On this live streaming radio program, we consider how artists, curators, architects and writers are responding to climate change in South Florida. King tides, flooding and eroding beaches are now part of everyday life. Our guests reveal how the rising sea has inspired two artist residency programs and an upcoming exhibition.
Natalia Zuluaga, Artistic Director at ArtCenter/South Florida, introduces the Center’s new Art in Public Life residency, a year-long opportunity for the selected artist to participate in shaping in the City of Miami Beach resiliency plan. She also talks about the exhibition Intertidal that imagines Miami's intertidal zone future, as a city above water at low tide, and flooded at high tide.
Also in studio, Ombretta Agro, Simon Faithfull, Will Rey, and Gustavo Oviedo share their roles in ARTSail, an ArtCenter residency exploring the Miami waterways, the South Florida coastline and the Keys. Our field recordings with recent ArtSail residents Blanca de la Torre and Mark Lee Koven to complete the picture of the floating residency's first year.
Special audio features: Archival Feedback, Stormtrack and Gustavo Oviedo, Boatski Tours
Rodrigue Mouchez on Choreographing Art Encounters
Poetry, Art and Community Justice
Joyce J. Scott on Craft in Contemporary Art
Miami Art Week 2018 Preview
Paola Pivi on Art with a View
Inside Miami's Sound Chamber
33rd São Paulo Biennial Pays Attention to Art
Mapping Caribbean Cultural Ecologies
Where Art Meets Sand and Social Behavior
Creative Time Summit 2018 to Explore Miami Culture
Live from Trinidad: Where Digital Culture Thrives
The Art of Breaking the Bank
Staging Complex Art
Mark Bradford Connects Art with the Real World
Whithervanes: The Art of Anxiety
Process, Experimentation and Action in Dak'Art 2018
Black in America
The BLCK Family of Miami on Collective Creativity
The Art of Capitalism
Turning Analog Technology into Sound Sculpture
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Spider-Man Crawlspace Podcast
The Week in Art
Art Sense
Anne of Green Gables
Pollyanna
The Art Angle
Harlem Is Everywhere: The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism