PODCAST · arts
The Boulder Artist
by NoBo Art District
Get informed, inspired, and involved. The Boulder Artist is about those making an impact, both with their work and with the lives they lead as creatives. But it’s also about culture and community, how place informs our arts, and vice versa. Brought to you by the NoBo Art District, created by Becca Saulsberry, and hosted by Kevin Hoth & Becca Saulsberry. Listen monthly.Enjoy the show? Consider making a donation towards our podcast fund using the link in the show notes or become a podcast sponsor and receive an on-air business feature. Get in touch!
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Julia Vandenoever
Julia Vandenoever is a freelance photographer based in Boulder, Colorado. She grew up in Chappaqua, NY and Norwich, Vermont. During her years at Smith College, Julia studied Art History and Photography. In addition, she attended the SALT Center for Documentary studies as well as SEA Semester. Photography led Julia to freelance at the Valley News, work with Wendy Ewald’s Literacy Through Photography program, and an 11 year Photo Editor career at Backpacker, Skiing, and Outside magazine. In 2021, Still Breathing, received a solo show at the Center for Photography at Woodstock as well as a Critical Mass Top 200 Finalist. Still Breathing, was published as a monograph by Gray Sky Press in 2022 and was recently acquired by Smith College Rare Books. In this episode we speak with Julia about her upcoming show Becoming Grayson, which is an ongoing collaborative photography project with her sixteen-year-old son Grayson. They also dive into her deeply personal body of work documenting her immediate family, and how photography can be used to navigate memory, identity, and complex histories.
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Joel Swanson
Joel Swanson is an interdisciplinary artist exploring the complex relationships between language, materiality, and technology. Working across discursive media—from neon text-based sculpture and obsessively detailed works on paper to new media works and large-scale public art—he investigates how linguistic tools and technologies subtly but profoundly shape meaning. As director of the TYPO Lab at the University of Colorado Boulder's ATLAS Institute, where he serves as Associate Professor, Swanson leads experimental investigations into the boundaries of text-based technologies.Unsurprisingly, Joel is the son of a nuclear engineer! We get into his upbringing in a Christian Conservative family, the influence of a caring teacher, his approach to public art, and his more recent embrace of more personal, punchy, and pink (but still clever, as always) art making. I've known Joel for a long time but it was a real treat to get to know him and his work better.Joel's website
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Bill Snider
Bill has always liked making things, whether it be paintings, sculptures, films, or even a house. He earned his BFA from the University of Colorado but spent 30 years working in film and television, often alongside his wife Deann, before eventually returning to visual art. His current work is graphic, abstract, made unconventionally, and spans from painting to kinetic sculpture. He has exhibited in galleries nationally and internationally, opened up his studio to the public for at least 15 years, and has started initiatives, such as the Boulder Contemporary Group and Studio Doorz, to promote open studio tours.In this episode, we discuss Bill’s varied career path, tactile and interactive work, and perspective on the Boulder art scene and community.More Info:Bill Snider's WebsiteCanvasRebel InterviewBoulder Lifestyle Magazine September Issue “Please Touch the Art” article by Grace Adele BoyleStudio DoorzBoulder Contemporary Group (BCG)NoBo Open StudiosSundance Film Festival Move to BoulderBMoCA RelocationIf you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating, consider making a donation towards our podcast fund, or become a sponsor to receive an on-air business feature. To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine.This project is funded in part by a grant from the Boulder Arts Commission, an agency of the Boulder City Council.
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Albert Chong - Part 2
We don't usually do a Part 2 with our selected artists, but since we did more of a deep dive into Albert Chong's personal background last time, we decided to record a second, shorter episode to engage more fully with his art practice and philosophies.In this episode we discuss creating from intuition, the value of non-academic art, elevating humble materials as well as the audience, and a personal story related to the artist Ana Mendieta. We also discuss his brand new work reflecting our current times and his upcoming exhibitions in Colorado and elsewhere.Albert's 2026 shows in Colorado will be at East Window Gallery and the Emmanuel Art Gallery, at the University of Colorado, Denver.If you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating, consider making a donation towards our podcast fund, or become a sponsor to receive an on-air business feature. To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine.This project is funded in part by a grant from the Boulder Arts Commission, an agency of the Boulder City Council.
