Look for any podcast host, guest or anyone
Showing episodes and shows of

Ojenis Studio

Shows

The Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaThe Black Man: Author's Memoir (Part I)WARNING: Language in this episode may not be suitable for sensitive listeners. In this episode, I read from William Wells Brown's book from 1865 titled, The Black Man: His Antecedents, His Genius and His Achievements, focusing on the first part of the author's memoirs as he recounts his early life as a slave. TheWholeArtNebula.com Please consider supporting us with your generous donation. Thank you! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/the-whole-art-nebula...2023-10-0323 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaCalling on YOU for help! Your contributions make a real impact in ensuring these stories of Black artists are heard and celebrated. Together, we're bridging some of the gaps in art history, one episode at a time.   To make your donation and claim your gifts, please visit our website at TheWholeArtNebula.com and click on the donate button at the top. Then choose the amount you’d like to donate. There’s even space to create a different amount. All of it helps. Also, consider committing to a monthly or an annual donation to help the podcast go even further. 2023-09-1108 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaEdward M. Bannister: The Entrusted Messenger John Nelson Arnold believed that Edward Bannister’s artistic legacy would endure. He observed that Bannister approached nature with a poet’s sensibility, capturing skies, rocks, trees, and distances on canvas with both vigor and poetic beauty. Arnold predicted that over time, Bannister would be recognized as one of the leading American painters. In a time when American painting lagged behind European art, Arnold couldn’t foresee the eventual rise of the uniquely American Hudson River School, which celebrated the nation’s untamed wilderness and vast landscapes. Despite witnessing the Civil War and the end of s...2023-09-0635 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaMatt Baker - Kind of a big dealDespite the brevity of his career, Matt Baker left an indelible mark on the comic book industry. He challenged norms, shattered stereotypes, and paved the way for future generations of diverse artists. His artwork continues to inspire and influence contemporary creators, and he is recognized as a pioneer. Baker's contributions to the medium, particularly in depicting strong and empowered women, remain significant and have had a lasting impact on the world of comic art. TheWholeArtNebula.com Source: Garcia, Mike (July 27, 222). “A Brief History of...2023-07-2418 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaMinnie Evans - Untitled (Three faces in floral design) - Discussion w/ Kevi YadaMy guest, Kevi Yada, joins me this time, to talk about one work by Minnie Evans. If you haven't listened to our episode on Minnie Evans, I highly recommend it. Podcast website: TheWholeArtNebula.com For the merch store go to: TheWholeArtNebulaMerch.com Journals can be found here: https://www.amazon.com/s?k=kobalt+luk&i=stripbooks&crid=2S8E2YME72A3I&sprefix=kobalt+luk%2Cstripbooks%2C125&ref=nb_sb_noss_1 2023-02-0536 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaMinnie Evans: Far from traditionalMinnie Evans is considered an outside or outsider artist. An outsider artist is an artist that has had no formal training. They are self-taught. The term outsider is in reference to being outside of traditional academic instruction. Minnie Evans, herself, was very far from traditional. She didn't start drawing until she was 43 when a voice told her she must “draw or die.” On Good Friday, 1935, Minnie unknowingly embarked on her new passion, and created her first drawings - two small pictogram-like works. Both are now in the collection of the Whitney Museum of American art. 2023-01-2919 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaQuick announcement before our next episodeTrust me, I'm working to get the next episode out. In the meantime I couldn't wait to put out this quick announcement. I just wanted to tell everyone that we now have a MERCH STORE! Woohoo! Check it out now and represent the podcast that represents you and your interests.  For the next month, get 10% off your purchase by using the code: NEWTWAN Go to: https://www.thewholeartnebulamerch.com/ Until the next episode...2023-01-2401 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaDiscussion of "Homage to Black Women Poets" w/ Henry Jones IIIHenry Jones III, is back to help me talk about a specific work by Elizabeth Catlett. The sculpture it titled, "Homage to Black Women Poets." To view the work, please go to the website, TheWholeArtNebula.com. If you haven't listened to the episode on Elizabeth Catlett, please go back and listen to that episode when you get a chance. Support The Whole Art Nebula: https://kobina-wright.pixpa.com/product/usij https://kobina-wright.pixpa.com/product/power-door · Books & Journals for sale: https://www.amazon.com/s?k=kobalt+luk&i=stripbooks&crid=2W...2023-01-1338 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaElizabeth