Afleveringen
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The practice of making and venerating santos (painted or sculpted images of saints) originated in Spain and was carried to territories that fell under Spanish colonial rule. New Mexican santeros (makers of santos) developed distinctive approaches that diverged from the models they found in imported oil paintings, statues, and devotional prints. The Santero tradition flourished from the mid-eighteenth to late-nineteenth centuries before falling into a period of decline. Yet it recovered and thrives today, responding to the needs of both religious devotees and art aficionados.
Artists Vicente Telles and Brandon Maldonado are forging new links in the chain of the continuing story of the people of New Mexico. Telles is firmly rooted in the Santero tradition, while Maldonado describes his work as being heavily inspired by New Mexican folk art. Yet they see their work converging on the critical question: What can and should Santero art be now?
This question is explored in the exhibition Cuentos Nuevomexicanos, on display at MOCRA March 19 â May 21, 2023. Vicente and Brandon sat down with MOCRA Director David Brinker for an interview while they were in town for the opening of the exhibition.
Visit the MOCRA Voices website to learn more about Cuentos Nuevomexicanos and to explore our other episodes.
Recording Engineer and Editor: Mike Schrand
Theme and Incidental Music: Stephen James Neale
Producer: David BrinkerOriginal release date: 4/27/2023
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Dr. Aaron Rosen reflects on an artwork that holds deep personal meaning for him, in a conversation with MOCRA Director David Brinker.
This is an Audio Extra to Episode 25: Aaron Rosen.
Visit the MOCRA Voices website to learn more about Aaron Rosen and to explore our other episodes.
Original release date: 3/6/2020
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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When MOCRA opened in 1993, many people were skeptical about a museum focusing on expressions of religion and spirituality in contemporary art. Preconceptions were firmly lodged for those coming from the perspective of art and for those coming from the perspective of faith and spirituality. By the time Founding Director Fr. Terrence Dempsey, S.J., retired from the museum on June 30, 2019, however, MOCRA had convincingly established that the religious and spiritual dimensions continue to nourish vital and varied currents in contemporary art.
MOCRA celebrated Fr. Dempsey on Nov. 10, 2019, in a program called Pursuing the Spirit in Contemporary Art: A Celebration of Terrence Dempsey, S.J. The afternoon featured a talk by author and curator Dr. Aaron Rosen, who reflected on MOCRA's significance and took stock of the present and future of the dialogue between contemporary artists and the religious and spiritual dimensions. You can see that talk and other highlights of the celebration here.
While he was in St. Louis, Rosen joined MOCRAâs new Director, David Brinker, to talk about Rosenâs scholarly and curatorial projects. In their wide-ranging conversation, they also speculated about future trajectories for MOCRA.
Be sure to listen to the Audio Extra, "Love as Strong as Death."
Visit the MOCRA Voices website to learn more about Aaron Rosen and to explore our other episodes.
Recording Engineer and Editor: Mike Schrand
Theme and Incidental Music: Stephen James Neale
Producer: David BrinkerOriginal release date: 3/6/2020
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How do you know if you're an artist? Many people would reflexively say they are not, since they cannot draw or paint or sculpt. But in this two-part episode, we hear from several people who have a more expansive understanding of what makes an artist. Their focus isn't on what is produced, but on the act of art-making itself, and the cultivation of an artistic methodology.
In Part 1, St. Louis-based artist, author, and educator Con Christeson interviews Federica Thiene. Thiene is an artist based in Italy and co-founder of artway of thinking, a non-profit organization with the aim of researching collective creative processes, where the artist enters actively into the process of social change. Together they explore the origins and scope of artway and what it means to work within a co-creation methodology. Listen to Part 1 of the conversation here.
Part 2 brings Christeson together with fellow St. Louis artist Tom Brady and MOCRA Assistant Director David Brinker in a conversation about the development of an artistic practice and its role in the community. They reflect on their shared their experiences with Geographica Schema, a project spearheaded by Christeson to introduce artway concepts to artists and others in St. Louis.
Visit the MOCRA Voices website to learn more about Con Christeson, Federica Thiene, and Tom Brady, and to explore our other episodes.