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Kristen Ross
In this episode, Kristen and Becca discuss the artist’s nonlinear path; culture, history, and geology of Boulder; life lessons learned through painting; environmental preservation and climate action; and upcoming events!Kristen Ross is an artist based in North Boulder whose landscape paintings in acrylic and oil reflect the vibrant complexity of the natural world. Hiking and camping in public lands near her home provides endless inspiration for her colorful works. Though she grew up hiking and camping with her family in the Appalachian mountains, it was moving to Colorado in 2015 that sparked her interest in landscape painting. Through her art, Kristen hopes to inspire appreciation for the world we share and highlight the importance of protecting it.If you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating, consider making a donation towards our podcast fund, or become a sponsor to receive an on-air business feature. To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine.This project is funded in part by a grant from the Boulder Arts Commission, an agency of the Boulder City Council.
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Albert Chong
Albert Chong is an artist working in sculpture, installation, and photography. He has won Guggenheim and Pollock-Krasner Grants, among many other accolades. He has been a professor of Photography at CU Boulder for over thirty years, and sees himself spending more time at his home base in rural Jamaica. We discussed his early days working at his parents' shop in Kingston, the portraits he made of his local community, and his ideals around growing young artists within academia who have stronger critical thinking and a sense of personal commitment to deeper subject matter.Albert has upcoming local shows at East Window Gallery in Boulder and at the Emmanuel Gallery in Denver. His work will also be included in an upcoming group exhibition at the National Gallery in Washington, D.C. To learn more about Albert and see his work online please have a look at his website.If you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating, consider making a donation towards our podcast fund, or become a sponsor to receive an on-air business feature. To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine.This project is funded in part by a grant from the Boulder Arts Commission, an agency of the Boulder City Council.
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Liz Compos
In this episode, Liz and Becca discuss rich food for thought for any artist–including topics such as process, switching between different mediums, meanings behind form, pressure for cohesiveness, deadlines, and business skills. They also discuss the growth of Boulder, connections across the state of Colorado, and events relevant to the community.Connect with Liz via her website or instagram and read the story of Yukon Jade.Liz Compos is a multi-media artist, educator, and community-builder based in Boulder, Colorado. Her art explores the visceral connections between people and their environments, often revealing the tension and harmony between natural and synthetic elements. Drawing from the textures and rhythms of local landscapes, botanicals, graffiti, architecture, fashion, and the human form, Liz creates layered compositions that reflect the complexity of contemporary life.Her primary focus is painting, working in both oils and watercolor to explore mood, memory, and place. She’s also an emerging muralist and a member of the Jamestown Jade Collective, where she carves jade and crafts hand-made jewelry, adding a tactile, sculptural element to her creative practice.Liz has her BFA in Painting and Drawing from Montana State University and an MBA from the University of Colorado at Boulder, a path she chose to bridge creativity and strategy. Passionate about education, advocacy, and grassroots organizing, Liz is committed to supporting the arts both inside and outside the studio. Whether she’s curating an exhibit, carving stone, or collaborating on community projects, her work is rooted in connection and collective growth.If you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating, consider making a donation towards our podcast fund, or become a sponsor to receive an on-air business feature. To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine.This project is funded in part by a grant from the Boulder Arts Commission, an agency of the Boulder City Council.