CatlettElizabeth Catlett lived a life creating work that addressed gender, racial and class inequities. In 1971 she wrote, “Art for me now must develop from a necessity within my people. It must answer a question, or wake somebody up, or give a shove in the right direction—our liberation.” Source Material: · Elizabeth Catlett @ MIA: https://collections.artsmia.org/art/7890/sharecropper-elizabeth-catlett · A History of African-American Artists: From 1792 to the Present, Romare Bearden & Harry Henderson, 1993, Pantheon, pp. 418-426 · Elizabeth Catlett @ Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History & Culture: https://www.lewismuseum.org/elizabeth...2023-01-0528 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaShotguns: A Discussion with Henry Jones IIIToday we're joined by Henry Jones III and we're taking a deeper look and sharing our perspectives on a painting by John T. Biggers titled, "Shotguns." TheWholeArtNebula.com A Fat Slice of Cake: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCubSSuvmvefVB4FPBJi7uIQ/videos Two Three: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt14965900/?ref_=nm_knf_i12022-11-0928 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaJohn Thomas Biggers: I RejoicedThe motifs that John Thomas Biggers loved to explore centered around harvesting, planting, baptism and other rituals of rural Black communities. Also, he loved telling the story of the root system, the connectors of Black American life to the Motherland – whose children are the Earth’s caretakers. His murals evoke beauty and allowed us to see ourselves and our ancestors in them. They allow us to be proud of our American lives without limiting the expectation of our capacity. TheWholeArtNebula.com Source Material: · Encyclopedia.com – John T. Biggers: https://www.encyclopedia.com/afr...2022-11-0327 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaCarroll Harris SimmsSculptor and ceramicist, Carroll Harris Simms, was born on April 29, 1924 in Bald Knob, Arkansas. A city that was named after a treeless rocky ridge that served as a landmark to pioneers.  Simms identified three major turning points in his development as a sculptor, “First the realization of certain permanent values which relate to the integrity of my grandparents inclusive of church folk and neighbors surrounding the environment of my early childhood, second, studies at the Toledo Museum of Art; Hampton Institute; Cranbrook Art Academy and in Africa and Europe - third, working at TSU and at the sam...2022-10-0924 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaAlma Thomas - Part IIAlma Thomas was a curious and ever-expanding woman who painted in her kitchen. She was both a cheerleader and mentor for many young artists and instrumental in getting them recognition. She encouraged them to “get in the mainstream.” Slowed slightly by arthritis and a failing heart, she focused on what she could do with one solitary intense color and rolled around and blew through new ideas. She learned from everything she did. “I’m still developing,” she used to say. To visit our website go to: https://thewholeartnebula.com/2022/09/09/alma-thomas-part-ii/ To support an...2022-09-1019 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaAlma Thomas - Part IAlma Woodsy Thomas was born on September 22, 1891, in Columbus, Georgia. This was 26 years after the Civil War. She would go on to help children explore the world of art and imagination and continue to educate herself in multiple disciplines.  It wasn't until after she retired that she began to consider herself an artist, although, in my opinion, she has been one all along. This is the first part of the life and work of Alma Thomas, from her birth to the education that would set her on the path to becoming the legend she is today and s...2022-05-0316 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaRobert S. Duncanson - Part IIIDuncanson accomplished a great deal having succeeded living as an artist as a Black man in a time of slavery. We have to look at his life as a whole to really be able to understand what a powerhouse he was and how phenomenal his achievements were not just as a pre-war Black Cincinnatian, but in the whole art nebula. Among the many sources used was the book, A History of African-American Artists From 1792 to the Present by Romare Bearden and Harry Henderson.2022-03-2523 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaRobert S. Duncanson - Part IIThe second part of a three part series on the artist Robert S. Duncanson. Half of this episode covers the Cincinnati riots of 1841, but because this is the year that Duncanson arrived in Cincinnati, it's good to have context of the social climate that he was stepping into at the start of his artistic career.  