Recording Engineer and Editor: Mike Schrand
Host: Linda Kennedy
Theme and Incidental Music: Stephen James Neale
Producer: David BrinkerOriginal release date: 5/25/2017
This episode was made possible with financial support from the Regional Arts Commission.
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How do you know if you're an artist? Many people would reflexively say they are not, since they cannot draw or paint or sculpt. But in this two-part episode, we hear from several people who have a more expansive understanding of what makes an artist. Their focus isn't on what is produced, but on the act of art-making itself, and the cultivation of an artistic methodology.
In Part 1, St. Louis-based artist, author, and educator Con Christeson interviews Federica Thiene. Thiene is an artist based in Italy and co-founder of artway of thinking, a non-profit organization with the aim of researching collective creative processes, where the artist enters actively into the process of social change. Together they explore the origins and scope of artway and what it means to work within a co-creation methodology.
Part 2 brings Christeson together with fellow St. Louis artist Tom Brady and MOCRA Assistant Director David Brinker in a conversation about the development of an artistic practice and its role in the community. They reflect on their shared their experiences with Geographica Schema, a project spearheaded by Christeson to introduce artway concepts to artists and others in St. Louis. Listen to Part 2 of the conversation here.
Visit the MOCRA Voices website to learn more about Con Christeson, Federica Thiene, and Tom Brady, and to explore our other episodes.
Recording Engineer and Editor: Mike Schrand
Host: Linda Kennedy
Theme and Incidental Music: Stephen James Neale
Producer: David BrinkerOriginal release date: 5/25/2017
This episode was made possible with financial support from the Regional Arts Commission.
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Thanks to her discerning eye and generous hospitality, Martha Schneider has built a reputation as one of the foremost gallerists specializing in contemporary Latin American photography. But 30 years ago, she had no inkling where her passion for art would lead her.
She spoke with MOCRA Director Terrence Dempsey, SJ, about the origins of Schneider Gallery and how she came to represent world-renowned artists such as Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons, Luis GonzĂĄlez Palma, and Erika Diettes. They also talk about the highly successful collaborations between the gallery and MOCRA, including 2016's acclaimed exhibition, Erika Diettes: Sudarios.
Visit the MOCRA Voices website to learn more about Martha Schneider, and to explore a Listening Guide to the interview.
Recording Engineer and Editor: Mike Schrand
Host: Linda Kennedy
Theme and Incidental Music: Stephen James Neale
Producer: David BrinkerOriginal release date: 5/23/2017
This episode was made possible with financial support from the Regional Arts Commission.
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Leo OâDonovan, S.J., talks about the compelling contemporary resonances he discerns in a painting by Henry Ossawa Tanner, âThe Flight into Egypt.â
This is an Audio Extra to Episode 22: Leo O'Donovan, S.J.
Visit the MOCRA Voices website to explore a Listening Guide to the interview.
Original release date: 12/22/2016
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Jesuit priest Leo OâDonovan, S.J., has held some prominent roles, including over 20 years as the president of Georgetown University. But he has also kept up a lively engagement with the world of art and art exhibitions, a fact well known to readers of the periodicals America and Commonweal.
O'Donovan spoke with MOCRA Director (and fellow Jesuit priest) Terrence Dempsey, S.J., about his wide-ranging career and his perspective on contemporary religious art.
Be sure to listen to the Audio Extra, "Henry Ossawa Tanner."
Visit the MOCRA Voices website to learn more about Leo O'Donovan, SJ, and to explore a Listening Guide to the interview.
Recording Engineer and Editor: Mike Schrand
Host: Linda Kennedy
Theme and Incidental Music: Stephen James Neale
Producer: David BrinkerOriginal release date: 12/22/2016
This episode was made possible with financial support from the Regional Arts Commission.
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What impact can art have on those in training to become pastoral caregivers? Cristina Stevens shares reflections from three of her students about their experiences visiting MOCRA.
This is an Audio Extra to Episode 21: Art, Empathy, And Healing.
Visit the MOCRA Voices website to learn more about Cristina Stevens and to explore our other episodes.
Original release date: 8/30/2016
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Empathy is a term that surfaces in a variety of fields, including museums. MOCRA Assistant Director David Brinker sets out to explore two different angles on museums and empathy.