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Sherry Wiggins
Sherry Wiggins is an interdisciplinary artist who sees her work as a feminist, relational process and enactment. Over the last three decades, her artistic practice has taken multiple forms in a variety of modes and media, including drawings, installations, performances, photographs, sculptures and writings. Wiggins’s work is collaborative, reflexive and globally engaged. She has worked on projects with other artists and cultural organizations in Portugal, Holland, Brazil, India and the Middle East, as well as in the United States.Sherry currently has work in the show Past is Present is Past is Present at the Arvada Center now through August 24th.Michael Warren Contemporary GallerySherry’s WebsiteSherry’s InstagramIf you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating, consider making a donation towards our podcast fund, or become a sponsor to receive an on-air business feature. To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine.This project is funded in part by a grant from the Boulder Arts Commission, an agency of the Boulder City Council.
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Steven Frost
Steven Frost (they/them) is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Media Studies at CU Boulder and an interdisciplinary fiber artist. Their research focuses on textiles, queer studies, and community development. Using weaving, Frost combines traditional materials like yarn and cotton with non-traditional materials from a range of sources, exploring the ways history and time are uniquely embedded in textiles. Frost is a Co-Founder of the Experimental Weaving Residency, Slay the Runway, and the Colorado Sewing Rebellion and serves as the Associate Director of the Unstable Design Lab at CU Boulder's Roser Atlas Institute. Frost has exhibited and performed across the US and Internationally. Their work has been featured in the Library Journal, the Advocate, Fiber Art Now, NPR’s Morning Edition, and the collection of the Denver Art Museum.Experimental Weaving Talk Series by Unstable Design LabLoomSteven’s InstagramIf you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating, consider making a donation towards our podcast fund, or become a sponsor to receive an on-air business feature. To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine.This project is funded in part by a grant from the Boulder Arts Commission, an agency of the Boulder City Council.
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Sarah McKenzie
This episode covers how McKenzie ended up in Boulder, her interest in rendering interiors and architectural spaces, her teaching of incarcerated individuals, and where she sees her painting practice in the near future.For nearly 30 years, McKenzie has explored architecture as a reflection of cultural, political, and social values. Early work focused on suburban sprawl and abandoned sites, later shifting to institutional spaces like museums and prisons. A 2021 Marion Fellowship supported a deep dive into prison architecture, revealing its hidden role in American identity. Teaching art in correctional facilities through DU PAI and Impact Arts has further shaped this inquiry. Blending realism and abstraction, the artist’s paintings emphasize surface, structure, and material, challenging viewers to reconsider the meaning and authority embedded in the spaces we build—and what they reveal about us.Sarah has an exhibition at David B. Smith up until May 17th and a curated show opening June 26th at East Window Gallery that will highlight three incarcerated artists' work.If you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating, consider making a donation towards our podcast fund, or become a sponsor to receive an on-air business feature. To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine.This project is funded in part by a grant from the Boulder Arts Commission, an agency of the Boulder City Council.
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Alex Stark
This episode covers growing up in Boulder; the scene in Chicago; landscapes, ambiguity, and emotive figures in painting and ceramics; working with artists as a curator; advocacy work; and Stark’s upcoming shows at Rare Visions in Boulder August 2025 and for the Voices Embodied series in Chicago.Alex Stark is an artist and curator working between Boulder, CO and Chicago, IL. He received a BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2016. Stark founded Rare Visions Gallery Project LLC in Boulder where there have been 5 shows. In 2023 he guest curated the show, Unfettered Recognition, at East Window Gallery in Boulder. In Chicago, Stark began the Voices Embodied series which primarily focuses on a relationship between disability, the body, and identity. Stark's paintings and ceramic sculptures focus on figures that relate to the idea of self, in spaces that combine observed and dream-like imagery. Recent exhibitions include The Green Gallery in Milwaukee, WI; Patient info, Circle Contemporary at the Arts of Life, and LVL 3 Gallery in Chicago; and the Curtis Center for the Arts in Greenwood Village, CO; His work appears in the 2024 New American Paintings: West Issue #168, 2019 School of the Art Institute Biannual Magazine, and the 24th issue of Posit, a journal of art and literature. Stark has spoken at the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design, NIAD Art Center, Arts of Life, and Artist Communities Alliance. If you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating, consider making a donation towards our podcast fund, or become a sponsor to receive an on-air business feature. To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine.This project is funded in part by a grant from the Boulder Arts Commission, an agency of the Boulder City Council.
