Today, we take you to the Everglades, a region of South Florida once entirely covered in a shallow, slow-moving sheet of water. Established as a National park in 1947, the subtropical wilderness of endless marshes, dense mangroves and towering palms is a habitat for rare and endangered species—including manatees, the American crocodile, and the Florida panther.
Since 2001, the wild world of the Everglades has been a temporary habitat for artists and writers who spend a month here as fellows in the program known as AIRIE, Artists in Residence in Everglades. New York based photographer Adam Nadel was a past resident. In this podcast episode, he introduces Getting the Water Right an expansive exhibition project he produced with Jessica Cattelino, associate professor of anthropology at the University of California Los Angeles. Together, they tell the human story of South Florida’s iconic eco-system.
Miami's 21st Century Radio World
Sharon Louden on The Artist as Culture Producer
Contemporary Black Portraiture
Jorge Menna Barreto on Environmental Sculpture
Artist Residency in the Everglades
Bahar Behbahani on Politics and Persian Gardens
A City Symphony for Miami
Catherine Morris and A Year of Yes
Public Art and the Underline in Miami
Zoë Buckman on Fight Mode
Fourth Wave Feminist Art
Lost Spaces and Stories of Vizcaya
Sounds of Miami Art Week 2016
Jochen Volz on Living Uncertainty
Vivian Caccuri on Tambon Bass
Prospect 4 New Orleans Revealed
Christie van der Haak on More is More
Miami Art Week 2016 Edition
Alexis Gideon on Myth and Memory
New Performance Art
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Spider-Man Crawlspace Podcast
Harlem Is Everywhere
The Week in Art
Black Beauty
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
The Art Angle
Robservations with Rob Liefeld