Real Photo Show with Michael Chovan-Dalton artwork

Real Photo Show with Michael Chovan-Dalton

201 episodes - English - Latest episode: 17 days ago - ★★★★★ - 32 ratings

Real Photo Show with Michael Chovan-Dalton is a podcast about photographers and the related arts.

Visual Arts Arts
Homepage Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed

Episodes

Victor J. Blue | Cities in Dust - Ep.96

July 04, 2019 21:24 - 1 hour - 87.3 MB

"Our job is to keep making work that speaks both to the conflicts as they unfold and also what they are going to mean…our job is to hold our political and military leaders accountable for the decisions they make and the people they affect." Victor Blue is a documentary photographer interested in the aftermath of conflict. He believes it is not enough to just cover the conflict, but that we also need to document the consequences of the decisions and actions of our political leaders. His recen...

SVA The Culture of Community: A Latinx Photo Symposium - Ep.95

June 21, 2019 15:09 - 1 hour - 104 MB

MFA Photography, Video, and Related Media, in collaboration with El Museo del Barrio, presents the final program in the Scheimpflug Lecture Series of the spring 2019 semester entitled The Culture of Community: A Latinx Photo Symposium. This episode is from a recording of the Latinx Photo Symposium event. The Real Photo Show was part of the early planning for the show. The show was organized by Liz Zito with discussions led by MFA grads Jordan Cruz and Carla Maldonado. The discussion was mode...

Stanley Greenberg | Codex New York - Ep.94

June 06, 2019 23:58 - 50 minutes - 69.8 MB

"I think that the early interest in infrastructure came from riding the subway to high school everyday and standing in the front car with my friends and watching the tunnel." Stanley Greenberg stopped by to talk about his new book CODEX NEW YORK - TYPOLOGIES OF THE CITY. It's a fascinating view of New York City organized by infrastructure, topography, carved out spaces, and architectural history. Stanley walked every block of Manhattan as part of this urban catalog of New York. We talk about...

Michael Joseph | Travelers - Ep.93

May 25, 2019 22:25 - 1 hour - 86.5 MB

"I think they see themselves as a second family, a found family, a supportive family and they're young in a way where they are exploring the world and seeing things for the first time, it's very exciting, it's intoxicating…" Michael Joseph was in town for his solo exhibition "Lost and Found" at Daniel Cooney Fine Art Gallery. Michael has some amazing stories about how the "Travelers" work took shape and about the connections he made along the way. We spend a good amount of time talking about...

Sasha Waters Freyer | Garry Winogrand: All Things Are Photographable - Half Frame - Ep.92

May 12, 2019 02:04 - 37 minutes - 51.5 MB

Sasha Waters-Freyer is a documentary filmmaker and Chair of the Department of Photography and Film at Virginia Commonwealth University. Her film, Garry Winogrand: All Things are Photographable, has been getting a lot of press and great reviews and it just aired on PBS American Masters. Sasha and I catch up on the success of the film, her awards, and what it took to get it made and the decisions that went into how it was edited and cut. We also talk about her Special Jury Prize for best femini...

Rory Doyle | Delta Hill Riders - with Nicole Craine - Ep.91

April 27, 2019 21:54 - 1 hour - 95.8 MB

"…I'm able to share a story in a small part of American on a large scale and that's not me, per say, that's the story of this culture that's been so overlooked and I feel really thankful that…I've been accepted and I've been able to photograph it…" Rory Doyle, Nicole Craine (Everyday Rural America, Ep.74) and I talk about his award winning Delta Hill Riders photo essay. Rory was in town for portfolio reviews and we talk about the difficulty of getting work outside of the major media parts of...

Anja Hitzenberger | strudelmediaLive - Ep.90

April 10, 2019 00:46 - 57 minutes - 78.5 MB

"I feed off of other people, that's really how I teach, I love teaching this way. I like to improvise, I like to go by what is needed." Anja Hitzenberger and I talk about photography, food, Mozart balls, and her new online venture, StrudelmediaLive, where she sometimes teaches from a mountaintop. Anja Hitzenberger is a photographer and video artist whose work focuses on the body and its relationship to architecture and space, as well as themes relating to food and how people eat. Her work ha...

