Today's conversation reveals the role of private investment in temporary and permanent public art across the U.S. Contemporary art collector Cricket Taplin, who with her husband Martin Taplin once owned the legendary Sagamore Art Hotel on Miami Beach, explains her philosophy on collecting as a mode of civic engagement. Curators Claire Breukel and Dina Mitrani tell how they introduce the work of local and international artists through public art. Miami-based artists Rosario Marquardt and Roberto Behar of R&R Studios share stories behind their privately sponsored and public-funded projects from Florida to California. In a special Fresh Art International flashback, Dejha Carrington talks about the waterfront intervention she realized in 2016, through the Miami Foundation's Public Space Challenge.
Sound Editing: Anamnesis Audio | Special Audio courtesy the artist and James Cohan Gallery: Hiraki Sawa’s Hidden Tree, 2007
Related links: Cricket Taplin and the Sagamore Art Hotel, Unscripted Bal Harbour, R&R Studios
Juan Botta Makes One-Minute Movies in Puerto Rico
Hong Kong Mixtape II
Contemporary Psyche on View in Venice Art Biennale
How to Build the Creative Economy
Commuter Biennial Brings Public Art to Miami’s Margins
Making Art, Creating Culture
Artist Playlist—Regina Frank Listens to Joan Jonas
When Sound is Art—Five Sonic Stories
How Paint and Pixels Power the Art of Allison Zuckerman
Model Behavior—New Orleans Art Triennial Inspires Other Cities
Artist Playlist—Nadine Hall Listens to Diaspora Vibe: Art with Caribbean Roots
Destination American Southwest
Art and Film Illuminate The Black Imagination
Charles Gaines on Philosophy and Politics in Conceptual Art
Art of the Eclipse Turns Our Gaze to the Sky
Studio Drift Sends Up Swarming Ode to Apollo at 50
Ellen Harvey on Public Art and Climate Action
Oliver Beer on the Architecture of Sound
The Art of Obsolete Media
Curating and Creative Resilience with IKT in Miami
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Spider-Man Crawlspace Podcast
Harlem Is Everywhere
The Art Angle
The Turn of the Screw
A Tale of Two Cities
The Week in Art
Robservations with Rob Liefeld