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Anna Tsouhlarakis
This episode features Anna Tsouhlarakis. Tsouhlarakis is an acclaimed interdisciplinary artist who had a recent solo exhibition at the MCA in Denver. She has shown at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington D.C., White Frame in Basel, Switzerland, and the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, among many other institutions. Tsouhlarakis is an Assistant Professor and Director of Foundations in the Art Department at CU Boulder. She is based in Boulder and Maine.During our conversation we discuss her family origins in Greece and the Navajo Reservation, native humor, the allure of a certain typeface, and what it means to foster indigenization.If you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating, consider making a donation towards our podcast fund, or become a sponsor to receive an on-air business feature. To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine.This project is funded in part by a grant from the Boulder Arts Commission, an agency of the Boulder City Council.
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Pedro Urbina
This episode features musician and avid music supporter Pedro Urbina, who started an online show for interviews and performances with local musicians called Pink Sofa Hour. Pedro has decided to take the leap to further the project into a multimedia production business called Couched Media, a nonprofit sector, and even a new app. During our conversation we discuss the importance and evolution of music, observations about the creative scene in and around Boulder, and so much more.If you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating, consider making a donation towards our podcast fund, or become a sponsor to receive an on-air business feature. To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine.This project is funded in part by a grant from the Boulder Arts Commission, an agency of the Boulder City Council.
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Renluka Maharaj
Renluka Maharaj was born in Trinidad and Tobago and works between Colorado, New York City and Trinidad. She attended the University of Colorado, Boulder where she earned her BFA. She earned her MFA at The School Of The Art Institute of Chicago. She has received numerous awards, her works are in many institutional and private collections, and she has been recognized through various fellowships and residencies including Project For Empty Space, Golden Arts Foundation, Fountainhead Residency, Vermont Studio Center to name a few. Her work has appeared in print in publications such as Washington Post, Elle India, Harper's Bazaar India, New American Paintings, Coolitude Volume II, Juxtapoz and Hyperallergic. In this episode we travel through her family history which began in India, how she feels connected to nature no matter where she is, the importance of color in her work, how swings bring in much-needed play to an exhibition, and what shows she has on coming year.If you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating, consider making a donation towards ourpodcast fund, orbecome a sponsor to receive an on-air business feature. To stay up-to-date,follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine.This project is funded in part by a grant from the Boulder Arts Commission, an agency of the Boulder City Council.
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Ondine Geary
Ondine Geary is is a Boulder-based choreographer, interdisciplinary performance artist, collaborator, and improviser. Her work plays at the intersection of art, the body and critical, social engagement. She is the Managing Director of the B2 Center for Media, Arts and Performance in the ATLAS Institute at CU Boulder. She is also the front person, whipper-upper-of-energy in the band Slzy Mylfs. If you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating and consider supporting the future of this podcast! To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram.
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15
Todd Herman
Todd Edward Herman is a visual artist and curator. He is the founding director of East Window Gallery and co-founder of Sins Invalid Performance Project. We discuss his early films, his foray into collaborating with AI, his work in disability justice, and the origin story of East Window, among many other things. Hotharoids by Kevin Hoth exhibit runs at the Bus Stop Gallery through October 2024. The opening is Oct. 4th from 6--9pm. SMiLE exhibition finishes up at the Bus Stop Gallery for September.If you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating and consider supporting the future of this podcast! To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine. This episode is sponsored by Guirys Color Source.
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Community, Curiosity, Consistency, & Connection: Reflections from Becca & Kevin after 12 conversations with impactful artists
In this episode host and producer, Becca Saulsberry, and fine art photographer and educator, Kevin Hoth, discuss key takeaways from the first 12 interviews on the show under 4 themes: community, curiosity, consistency, and connection with the natural world. They also announce a big transition for the podcast! If you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating and consider supporting the future of this podcast! To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine. This project is funded in part by a grant from the Boulder Arts Commission, an agency of the Boulder City Council.
