Art Slice - A Palatable Serving of Art History

By: Stephanie Dueñas & Russell Shoemaker / Art Slice
  • Summary

  • Irreverent Deep Dives into Art & Art History - by artists and art historian Stephanie Dueñas and Russell Shoemaker.

    No gatekeeping, privilege, or that cognitive fog called ‘art speaking.'

    Follow along with the images we discuss on our Youtube page, artslicepod.com, @artslicepod on Instagram.

    Get bonus content and support the show at http://www.patreon.com/artslicepod

    All rights reserved
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Episodes
  • 28: Mary Cassatt at Work ➬ a bonus conversation with curator Emily Beeny
    Dec 5 2024

    To watch ➬ mosey on over here ➬ : https://youtu.be/3H3ittr_RNY


    We present a very special bonus interview with Emily A. Beeny, Chief Curator at the Legion of Honor in San Francisco about the Mary Cassatt At Work exhibition.


    Since her day, Mary Cassatt (1844-1926) has been known for her paintings of bébés and upper class women but there’s another layer - a radical one - that has been overlooked until now.


    Join us as we discuss how this new exhibition explores the idea of labor surrounding Cassatt’s studio practice as well as her radical subject matter: the bébés being cared for by, more often than not, nannies, nurse-maids, governesses etc.


    Our conversation with Emily revolves around Cassatt's “A Goodnight Hug” a pastel from 1880.


    Topics include the artist as laborer, shedding light on domestic work, her and Cassatt’s involvement in women’s suffrage in the US.


    The exhibition closes January 26th, 2025 - don’t miss it!!


    You can learn more about the exhibition here:


    https://www.famsf.org/exhibitions/mary-cassatt


    MUSIC: HoliznaCC0 - “First Snow”

    https://holiznacc0.bandcamp.com/




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    38 mins
  • 27: Yasuo Kuniyoshi - ✰ ► a deep dive into the often overlooked artist ◄ ◄ ◄
    Nov 4 2024

    WATCH THE VIDEO VERSION HERE (and if you do please like, subscribe, and comment - we are trying to get our videos some traction): https://youtu.be/vQZ0yMxdfuE


    ¡ ¡ W E ‘ R E B A C K, Y ’ A L L ! !

    This time getting lost in the weird and wonderful world of painter, photographer and printmaker Yasuo Kuniyoshi’s early works (Part 1) that feature wonky landscapes populated by dream logic, lumpy babies, curvaceous women, angular farm animals, and Japanese folk tales as well as American folk influences.


    Yas’ early works became an amalgamation of his lifelong journey of self-identity, expertly blending sentimental past memories, like that of Japanese folktale Momotaro, with present feelings of fear and isolation due to the growing racism and tension he was experiencing on the daily.


    As an Asian American immigrant, and like many other Nikkei, Yas found himself trapped somewhere in the middle - considered neither Japanese nor American enough - as relations between the US and Japan escalated.


    We discuss “Little Joe with Cow” 1923, “Bad Dream” 1924, and “Self-Portrait as Golf Player” 1927.


    Topics include shedding your husk, Weezer dance-a-thons, dual cup-holder LaZ boys, censoring comics and mermaids . . . and so much more!!


    Music:


    "A flower blooms in complete darkness"


    From the album: "Visions, Prophecies, and Night Terrors" by The Hathaway Family Plot


    Check out the album on Spotify or Bandcamp


    https://thehathawayfamilyplot.bandcamp.com/album/visions-prophecies-and-night-terrors




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    1 hr and 2 mins
  • 26: La Catrina ⇝ Jose Guadalupe Posada's Skull-icon of Día de Muertos ☠ Revolution ☭
    Nov 4 2024

    Watch the video version here (if you do - please like, subscribe, and comment as we are trying to get our videos more recognition): https://youtu.be/YN-jTDR2spY


    ¡ ¡ W E ‘ R E B A C K, Y ’ A L L ! !

    and diving into the origins of La Catrina, the quintessential skelicon of Day of the Dead. Over the past 100ish years, her image has transcended borders, becoming synonymous with sugar skulls, Frida Kahlo, the Virgin of Guadalupe and even Santa Muerte.


    From her first incarnation by Mexican printmaker Jose Guadalupe Posada in 1910 as “Calavera Garbancera” (Chick-Pea Calavera) print, all the way back to early depictions of (and actual) skulls found in Aztec and Mayan tzompantli; Her rediscovery and re-imagining by the Mexican Muralists in the early 20th century, even making a cameo in the larger than life mural by Diego Rivera in 1947 “Sueño de una tarde dominical en la Alameda Central” or “A Dream of a Sunday Afternoon in Alameda Park” and finally, the continuing rise of La Catrina’s visage in the present day.


    We also discuss Europe’s Memento Mori moment in Hans Holbein the Younger’s “The Ambassadors” from 1533 as well as Francisco Goya’s Los Caprichos influence on Posada’s “Calavera de los Patinadores” or “Street-cleaning Calavera” from c.1900 and “Calavera Oaxaqueña” or “The Oaxacan Calavera” c.1910.



    Topics include renegade saints, is Tim McCraw dead?, hybrid deities, Franceyness, psychedelic skulls, really just lots and lots and lots of skulls . . .



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    34 mins

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