Podcasts
As the language of humanity, art tells stories of inspiration, hope, and healing even as it acknowledges the hurt and despair that afflicts us all.
Episode 15: Meryl Truett’s Story of Excavations
Meryl Truett is a curator, gallerist, teacher, consultant, and artist. She earned an MFA from Savannah College of Art and Design. After years in the United States, where she taught and produced works such as Vernacular Highway and a photography book, Thump Queen and other Southern Anomalies (in its second printing), she moved to the magical pueblo of San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. Meryl continues to exhibit—in the US, Europe, and now Mexico. Her current work mixes photography with other media in order to excavate her past. She speaks of such excavations in this episode of Artists Telling Stories.
Episode 14: Josephine Sacabo Tells a Story of Her Journey Toward Transcendence and Connection
Josephine Sacabo’s art seeks transcendence and connection. She eschews any chasing after artistic fashion in favor of diving into what she loves. In this way she connects with those who view her work. The many layers of her work evoke layers of being, some disturbing, yes, but ultimately transcending such disturbance to “come full circle” with compassion and beauty.
Episode 13: Artists Telling Stories 2024 Extended Trailer
In this extended Artists Telling Stories Podcasts trailer, please join Austin Tichenor, Aline Smithson, Joe Harjo, Vincent Valdez, Jay Tolson, Alicia Olatuja, and Jim Lavilla-Havelin in discovering the importance of stories, the language of our humanity, and the transformative power of art. Artists Telling Stories Podcasts draw out human stories in the hope that in their telling, artists will offer a new story of our shared humanity, bringing all of us closer together. Join us for a new season in 2024!
Episode 12: Poet and Activist, Words and Names, Marks and Meaning: Jim Lavilla-Havelin
Jim Lavilla-Havelin has written six collections of poetry, with several more in the works. His work has been anthologized widely, and he has been nominated for Poet Laureate of Texas, where he has lived for the last few decades. This episode of Studio Aesculapius is different. Jim reads three poems and has a wide-ranging discussion with co-host, Eddie Dupuy: about the poems, about poetry, about art and activism, about language and knowing and finding patterns, about the human desire to make marks and the attempt to make meaning.
Episode 11: Joe Harjo and Native Visibility: Not Monolithic, but Extraordinarily Diverse
Joe Harjo says he didn’t have “access to seeing ‘artist as profession,’” while he was growing up in Oklahoma as a member of the Muscogee (Creek) nation. When he told a guidance counselor in high school that he wanted to teach, the counselor rebuffed him. When he said he wanted to be an artist, he got a similar response. Now he’s both artist and teacher, and his work tries to counter misrepresentations of Native peoples in popular culture. After a particularly difficult year of isolation, an injured knee, the resurgence of racial strife, and Covid, Harjo discovered his origins anew, both as an artist and as a Native person. He felt “lifted” and “carried through” by histories, his own and that of his ancestors, and he shared that discovery in a series of prints. It’s one of the mysteries of art that you will find something of yourself in his story as well.
Episode 10: Aline Smithson and Finding a Visual Voice: Something Universal, Something Healing
Aline Smithson was always drawing as a child growing up in Los Angeles. After a stint as a large format painter, Smithson went to New York for 10 years, working in fashion. She returned to LA, took a class in photography and realized she “could use the camera to make art.” She had found her “visual voice,” and now, as a teacher for more than 20 years, savors the moments she sees that voice arise in her students. Smithson is one of the most recognized names in photography, not only because of her work developing LENSCRATCH, an online resource for and community of photographers, but also because of her own significant body of work, which elevates the everyday world into something more. You will enjoy our conversation with her because of the individuality and universality, the humanity, she shares with us.
Episode 9: The Displaced and Disappeared: Adriana Corral and “Between Spaces”
Adriana Corral credits both sides of her family for her interest in art. Her father's side had several physicians who invited her to see their work of healing and who gave her a strong sense of the body. On her mother's side were an aunt and uncle who opened to her ideas of social justice. Like her place between her father’s and mother’s families, Corral sees between spaces as “where vital content exists.” She invites those who view her installations to do so “bodily.” Looking up, looking down, being aware of where they are in space. The spaces she creates are meditative or contemplative, dealing with heavy subjects that pull her viewers in (like gravity) while still giving them space to experience the work uniquely. Her conversation with us is no less weighty, drawing listeners to her thoughtful reflections on her life and work.
