogue Festival in Milan, and the National Center for Civil and Human Rights in Atlanta. When I look in the mirror, I want to believe that what I am seeing is an extension of myself even though I know that it isn’t. I’m seeing a reflection (an illusion) of me and my world. I can never quite trust a mirror. A picture creates a similar false sense of reality. The nature of photography tells us that what we are seeing is true, but it’s not. It is a selective truth, or even a fiction. One night in Jamaica, as my father and I drove through the mountains, he described a recurring dream: he is in his hometown, Saint Mary's, at a certain winding road that’s shaped like an N, trying to catch the bus. He misses it and has to run up the mountain through the bush and slide down the other side to catch it. This is his only dream set in Jamaica. He told me as we approached the N. I listened while chewing on my sugar cane. It’s strange hearing about a dreamscape while physically going through it—like déjà vu. I feel this sense of familiarity driving through my father’s dream. But what’s more overwhelming is the sensation of jamais vu: foreignness in what should be known. The moon you see, the air you breathe, and the flowers you smell are all suddenly unfamiliar. You’ve moved, traveled—maybe even transcended—although you don’t know to where. You look in the mirror and see yourself, but can’t be sure that it’s the same reflection you saw yesterday. This is why I photograph: to capture a trace of the unexplainable. My pictures are where dreams meet the physical world and earthly things take on higher meaning. I search for the uncanny. I uncover what is hidden. An obscured face, a wet flower, a dark shadow. https://www.instagram.com/jasmineclarke0/?hl=en https://photoville.nyc/the-lit-list-2020-photographers-to-watch-exhibit-hire/ https://www.blueskygallery.org/upcoming-exhibitions https://www.photographersofcolor.org/ https://twitter.com/photogsofcolor https://www.instagram.com/photogsofcolor/?hl=en https://fulbright.uark.edu/departments/art/ https://www.instagram.com/uarkart/?hl=en
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14 Jun 2019 | Bethany Mollenkof | Ep. 2 | 01:04:08 | |
Bethany Mollenkof is a filmmaker + photographer based in Los Angeles, CA. She creates both short documentary and still photography focused at the intersections of gender, identity and culture. Through portraits and interviews she finds meaning in telling stories that reframe familiar narratives. Awards include: Women Photograph Grantee, 2019, Glassbreaker Films Grantee, 2018, The Los Angeles Times Team Pulitzer Prize, 2016, Eddie Adams workshop class of XXVII, POYI In this episode, we talk about Bethany’s time at the LA times, what it’s like to be a woman of color in the industry today, freelancing, and her latest project on women working midwifery in Alabama https://www.bethanymollenkof.com/ https://twitter.com/photogsofcolor?lang=en This podcast is made possible by the University of Arkansas School of Art | |||
29 May 2019 | Zora J Murff | Ep. 1 | 01:20:24 | |
Zora Murff received his MFA in Studio Art from the University of Nebraska–Lincoln and holds a BS in Psychology from Iowa State University. Combining his education in human services and art, Zora’s work explores how photography is intertwined with social and cultural constructs. His work has been exhibited nationally, internationally, and featured in various publications such as Aperture Magazine, The New Yorker, VICE Magazine, The British Journal of Photography, and The New York Times. Zora was named a 2019 Aperture Portfolio Prize finalist, also, an honoree for PDN’s 30: New & Emerging Photographers to Watch, was and selected for the 2019 Light Work Artist-in-Residence Program. http://www.zora-murff.com/ https://www.instagram.com/photogsofcolor/ |