Vik Muniz says he owes his artistic career to being shot as a young man, not because he had an epiphany about the meaning of his life, but because he won enough compensation from the accident to move to New York and kick-start his career in the art world. He is now probably one of Brazil’s most successful visual artists and his pieces can range from tiny specs that are photographed by microscopes to giant landscapes captured from helicopters. He is known for working with unconventional materials; some of his most famous works have been created out of sugar, chocolate and a plate of left over spaghetti. Andrea Kennedy went to New York to meet him as he prepared for an exhibition full of illusions.
Solutions Journalism: Reducing risks in a risky world
Solutions Journalism: Ending homelessness the Finnish way
In the Studio: Maria Djurkovic
Paris: Football’s greatest talent factory
BBC OS Conversations: Surviving sepsis
Heart and Soul: Russia’s Africa crusade
Assignment: Bulgaria - the people smugglers
Our House: Stories of the Holocaust
In the Studio: Thelma Schoonmaker
BBC OS Conversations on graduate unemployment
Heart and Soul: Facing death in Kenya
Assignment: The struggle for Barbuda's future
Building a future for cyclone-hit Mozambique
The Return
In the Studio: Poet Fred D’Aguiar
BBC OS Conversations: Covid-19 four years later
Assignment: Bones that speak
An octopus's garden
The Approach
In the Studio: Manal AlDowayan
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Global News Podcast
Stuff You Should Know
The Frommer’s Travel Show
WDW Radio - Your Walt Disney World Information Station
The Dish Food Travel Show