American Art Online Audio

a catalogue of audio recordings
of lectures and conversations with artists, scholars and others
with content focusing on representational art
listed by source name
and presented free of charge
-
Dallas Museum of Art
- Dallas Museum of Art as of 2013 provided an online service
named DMAtv, which contained a section named Program Recordings, with audio
by scholars and artists, accompanied by transcripts of the recordings.
A recording dated May 3, 2003 was titled The Lone Star Regionalist:
The Legacy of Jerry Bywaters, with Sam Ratcliffe, John Lunsford, Jerry
Bywaters Cochran, and Joseph B. Rucker. On May 28, 1995 Robert Rosenblum,
Art Historian and Curator, and Roy Lichtenstein, Artist, presented Conversation
with Roy Lichtenstein. [Link found to be expired as of 2015
audit. TFAO is saving the citation for use by researchers.]
.
deYoung Museum
- The deYoung Museum website has a podcasts page
(Link found expired as of 4/24/09 audit. Source site may
contain this content via a revised URL) which is a
series of free monthly audio segments offering news, features, and "hidden
treasures" from the de Young museum. The February 2006 (Link found expired as of 4/24/09 audit. Source site may contain
this content via a revised URL) podcast contains a
tour of the American art galleries.
-
-
Duke University Library
- The Duke University Library web site contains audio recordings
of lectures from the Engaging Faculty Series, which are "informal,
interdisciplinary conversations that provide an opportunity for faculty
to hear about the work of their colleagues in other departments and give
students and the general public a chance to learn about research going
on at Duke." One of the lectures in the series is by Stanley Abe,
assistant professor in the Department of Art and Art History. His November
2000 lecture,"The Bright Leaf: Xu Bing and Tobacco at Duke,"
(Link found expired as of 4/24/09 audit. Source site may
contain this content via a revised URL) was the second
in the Friends of the Library's 2000/2001 Engaging Faculty series. The
lecture "focused on the development of the Tobacco Project, a series
of installations created by New York artist Xu Bing on the Duke campus
and in Durham during the fall of 2000." The web page for the lecture
contains both a text summary and a one hour RealAudio stream.
FLUXLIST
- William Woods of radio station KRAB interviewed George
Maciunas in a 55-minute
broadcast separated into 8 audio clips following a Fluxus Festival.
This was the last Fluxus Festival to be organized and directed by Maciunas,
who died eight months later at the age of 46. Accessed June, 2015.
Frist Center for the Visual Arts
- The Frist Center
for the Visual Arts is among the first major visual arts institutions
to take advantage of new podcasting technology with the posting of three
podcast programs at its web site in June, 2005. In a November 17, 2005
podcast Ken Swanson, dean of Christ Church Cathedral in Nashville, has
a casual conversation with Frist Center Community Relations Manager Adelaide
Vienneau about his personal reflections on the Hudson River School exhibition.
An October 21, 2005 podcast features Frist Center Exhibitions Curator Mark
Scala leading an ARTini talk with Frist Center visitors focusing on a few
works in the Hudson River School: Masterworks from the Wadsworth Atheneum
Museum of Art exhibition. The Frist's first podcast features a discussion
of the organization's new exhibition The Fragile Species: New Art Nashville
with the Frist Center Curator Mark Scala and docents Mancil Ezell and Jay
Turman in a conversation about the exhibition and Nashville's burgeoning
community of artists. A second podcast features a visit with budding artists
in the Frist's popular Martin ArtQuest interactive gallery, and the third
features Mancil Ezell offering an architectural overview of the building
which is on the National Register of Historic Places.
GalleryCast
- GalleryCast was a worldwide guide for museum, exhibit,
and art gallery podcasts. Podcasts are included from several American art
museums covering topics in American representational art. (Link found expired as of 4/24/09 audit. Source site may contain
this content via a revised URL)
J. Paul Getty Museum
- In Focus: Picturing Landscape an
exhibit held May 22 - October 7, 2012 at the J. Paul Getty Museum. Includes
illustrated checklist, audio clips. Accessed June, 2015.