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13
Margaret Galvin Johnson
In this interview with painter, photographer, botanic illustrator, printmaker, and writer, Margaret Galvin Johnson, we touch on: growing up in the Colorado outdoors, how the story of her life (now published in the New York Times best-selling book Hidden Valley Road) has influenced her work, mental health and wellbeing, joy in the process, abstraction and precision, teaching, Georgia O’Keeffe, and more! Margaret is a multi-passionate artist. The pottery classes she took as a child gave her a new way of looking at the world. Her mother was a watercolor artist. Margaret would spend hours at the kitchen table watching her mother and learning from her. As a teenager buying a film camera became a top priority and while she still loves the camera she continues to grow as an artist in other directions like mixed media painting, oil painting, botanic illustration, and monotype printmaking. Host and Producer, Becca Saulsberry, is a spunky communications designer who aims to address societal and environmental issues while nerding out on graphic design, illustration, creative nonfiction, and podcasting. Her favorite pastime, however, is playing outside. If you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating and consider supporting the future of this podcast! To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine. You can also leave us feedback if you’re listening on Spotify via the question and poll below. This project is funded in part by a grant from the Boulder Arts Commission, an agency of the Boulder City Council.
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Onecho (Juan Usubillaga)
In this episode, Juan and Becca discuss cultural differences between South America and Colorado, differences in fine art and public art, murals, cosmovision, Abya Yala (the united land from Patagonia to Alaska), color, communicating with clients, European and Indigenous influences, and “loss of connection with nature and ancestral wisdom.” Join us for an especially inspiring, heartwarming, and informative conversation. Juan Usubillaga, often known as Onecho, is a painter and muralist born in Colombia and raised in Venezuela. He shares beauty through his vibrant art practice, which envelopes both his western art style education and his Mestizo heritage. He has collaborated with local galleries in Boulder and Denver, participated in and led mural projects in the area, exhibited work locally, nationally, and internationally, and is currently focusing on artistic practice in Colorado. Host and Producer, Becca Saulsberry, is a spunky communications designer who aims to address societal and environmental issues while nerding out on graphic design, illustration, creative nonfiction, and podcasting. Her favorite pastime, however, is playing outside. If you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating and consider supporting the future of this podcast! To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine. You can also leave us feedback if you’re listening on Spotify via the question and poll below. This project is funded in part by a grant from the Boulder Arts Commission, an agency of the Boulder City Council.
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Aaron Mitchell LIVE
This special episode was recorded live in front of an audience for Boulder Arts Week 2024! Aaron Mitchell is a singer-songwriter, visual artist, creative collaborator and community-arts activator from Ft. Lupton, CO who spent many years pursuing his art and music career in Chicago before moving to Boulder. He discusses music, authenticity, the creative process, balance, and more. If you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating and consider supporting the future of this podcast! To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine. You can also leave us feedback if you’re listening on Spotify via the question/poll below.
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Julie Rothschild
Julie Rothschild explores movement via dance and art made of fiber and steel. We discuss the evolution of her work and her exhibit on display, as well as collaboration, being a newcomer in Boulder, materials, metaphors, and minimalism. Body at Work exhibit at Bus Stop Gallery March 2024 Boulder Arts Week April 5-13, 2024 If you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating and consider supporting the future of this podcast! To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine. You can also leave us feedback if you’re listening on Spotify via the question and poll below.
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9
Amy Guion Clay
Amy Guion Clay–mixed media painter, traveler, and teacher–discusses risk-taking, curiosity, and artist residencies abroad, as well as the logistics of working as an artist, social media, developing style, limiting beliefs, and materials. There is so much in this episode! If you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating and consider supporting the future of this podcast! To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine. You can also leave us feedback if you’re listening on Spotify via the question and poll below.