In Part 1, he talks with museum educator Adam Nilsen about how empathy is understood and studied, as well as the ways it is being applied in museum settings.
Part 2 features chaplain and pastoral care educator Cristina Stevens reflecting on the role art and empathy play in the training and practice of those who support the spiritual needs of healthcare patients.
Listen to Part 1 of the conversation here.
Be sure to listen to the Audio Extra, "Student Reflections."
Visit the MOCRA Voices website to learn more about Adam Nilsen and Cristina Stevens and to explore our other episodes.
Recording Engineer and Editor: Mike Schrand
Host: Linda Kennedy
Theme and Incidental Music: Stephen James Neale
Producer: David BrinkerOriginal release date: 8/30/2016; updated on 5/30/2017
This episode was made possible with financial support from the Regional Arts Commission.
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Empathy is a term that surfaces in all kinds of settings, including museums. MOCRA Assistant Director David Brinker sets out to explore two different angles on museums and empathy.
In Part 1, he talks with museum educator Adam Nilsen about how empathy is understood and studied, as well as the ways it is being applied in museum settings.
Part 2 features chaplain and pastoral care educator Cristina Stevens reflecting on the role art and empathy play in the training and practice of those who support the spiritual needs of healthcare patients.
Listen to Part 2 of the conversation here.
Be sure to listen to the Audio Extra, "Student Reflections."
Visit the MOCRA Voices website to learn more about Adam Nilsen and Cristina Stevens and to explore our other episodes.
Recording Engineer and Editor: Mike Schrand
Host: Linda Kennedy
Theme and Incidental Music: Stephen James Neale
Producer: David BrinkerOriginal release date: 8/30/2016; updated on 5/30/2017
This episode was made possible with financial support from the Regional Arts Commission.
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Pamela Ambrose talks about the ways in which art museums can use their collections to enrich the lives of people living with Alzheimer's and their caregivers.
This is an Audio Extra to Episode 20: Pamela Ambrose.
Original release date: 8/30/2016
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Pamela Ambrose and Terrence Dempsey, SJ, discuss the inflatable sculpture Paranirvana, by Bay Area artist Lewis deSoto, a contemporary interpretation of a centuries-old Buddhist shrine.
This is an Audio Extra to Episode 20: Pamela Ambrose.
Original release date: 8/30/2016
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Pamela Ambrose has had a distinguished career as a curator and museum director. On the occasion of her retirement as Director of the Loyola University Museum of Art in Chicago, Ambrose joined MOCRA Director Terrence Dempsey, SJ, to look back over her distinguished career managing both galleries and museums, and talk about her enduring interest in the intersection of art and the spiritual dimension.
Be sure to listen to the two Audio Extras, "Lewis deSoto's "Paranirvana"" and "Art and Alzheimer's."
You can hear more from Ambrose in Episode 5: Pamela Ambrose and Ena Heller. Also, watch the related video podcast episode, "Art and the Religious Imagination," on the MOCRA Voices Vimeo channel.
Visit the MOCRA Voices website to learn more about Pamela Ambrose and to explore a Listening Guide to the interview.
Recording Engineer and Editor: Mike Schrand
Host: Linda Kennedy
Theme and Incidental Music: Stephen James Neale
Producer: David BrinkerOriginal release date: 8/30/2016
This episode was made possible with financial support from the Regional Arts Commission.
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The multidimensional, abstract paintings, sculptures, and installations of artist Jordan Eagles have caught the imagination of viewers and critics alike. His invented preservation technique, combining blood, plexiglass, UV resin, and other materials, permanently retains the organic materialâs natural colors, patterns, and textures.
Eagles speaks with MOCRA Director Terrence Dempsey, SJ, about his unusual artistic media and his worksâ rich symbolic associations. They also discuss Eaglesâ continuing growth as an artist, including Blood Mirror, a work created to raise awareness about the FDAâs ban on the donation of blood by men who have sex with men.
Jordan Eagles' work was featured in the 2013 MOCRA exhibition BLOOD / SPIRIT.
Visit the MOCRA Voices website to learn more about Jordan Eagles and to explore our other episodes.
Recording Engineer and Editor: Mike Schrand
Host: Linda Kennedy
Theme and Incidental Music: Stephen James Neale
Producer: David BrinkerOriginal release date: 8/30/2016
This episode was made possible with financial support from the Regional Arts Commission.