Aaron Turner | Center for Photographers of Color - Half Frame - Ep.89

March 28, 2019 02:24 - 32 minutes - 45.2 MB

Aaron Turner started @photogsofcolor on Twitter to promote Photographers of Color and we talk about that back on episode 50, but now this social media idea is becoming an actual Center for Photographers of Color at the University of Arkansas. We talk about all of the amazing changes and successes for Aaron in this half-frame episode of Real Photo Show with Michael Chovan-Dalton. https://www.aaronturnerphotography.com/ https://www.instagram.com/aturn_arkdelta/ https://twitter.com/AaronRTurner_...

Andrew L Moore | Learning by Inquiry - Ep.88

March 09, 2019 22:22 - 49 minutes - 67.5 MB

"We spent a lot of time visiting architectural sites when I was a kid…I really grew up with a kind of 6th sense about buildings, about architecture, and about how architectural space creates a kind of narrative and I've been able to take that and translate that into my photographic practice." Andrew L. Moore took some time after teaching his graduate class at the School of Visual Arts to talk about his work. He is probably best known for his books, Detroit Disassembled and Dirt Meridian and ...

Rust Belt Biennial | Niko J. Kallianiotis - Yoav Friedlander - Half Frame Ep.87

February 24, 2019 03:30 - 39 minutes - 54.8 MB

Yoav Friedlander and Niko J. Kallianiotis call in to talk about their open call exhibition, Rust Belt Biennial. We talk about the logistics of putting together this ambitious exhibition and the leaps of faith you have to make when doing something like this for the first time. We also talk about their desire to change the narrative or the perceptions people have of the rust belt because of the politicization of the media coverage. On a more personal note, the top prize winner chosen by photogr...

Lissa Rivera - BJ Lillis | History and Muse - Half Frame Ep.86

February 09, 2019 20:48 - 35 minutes - 49 MB

In this half frame episode I catch up with Lissa Rivera and BJ Lillis (ep.51) to talk about their successes with the Beautiful Boy exhibition and how there is more work to come, but there was so much more to talk about as well. Lissa has just organized the first U.S. museum exhibition of Leonor Fini, the Argentinine-Italian surrealist artist, at the Museum of Sex and BJ is busy learning Dutch to help him translate his doctoral work on cultural and interethnic contact in the colonial Hudson va...

Lissa Rivera - BJ Lillis | History and Muse - Half Frame Ep.86

February 09, 2019 20:48 - 35 minutes - 49 MB

In this half frame episode I catch up with Lissa Rivera and BJ Lillis (ep.51) to talk about their successes with the Beautiful Boy exhibition and how there is more work to come, but there was so much more to talk about as well. Lissa has just organized the first U.S. museum exhibition of Leonor Fini, the Argentinine-Italian surrealist artist, at the Museum of Sex and BJ is busy learning Dutch to help him translate his doctoral work on cultural and interethnic contact in the colonial Hudson va...

Katie Sadie | The Way South - Ep.85

January 27, 2019 22:37 - 57 minutes - 78.5 MB

"Ended up going on a six month road trip from Toronto to Los Angeles…all through the south…living in a van…lived in that total for a year, but six months on the road for a photo trip" Katie Sadie started out as a fashion photographer but quickly realized she wanted more out of the work she was making. She sold off her studio equipment to pay for a 6 month road trip through the American South ending in Los Angeles. She traded studio backdrops for rolls of 120 film, bought a Pentax 6x7 off of ...

Dana Stirling | Float Magazine - Half-Frame Ep.84

January 19, 2019 20:16 - 19 minutes - 26.4 MB

In this half-frame episode I catch up with Dana Stirling from Float Magazine. Dana and her partner in life and business, Yoav Friedlander, were guests back on episode 49. Dana and I talk about the upcoming issue of Float entitled "Killing Time" and we talk about the rewards of promoting others and building a community while keeping in mind the need to carve out space to make your own work. We also talk about failure as an inherent part of making. http://www.danastirling.com/ https://www.float...