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Marie-Juliette Bird
A very real, very relatable conversation with founder of The New Local, fine jewelry designer, musician, and Boulder native: Marie-Juliette Bird. She discusses Boulder culture, history, and landscape; how failure helped her shift from personal blame to a systemic perspective; the reality of money; and why nonprofits are the most viable path towards a sustainable arts presence. If you’ve enjoyed the show, please leave us a rating and consider supporting the future of this podcast! To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine. You can also leave us feedback if you’re listening on Spotify via the question and poll below. Photo by Bridget Dorr
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Berger & Föhr
Internationally-recognized, self-taught designers and artists, Todd and Lucian of Berger & Föhr, discuss the aspirational model they’ve developed to do work and live lives they love. This episode covers how to create work that resonates and endures, the value of simplicity, similarities and differences between art and design, ways to prevent or address burnout, and much more. To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine!
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Benjamin Burney
What to do when you can’t scale a hustle, the value of art, putting ego aside to become a vessel for your work to flow from. Traveling, poetry, ancestors, history, identity, and so much more. Benjamin Burney is full of well-worded wisdom in this episode. To stay up-to-date, follow us on Instagram and sign up for our e-zine!
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Drew Austin
Cozy up for this eye-opening, thought-provoking, and heart-warming episode… interdisciplinary artist and Visual Arts Curator at The Dairy, Drew Austin, discusses noticing/curiosity, making space for yourself, his curatorial path and process, making art for other artists vs for the public, light, and the changing seasons. Stay up-to-date by following us on Instagram and signing up for our e-zine! cover art photo by Amanda Tipton, Leon Art Gallery
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Kevin Hoth
Kevin Hoth offers practical insight regarding art school, overcoming the paralysis of indecision, how to continue improving over time, and thinking critically about how we use the tools that we do. But this episode also dives into the artist-viewer relationship, some of the parallels between Kevin’s artwork and life, and flora… Stay up-to-date by following us on Instagram and signing up for our e-zine!
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Rebecca DiDomenico + Emir Klepo
In this episode we hear from Rebecca DiDomenico about what it means to be an artist, purpose and vision, philanthropy and activism, and the Boulder art scene, plus soul-sucking jobs and “brainstorming burgeoning extravaganza[s]!” Then, the current Swoon / BMoCA International Artist in Residence, Emir Klepo, joins us to discuss his experimental filmmaking. Our conversation visits empathy, ancestral trauma, and self-reflection before wrapping up with upcoming events and ballot measures to know about. Stay up-to-date by following us on Instagram and signing up for our e-zine! BMoCA is moving to the NoBo Arts District! BMoCA + Swoon Artist in Residence Dinner with Emir Klepo 2023 City of Boulder Ballot Measures and Candidates
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Martha Russo
What field hockey and ceramics have in common, getting kicked out of Toshiko Takaezu’s class, “going down the chute,” artistic happenings to know about, the duality of intuition and discipline… what don’t we discuss on this episode? Meet Martha Russo, a ceramicist and installation artist, a lecturer at the University of Colorado at Boulder, and the Coordinator for the artist collective Artnauts. Stay up-to-date by following us on Instagram and signing up for our e-zine! Photograph by Lynné Bowman Cravens, for the Galleries of Contemporary Art at UCCS, 2023
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Welcome!
This is the Boulder Artist, conversations with impactful creatives to inform, inspire, and involve, brought to you by the NoBo Art District, hosted and produced by Becca Saulsberry, recorded in the madelife sound studio, music by Hank Church, and mastered by Connor Weisburg. Stay up-to-date by following us on Instagram and signing up for our e-zine!
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Get informed, inspired, and involved. The Boulder Artist is about those making an impact, both with their work and with the lives they lead as creatives. But it’s also about culture and community, how place informs our arts, and vice versa. Brought to you by the NoBo Art District, created by Becca Saulsberry, and hosted by Kevin Hoth & Becca Saulsberry. Listen monthly.Enjoy the show? Consider making a donation towards our podcast fund using the link in the show notes or become a podcast sponsor and receive an on-air business feature. Get in touch!
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NoBo Art District
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