TheWholeArtNebula.com Sources: · Bearden, Romare and Henderson, Harry, A History of African-American Artists: From 1792 to the Present, Pantheon, 1993 · Crowfoot, Silas, “Community Development for a White City; Race Making, Improvementism and the Cincinnati Race Riots and A...2022-03-0724 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaRobert S. Duncanson - Part II decided to really dig in and give you as much as I could, without going down a rabbit hole. So, unlike the other artists on this podcast, I’ve broken Robert S. Duncanson’s story into three parts. In this one, of course, I'll cover his earliest years – Please note, though, that I won’t go too early because there’s not a lot of information on his childhood. TheWholeArtNebula.com Sources: · A History of African – American Artists: From 1792 – to the Present, by Romare Bearden and Harry Henderson, pp. 19-39 · Hamilton County...2022-02-1716 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaLangston Hughes: A brief history and a storyUsually, we only talk about visual artists on this podcast however, I wanted to cover Hughes because of his prominence in the Harlem Renaissance and his inspiration to writers, poets, actors and artists in our community.  And today is his birthday! February 01, 1902. Here's the link to our film's crowdfunding campaign for "Two Three" by clicking here. Sources: Langston Hughes (1940). The Big Sea. p. 36. ISBN 0-8262-1410-X. https://www.biography.com/writer/langston-hughes Rampersad, Arnold (2002). The Life of Langston Hughes: Volume II: 1941-1967, I Dream a W...2022-02-0120 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaLouis Delsarte: The People's Painter"I try to work toward peace, to say that art is the meaning of love, that living on earth is a spiritual quest." -Louis Delsarte (Painter, draftsman, muralist, printmaker and poet)2021-02-2312 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaDavid C. Driskell - Part IIThis is Part II of the two part series on David C. Driskell. I’ve listed my sources for the last two episodes below. Also, when you get a chance, watch the HBO documentary titled, “Black Art: In the Absence of Light.” It’s based upon one of Driskell’s major exhibitions he organized and curated. Sources: Genzlinger, Neil (April 7, 2020). “David Driskell, 88, Pivotal Champion of African-American Art, Dies“. New York Times. Retrieved April 9, 2020. Print version, April 9, 2020, p. B12. “David Driskell – Artists – DC Moore Gallery”. www.dcmooregallery.com. Retrieved 2020-07-18. McGee, Julie L. ( 2006). David C. Driskell: Artist and Sch...2021-02-0816 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaDavid C. Driskell - Part IWe're breaking from our usual format this time. This is the first part of a two part series on the life and work of David C. Driskell. Driskell has done so much that there was no way I could feel comfortable cramming it into a single episode.  Excerpt: His student, Mary O’Neal, who later became a distinguished fine artist, but was only then a student and the girlfriend of Stokely Carmichael, told Driskell that he was teaching the course in cultural disguise – meaning it was not just art history but a very passionate kind of ci...2021-02-0420 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaDriskell's "Jazz Singer (Lady of Leisure, Fox)" Discussion w/ ElleBeahThis episode is a little different. I consider it a "pre-episode" episode. It's more like an introduction into the work of David Driskell, the artist I'll be covering next on The Whole Art Nebula. In this, I discuss his work titled, "Jazz Singer (Lady of Leisure, Fox)" with my good friend ElleBeah. This is just a portion of a longer conversation. I've given access of the entire conversation to Patreon members at the Oasis level as in incentive to support our brand new art history podcast. To visit our Patreon page, go to, https://www.patreon.com...2021-01-1126 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaEd Clark: The InnovatorClark, in his lifetime, has received many awards, his work has been exhibited all over the world and is part of collections in several art institutions and museums. He guarded his private thoughts on worldviews and his background from unwelcomed intruders, allowing his work and innovation to speak for itself.2020-12-3012 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaFrank J. Brown - Another Day...Sculptor and arts activist, Frank J. Brown, had a big presence in the St. Paul art scene, lending his voice and talent to the discussion of the plight and future of humanity and African American people. Brown’s sculptures can be found in the permanent collections of many institutions, including the Minneapolis Institute of Art, Southern Illinois University and the University of Utah Museum of Fine Arts in Salt Lake City.2020-12-0712 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaEmma Amos: Through Time and SpaceEmma Amos was a woman who found her voice in the art world - constantly pushing and batting at the resistance of male dominance and racial exclusion - then, blurring the lines of fine art and traditional craft. Oh yeah, and W.E.B. DuBois used to pop up at her parents' house from time to time.2020-12-0720 minThe Whole Art NebulaThe Whole Art NebulaYour Host is an ArtistI'm speaking to my mother (who is very much alive and well - by the way). It's from an essay previously published in the Wilderness House Literary review, discussing one small aspect of my start as an artist... How a girl learns to paint when she can only afford to buy two colors.2020-12-0706 min