Kayla Coleman | Carrie Able Gallery - Ep.83

January 07, 2019 17:38 - 1 hour - 116 MB

"I remember sitting in that art history class and loving it, but flipping through the textbook and not seeing myself in it. And so I was like, 'do black people not make art?' and I know they make art because I grew up in New York." Kayla Coleman is a Collector Relations Liaison for the Carrie Able Gallery in Brooklyn, NY. She is an art historian, educator, and writer based in New York City and specializes in Modern and Contemporary art by black artists in the United States and the Caribbean. ...

Charles Traub | Taradiddle - Half-Frame Ep.82

December 28, 2018 01:50 - 21 minutes - 29.1 MB

Charles Traub is my first guest for the new half-frame episodes where I catch up with previous guests on what they have been up to. Charles and I talk about his new book, Taradiddle. We also get into the collaborative effort required to publish a book. The book can be purchased here: https://www.damianieditore.com/en-US/product/675 or https://www.amazon.com/Charles-Traub-Taradiddle-David-Campany/dp/8862086210 Visit Real Photo Show at realphotoshow.com or IG/FB/Twitter @realphotoshow

Oliver Wasow & Mark Alice Durant | Friends Enemies Strangers - Ep.81

December 19, 2018 22:28 - 1 hour - 87.9 MB

"They are really poignant images and they really sort of resonated humanity, and because I didn't know the author, I didn't know the intent or anything, in some ways that allowed me to kind of engage with them. Because I didn't feel like I was being manipulated, I was in control their meaning in some ways." -Oliver Wasow "Since the election, the sort of two dominating emotions for me have been rage and tenderness…This range of photographs in Oliver's work…encompassed this sense." -Mark Alice...

Andy Dunn | Last Stop Coney Island - Harold Feinstein - Ep.80

December 05, 2018 01:37 - 1 hour - 97.9 MB

"This was all slow kind of going as well, an email here and there, and it wasn't until 2014 that Harold's health started to fail quite seriously…and Judith dropped me a line and said, 'if you are serious about doing this film, just fyi, let's get on with it.' So I did and that was where I had to kind of take a bit of a leap of faith. " Filmmaker, Andy Dunn stopped by to talk just hours before the premiere of his documentary, Last Stop Coney Island: The Life and Photography of Harold Feinstei...

Paul Kwiatkowski - Tom Griggs | Ghost Guessed - Ep.79

November 17, 2018 22:34 - 1 hour - 84 MB

"I think the first thing that happened, which is the big overarching theme of the book, was the missing Malaysian plane…and all the kind of mythology and conspiracy that followed it, and that led to a much bigger more personal theme, which is about Andrew, Tom's cousin, who also died in a plane crash." - Paul Kwiatkowski "The book is not a reflection on how we process grief, it is actually processing grief." - Tom Griggs Paul Kwiatkowski and Tom Griggs stop by SVA to talk about their new boo...

Noyes Arts Garage | RAW 2018 - Ep.78

October 31, 2018 18:30 - 42 minutes - 58.5 MB

This episode was recorded with a live audience at the Noyes Arts Garage reception for the 2018 RAW exhibition that I juried. The episode is actually broken into three parts. The first two parts are at the show during the reception and first I speak with Saskia Schmidt, the Director of Education, and Michael Cagno, the Executive Director of the Noyes. In part two I speak with two of the three juror selected artists, Krista Svalbonas and Sherman Fleming, and in part three you will hear a phone ...