Episode 8: Hard Won Pilgrimages: Paul Elie discusses Literature, Bach’s Music, and his Journey as a Catholic
Paul Elie (from the Berkley Center at Georgetown University) talks about his two books, The Life You Save May be Your Own: An American Pilgrimage (2003) and Reinventing Bach (2012), especially the “hard won” pilgrimages of Dorothy Day, Thomas Merton, Flannery O’Connor, and Walker Percy. Elie goes on to speak of his own pilgrimage in and around the Catholic Church, his struggle to remain within its story while writing about some “awful things”—such as the sexual abuse crisis. He speaks of Bach’s unique place as religious artist and, finally, of his work on the American Pilgrimage Project, where he has discovered the healing power of a diversity of American religious experience beyond even his broadest expectations.
Episode 7: Fake News and Truth, Faith and Irony: Jay Tolson Discusses the Big Questions of our Culture
Jay Tolson is editor of the award-winning journal The Hedgehog Review, published out of the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture at the University of Virginia. He’s also a journalist and scholar, who wrote Pilgrim in the Ruins, a biography of writer Walker Percy. Tolson discusses our current political climate, the war in Ukraine, and the deleterious impact of “PR politics.” Say something enough, true or not, and people will believe it. He also discusses the impact of Walker Percy on his thinking about art, and the way forward (the hope) Percy’s work opens, namely a connection with others through symbols.
Episode 6: Shakespeare and the Arts during the time of Plague and War
Austin Tichenor is an actor, comedian, writer and editor. Part of the world renowned “Reduced Shakespeare Company,” Tichenor discusses the “leveling quality” of humor, his insistence on not taking himself too seriously, and the ubiquity of storytelling. We all tell stories for work, love, and play. But as we “mature,” we somehow forget story’s (and art’s) enlivening power and push them aside. Rediscovering laughter in so-called “high-brow” endeavors, he maintains, can open new paths to healing.
Episode 5: Music, Connection, and Joy: Alicia Olatuja and the Presence of Voice
Alicia Olatuja is a vocal artist and life coach, who, the New York Times says, has a “luscious tone and amiably regal presence.” As the soloist at Barack Obama’s second inauguration, Olatuja discovered that she needed to align her head, heart, and voice to connect not only with her audience, but to discover a more authentic self. Now she not only performs, but also shares her experience from the stage with those seeking their own voice. Finding this voice, Olatuja contends, offers a way past the doubts and traumas we face in our troubled times.
Episode 4: The Mastery of Craft and the Healing Expression of Art
Mohammed (Momo) Al Shaibani is a comic artist from the United Arab Emirates. He earned an MFA in sequential art (comics) from Savannah College of Art and Design. Momo discusses the art scene in the UAE, the importance of craft, and the marriage of illustration and story-telling that comics demand. A sometimes marginalized medium, the comics, Momo finds, provides as much a salve to ills of contemporary life as music or song.
Episode 3: In Our Era of Loss, Imbalance, and Malaise, Bach's Music Recenters, Restores, and Heals
Sean Duggan, OSB, is a monk of Saint Joseph Abbey in Covington, Louisiana, and a Professor of Music at SUNY Fredonia. He’s also a world-class pianist with a passion for J.S. Bach. Duggan discusses his attraction to Bach, the balance Bach offers to our topsy-turvy world, and Bach’s insistence on continually pointing away from himself to “something higher.” In this self-abnegation, Bach offers a clue to overcoming our contemporary sense of loss and malaise.
Episode 2: Telling Stories with Images: Memory and the Quest of History
Vincent Valdez, an artist based in Houston, has gained widespread critical acclaim for his provocative works that go against the grain of most contemporary art. Valdez discusses the “trauma of living in 21st-century America,” the challenge of being an American artist, and the solitude necessary to produce works that recover history and memory.
Episode 1: Reconnecting with Beauty in a Post-Pandemic World
Rene Paul Barrilleaux, Head of Curatorial Affairs at the McNay Art Museum in San Antonio, sees first-hand the impact of art on viewers. He talks about his struggles with words as a child, his turn to images, and art’s ability to “transport” viewers to a fuller reality, particularly after the constraints imposed by the worldwide pandemic.