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Howard Fox is well-known in contemporary art circles as a curator and author. MOCRA Director Terrence Dempsey, SJ, speaks with Fox about his approach to curating exhibitions and discerning trends in art-making, as well as the process of writing essays on contemporary art. Along the way they discuss specific artists who engage the religious and spiritual dimensions in their work.
Visit the MOCRA Voices website to learn more about Howard Fox and to explore a Listening Guide to the interview.
Recording Engineer and Editor: Mike Schrand
Host: Linda Kennedy
Theme and Incidental Music: Stephen James Neale
Producer: David BrinkerOriginal release date: 5/31/2015
This episode was made possible with financial support from the Regional Arts Commission.
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In 2013, MOCRA celebrated its twentieth anniversary, a perfect time to talk with people who have been affiliated with the museum over the years: those who had a hand in MOCRAâs genesis, artists who have participated in exhibitions at MOCRA, and other participants in the broader dialogue between contemporary art and religion and spirituality. With "MOCRA Memories" we bring you these conversations and reflections.
This two-part episode features people involved with MOCRA's groundbreaking 1994 exhibition, Consecrations: The Spiritual in Art in the Time of AIDS.
Listen to Part 1 of the episode here.
Visit the MOCRA Voices website to learn more about the people behind the voices.
Recording Engineer and Editor: Mike Schrand
Host: Linda Kennedy
Theme and Incidental Music: Stephen James Neale
Producer: David BrinkerOriginal release date: 5/31/2015
This episode was made possible with financial support from the Regional Arts Commission.
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In 2013, MOCRA celebrated its twentieth anniversary, a perfect time to talk with people who have been affiliated with the museum over the years: those who had a hand in MOCRAâs genesis, artists who have participated in exhibitions at MOCRA, and other participants in the broader dialogue between contemporary art and religion and spirituality. With "MOCRA Memories" we bring you these conversations and reflections.
This two-part episode features people involved with MOCRA's groundbreaking 1994 exhibition, Consecrations: The Spiritual in Art in the Time of AIDS.
Listen to Part 2 of the episode here.
Visit the MOCRA Voices website to learn more about the people behind the voices.
Recording Engineer and Editor: Mike Schrand
Host: Linda Kennedy
Theme and Incidental Music: Stephen James Neale
Producer: David BrinkerOriginal release date: 5/31/2015
This episode was made possible with financial support from the Regional Arts Commission.
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Artists Daniel Ramirez and Buzz Spector were studio mates in the MFA program at the University of Chicago in the 1970s, forging a friendship that has lasted ever since.
In this wide-ranging conversation with MOCRA Voices, they trace the evolution of their artistic output over the decades. They touch on the thought of Ludwig Wittgenstein, the music of Olivier Messiaen, divine geometries, book design, and even the finer points of bowing technique.
Visit the MOCRA Voices website to learn more about Daniel Ramirez and Buzz Spector and to explore a Listening Guide to the interview.
Recording Engineer and Editor: Mike Schrand
Host: Linda Kennedy
Theme and Incidental Music: Stephen James Neale
Producer: David BrinkerOriginal release date: 5/30/2015
This episode was made possible with financial support from the Regional Arts Commission.
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MOCRA has been shaped by many people and events over the years. âMOCRA Memoriesâ episodes delve into particular moments in MOCRAâs history.
In 2013, MOCRA celebrated its twentieth anniversary, a perfect time to talk with people who have been affiliated with the museum over the years: those who had a hand in MOCRAâs genesis, artists who have participated in exhibitions at MOCRA, and other participants in the broader dialogue between contemporary art and religion and spirituality. In this episode we bring you conversations and reflections with people involved in MOCRAâs inaugural exhibition, Sanctuaries: Recovering the Holy in Contemporary Art.
Visit the MOCRA Voices website to learn more about the people behind the voices.
Recording Engineer and Editor: Mike Schrand
Host: Linda Kennedy
Theme and Incidental Music: Stephen James Neale
Producer: David BrinkerOriginal release date: 5/29/2015
This episode was made possible with financial support from the Regional Arts Commission.
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