Lynsey Weatherspoon | Portraits & Communication - Ep.77

October 17, 2018 02:25 - 1 hour - 89 MB

"I left home because I was getting too comfortable. Comfortable with the type of work I was creating, comfortable around the people I had known for 29 years… " Lynsey Weatherspoon was in New York for Photoville after being named to the Lit List - 30 Image Makers To Watch by the Authortity Collective. Lynsey and I talk about leaving home and taking risks in order change your life and to pursue what you truly want to do. What you will learn about Lynsey is that she doesn't like to get too comf...

Ryann Casey | Loss Event - Ep.76

September 28, 2018 01:00 - 59 minutes - 82.2 MB

"My first trip after Sarah passed was to the Grand Canyon…so I think that trip and that sense of awe…felt like I was connected to something outside of myself." This episode was recorded during Ryann Casey's artist talk about her show, Loss Event, at the JKC Gallery. Ryann and I talk about combining the personal loss of her friend Sarah, with the public loss of national park land as a means to explore the grieving process and how we don't allow ourselves to fully explore grief. Ryann is a Phil...

Melissa Bunni Elian | Afropunk x Ferguson - Ep.75

September 10, 2018 02:29 - 1 hour - 88.8 MB

"The analogy I always use is that we are on this table as a society, but we don't see that we are getting pushed closer and closer to the edge and we're comfortable because we are still on the table, but now we are looking at the edge and we are freaking out." Bunni Elian is an alum of the Bronx Documentary Center and one of the original members of the Bronx Photo League. Her work on the Afropunk music festival earned her a Pulitzer Center grant and was just featured on the Picture Show, NPR...

Nicole Craine | Everyday Rural America - Ep.74

August 21, 2018 16:34 - 1 hour - 120 MB

"I was like, If I spend as much time working on my own stuff as I do working at this desk I could probably make just about anything happen, so goodbye." Nicole Craine's successes in the documentary/photojournalism world can be attributed to her ability to know when it's time to walk away and when it's time to lean in. Nicole has walked away from a couple of steady photo related jobs in New York that others would kill to have in order to pursue her work and, one time, so she could meet Quest ...

Sarah Blesener | Beckon us from Home - Ep.73

August 03, 2018 12:48 - 1 hour - 86.4 MB

"I want nuanced reflections and questions…that's why I like literature…if a book didn't do that you would not be interested and you would throw it away…so I think photography should beckon the same kinds of responses…" Sarah Blesener dropped out of school at an early age to pursue alternative forms of education which included a year of flight school. She describes herself as very goal driven with a desire to get things done quickly, which accounts for how much she has accomplished in a relat...

apexart | Steven Rand - Ep.72

July 20, 2018 02:25 - 1 hour - 93.5 MB

"As an artist I began to feel that I was making collectibles for wealthy people…with apex I turned into more of an educator…and the fellowship is the program that I would have liked, that I think I should have gone on." -Steven Rand As part of a series of events related to the exhibition, Light in Wartime, curated by Rola Khayyat (ep.68), I was invited to speak to Steven Rand, the Founder of apexart. It was a panel discussion with Steven, Rola, Margaret Ewing, Director of Programs, and former...

Reuben Radding | Humans and Music - Ep.71

July 06, 2018 17:59 - 1 hour - 118 MB

"I looked back on my life and was like, I've done a lot of tearing down, a lot of dismantling of my life to move on to something else and grow, and I thought maybe I don't need to do that…" Reuben Radding's path to photography can be traced through his love of music. He dropped out of High School to play music and to be with a community that got him away from his abusive father, who was also a musician. Music brought him to New York City in the early 90's where he played at the Knitting Fact...

Sara Hylton | Nobody Listened - Episode 70

June 21, 2018 21:50 - 54 minutes - 75.2 MB

"I think even in storytelling and making pictures there's so much noise and it's so busy and here's this conflict and this violence and for me it's just about people, I just want to see them." Sara Hylton uses portraiture to tell the stories of the oppressed, abused, and the underrepresented. Much of her work focuses on discrimination against women and their resilience in the face of systemic class and gender bias. We talk about how Sara developed this sense of social justice, how she chose ...

Aaron Berger - Episode 69

June 07, 2018 01:52 - 52 minutes - 71.7 MB

"That was at the very end of Thailand, I was just starting to think I didn't want to play poker anymore and I was starting to be drawn to something maybe a little more creative which I had never done in my whole life…" Aaron Berger taught himself photography by studying the tech specs that are included with photos on Flickr® and looking at photographers such as Garry Winogrand on the internet. His path to photography started with a realization that he was not going to be a professional socce...

Rola Khayyat | From Brooklyn to Beirut - Episode 68

May 23, 2018 20:27 - 1 hour - 97.6 MB

"When the shelling got too bad my mom would hide us in the bathroom and say it's just raining really hard and this is the safest spot in the house." Rola Khayyat grew up during the Lebanese Civil War but when talking about her experience she doesn't focus on the horrors, she focuses on the richness of her life and how her mother protected her children and gave them a sense of security and home. Life during conflict is at the heart of Rola's work and also became the creative drive behind the ...

Peter Kasovitz | K&M Camera - Episode 67

May 07, 2018 01:16 - 43 minutes - 34.6 MB

"The people that I dealt with were quite fascinating to me because I came from a completely different perspective and I began following them and I said they support me there's no reason for me not to support them." Peter Kasovitz is the co-founder of K&M Camera which has been in business for 42 years. It's an institution among photographers from all around the world and Peter's generosity and support for students and established photographers is know by many. Peter and I spoke at SVA which w...

Gordon Stettinius | Candela Books + Gallery - Episode 66

April 21, 2018 23:12 - 46 minutes - 64.3 MB

"There is sort of a desert in Richmond Virginia, there was no photo gallery, there are a couple of blue-chip galleries…but my feeling is I could talk circles around them…where photography is concerned, but I'm still trying to learn the business, that they are very good at." Gordon Stettinius is an artist and the founder of Candela Books + Gallery. He started Candela to help publish and promote well-known, but maybe underrepresented artists, as well as to promote new, and mid-career artists wh...

Andréanna Seymore - Episode 65

April 07, 2018 00:06 - 1 hour - 82.7 MB

"I really wanted to kind of tackle women being empowered by physical fitness, and being empowered by sports, and what let me into that was discovering roller derby." Andréanna Seymore's interest in photographing women in sports as a source of empowerment can be traced back to her own experience of giving up sports in school because there was no support or expectation of success for women in sports. She also sees her mother, a lawyer who defended tenants from eviction, as inspiration for her ...

Andre D Wagner - Episode 64

March 18, 2018 21:18 - 54 minutes - 74.3 MB

"It's just amazing how like when you kind of put energy out, like a certain type of energy that you want to be around and that you want to be a part of, how the world kind of brings that right back to you…" Andre D. Wagner accidentally started his photo career while playing basketball for Buena Visa University as a social work major. He took a photo class thinking it would be an easy grade, but like many first time photo students, he was shocked by the cost and the amount of work involved, bu...

Joseph Michael Lopez - Episode 63

March 04, 2018 21:15 - 1 hour - 93.2 MB

"I don't think I was really ready to break out as a photographer, but I was ready to break out as like my own spirit." Joseph Michael Lopez is a documentary photographer. His interest in photography started while he was a cinematographer. Joseph is mostly self-taught and his work often involves concerns for social justice which is a character trait he attributes to the life story of his mother who escaped Cuba in 1967. Joseph's work has appeared on the cover of M, The Magazine for Leica M Ph...

Wassaic Project | Eve Biddle | Jeff Barnett-Winsby - Episode 62

February 18, 2018 23:09 - 1 hour - 118 MB

"We talk to other community organizations all the time, they are like, oh how do you get such great community engagement, we do events all the time and the community doesn't come. Well, are you doing events for the community or with the community?" - Eve Biddle "I'm really proud of what we've done, we've worked so hard, it's fabulous, it continues to grow, why don't I just dive deeper." - Jeff Barnett-Winsby The Wassaic Project is a fantastic organization in Wassaic, NY. It's an artist's spac...

Nomi Ellenson | Boudoir by Nomi - Episode 61

February 04, 2018 19:41 - 1 hour - 83.9 MB

"When you're 3 or 5 years old and you're understanding that your grandma fits bras, you don't think about it in a sexual way…I just equated bras with, oh people go see grandma Selma feeling uncomfortable and they leave feeling better." Nomi Ellenson is a body positive and sex positive boudoir photographer. As a freelance fashion photographer, Nomi felt limited by what she was assigned to shoot in terms of promoting a specific kind of beauty. She started her own business so she could help cha...

Katie Kline - Episode 60

January 22, 2018 13:36 - 57 minutes - 79.2 MB

"That's the thing I get most excited about with photography is what you can hide from the viewer and how you can frame your work to make it something that is very specific or might not be seen just passing by." Katie Kline's photography was influenced by her father's job at Disneyland and their frequent trips to the land of artifice. Now Katie sees a little Disney wherever she travels and you can see it in her landscapes and the way she records the details of places that aspire to be more. K...

Verónica Sanchis Bencomo | Foto-Féminas Episode 59

January 07, 2018 22:32 - 1 hour - 89.7 MB

"That's when I came to learn more about Graciela Iturbide, Tina Modotti, Lola Alvarez Bravo…that kicked in this interest or appetite in what else is going on in other places…" Verónica Sanchis Bencomo founded Foto-Féminas as a way to promote the work being done by female photographers working in Latin America and the Caribbean. It was while growing up in Venezuela and witnessing political turmoil that Verónica became acutely aware that the media could be a powerful tool for giving voice to th...

Jackie Battenfield | The Artist's Guide - Episode 58

December 23, 2017 19:33 - 56 minutes - 77.4 MB

"If the bottom line isn't scaring you, you haven't thought of everything, and because of that we don't go after enough funding…" Jackie Battenfield is an artist and an entrepreneur, and that is a big part of the message she shares with her audience when she teaches professional practice at Columbia University and when she lectures at conferences. Her book, The Artist's Guide: How to Make a Living Doing What You Love, has been called a "tough-love" guide to pursuing a career in the visual arts...

Emile Askey - Episode 57

December 10, 2017 00:28 - 1 hour - 112 MB

"You know I had a meltdown and went to hang out in the desert for a couple weeks…came back…I talked to my brother and he's like, you say good things but you don't do anything good. You have all these ideas…your at 10,000 feet, nothing is on the ground for you…" Emile Askey was born in California to a Macedonian/Australian mother and an African American father. At a very young age his mother convinced the family to move from LA to Australia because, she was concerned with gangs in the public s...

Donato DiCamillo - Episode 56

November 23, 2017 13:17 - 1 hour - 87.7 MB

"I was a criminal, I lived that criminal lifestyle, and I really didn't give a crap about anybody's feelings…but something changed in me and photography…brought me closer to people." Donato DiCamillo has one of the more unique stories of how he got into photography. Afflicted with behavioral and anger issues, Donato was kicked out of high school and became fully immersed in a life of crime. In 2006 he was arrested by federal agents in an operation involving the Colombo crime family. It was wh...

Gabriela Herman | The Kids - Episode 55

November 07, 2017 02:30 - 44 minutes - 61.7 MB

"I literally went from, I wasn't able to say the words out loud…my mom is gay, to basically writing it in the Times and screaming it to the whole world." Gabriela Herman does something that is rare among photographers, she makes a living with her photography. Gabriela talks to Michael about some of her career milestones, including getting some photojournalism work through Craigslist. Her new book ,The Kids (The New Press), which explores the lives of kids who grew up with LGBTQ parents also ...

Amani Willett - Episode 54

October 18, 2017 01:42 - 56 minutes - 77.2 MB

"…and to me that is the irony in all of this…In the act of wanting to be alone, and disappearing, he actually became famous." Amani Willett's new book, The Disappearance of Joseph Plummer, pieces together the history and the mythology left behind of a mysterious hermit who moves away from society to the deep woods of New Hampshire in the late 1700's. Amani became interested in Plummer after realizing that his father had bought the same land, where Plummer had settled, also as an escape from ...

John Trotter - Episode 53

September 24, 2017 22:57 - 1 hour - 75.9 MB

"I remember saying, 'That, that's it, I almost died for that…it's a nothing photograph.' That's how I would have been remembered, he died to make a really nothing photograph. " John Trotter is a former photojournalist and conflict photographer who had photographed in dangerous hot spots like Mogadishu, but it would be on a simple assignment in Sacramento California where John would face his own life altering experience. thePhotoShow becomes theCyclingShow for the start of this episode as John...

Michael Kamber | Bronx Documentary Center - Episode 52

September 04, 2017 01:38 - 1 hour - 95.2 MB

"Photography is magic…it has incredible and really unparalleled power to represent and define people, communities, and individuals...kids see that and they want to do that and they want to be part of that." Former conflict photographer Michael Kamber founded the Bronx Documentary Center. The BDC is dedicated to providing free photographic education to Bronx middle and high schoolers, as well as education for adult Bronx photographers. Michael believes in the value of photography to educate an...

Lissa Rivera - BJ Lillis | Beautiful Boy - Episode 51

August 17, 2017 17:19 - 1 hour - 95.1 MB

"It was about getting the opportunity as a woman to experience the beauty of my partner and also question beauty and how beauty is constructed and the language of beauty itself." Lissa Rivera and BJ Lillis talk about their collaboration on "Beautiful Boy." Lissa describes this work as a "…confession between friends." and that description reveals itself again and again as Lissa and BJ describe their evolving relationship that grows and changes with each photograph that Lissa makes of BJ. Our c...

Aaron Turner | Photographers of Color - Episode 50

July 23, 2017 21:16 - 1 hour - 116 MB

"People know that there are black artists out there but it's just about why isn't that work included in the overall narrative…Let's know the history of photography and let's figure out how we can insert ourselves into that narrative." Aaron Turner started Photographers of Color so that when you are asked the question, "How many photographers of color do you know?" you would have no excuse for having a poor answer. Aaron is the Technical Director of Film & Electronic Arts at Bard College and ...

Float Magazine | Yoav Friedlander & Dana Stirling - Episode 49

July 07, 2017 00:10 - 1 hour - 101 MB

"The feeling that you are opening a door for someone , what you always dreamt that someone would do for you…it's a very humbling experience." Float Magazine is the brainchild of Dana Stirling and Yoav Friedlander. It is an online publication that allows lesser known photographers to showcase their work with photographers who have had more success in getting recognized. In our conversation about how Dana and Yoav got started you will also hear how they became such great partners who support ea...

Gary Schneider - Episode 48

June 16, 2017 20:53 - 1 hour - 118 MB

"I realize I have a kind of self-consciousness about my history, about having grown up in Apartheid South Africa and mostly my work is outside of race…" Gary Schneider is the Director of the Graduate Program at Mason Gross School of the Arts. The Harvard Art Museum has recently acquired a historic collection of printer proofs from the Schneider/Erdman Photography Lab that Gary and his lifelong partner John Erdman owned for 30 years. In addition to the proofs Gary and John are donating their p...

Twitter Mentions

@realphotoshow 64 Episodes
@photogsofcolor 1 Episode
@kaimcbride 1 Episode
@fotofeminas 1 Episode
@mattabbottphoto 1 Episode
@patchop 1 Episode
@cameraimages 1 Episode
@andrew_cenci 1 Episode
@photodre 1 Episode
@dolo_foto 1 Episode
@uglyboy_paul 1 Episode
@bunnisays 1 Episode
@mattustu 1 Episode
@hannahkozak 1 Episode
@photobram 1 Episode
@reubenradding 1 Episode
@amaniwillett 1 Episode
@katshorr 1 Episode
@charlestraub 1 Episode
@rorydoylephoto 1 Episode