-
- Jo
Ann Callis: Woman Twirling an exhibit held
March 31 - August 9, 2009 at the J. Paul Getty Museum. Includes audio clips.
Accessed June, 2015.
-
- Paul Outerbridge: Command Performance
an exhibit held March 31 - August 9, 2009 at the J. Paul Getty Museum.
Includes audio clips. Accessed June, 2015.
-
- Accompanying the page
on the Getty web site for the exhibition Edward Weston: Enduring Vision,
showing July 31 - September 25, 2007, in an audio clip Weston's grandson,
photographer Kim Weston, discusses the photograph Nude, Bertha Wardell.
The Getty says: "After seeing an exhibition of his photographs at
the University of California at Los Angeles, the dancer Bertha Wardell
volunteered to model for Edward Weston. She soon became a friend and lover,
modeling for him in the spring of 1927 at his Glendale studio. Weston particularly
admired her dancer's combination of strength and grace, writing that 'her
beauty in movement is an exquisite sight.'" Accessed June,
2015.
-
- Accompanying the page
on the Getty web site for the exhibition Three Roads Taken: The Photographs
of Paul Strand, showing May 10 - September 4, 2005, an audio clip explains
how Strand incorporated modernist ideas into "Still Life with Pear."
Other clips talk about Strand's message in "Blind Woman," the
photographer's interest in rural Scotland in the photograph titled "White
Horse, South Uist," and how strand created the image "Seated
Man, Uruapan del Progreso Michoacan, Mexico." Accessed June,
2015.
-
- The page
for the exhibit The Photographs of Frederick Sommer: A Centennial Tribute,
showing May 10 - September 4, 2005, contains three audio clips interpreting
the photographer's images. Accessed June, 2015.
-
- The page
for the photography exhibit Close to Home: An American Album showing
October 12, 2004 - January 16, 2005 contains an audio clip with curator
Weston Naef introducing the exhibition. Accessed June, 2015.
-
-
Georgia Museum of Art
-
- The Georgia Museum of Art produced podcasts posted on
the musum's website. Titles by Paul Manoguerra, Curator of American art,
included:
-
- -- Paul Manoguerra leads a tour of Jay Robinson
- -- Paul Manoguerra leads a tour of American Impressionism
- -- Paul Manoguerra leads a tour of Let Loose Upon
Innocence: George Bellows and World War
- [Links found to be expired as of 2015 audit. TFAO is saving the citation
for use by researchers.]
The Grace Museum
- Visitors to The Grace Museum beginning in 2005 had the
opportunity to download to their MP3 player audio segments posted on the
museum's web site prior to visiting a related exhibit. A page containing
the MuseCasting section of the Museum's website said: "We want you
in our galleries with headphones on! Here at The Grace we strive to bring
you the best podcasted programming possible. Follow the link to the exhibits
where podcasts are available! " The Grace's first podcast was posted
to be available until August 27, 2005, for the exhibit Fine Line: Mental
Health/Mental Illness's final day. It featured an interview with San
Antonio photographer Michael Nye. The Grace added podcasts regularly to
their web site. Upcoming programs included gallery lectures, docent-led
tours of the galleries and audio "eavesdropping" on The Grace's
popular Children's Museum. Presently, a MuseCasting
blog contains audio tracks. Accessed June, 2015.
-
Return to American
Art Online Audio
TFAO welcomes your suggestions for additions
to this catalogue. Please send them to: 
Links to sources of information outside of our web site
are provided only as referrals for your further consideration. Please use
due diligence in judging the quality of information contained in these and
all other web sites. Information from linked sources may be inaccurate or
out of date. TFAO neither recommends or endorses these referenced organizations.
Although TFAO includes links to other web sites, it takes no responsibility
for the content or information contained on those other sites, nor exerts
any editorial or other control over them. For more information on evaluating
web pages see TFAO's General Resources
section in Online Resources for Collectors and Students of Art History.
Search
Resource Library for thousands of articles and essays on American
art.
Copyright 2015 Traditional Fine Arts Organization, Inc., an Arizona nonprofit corporation. All rights
reserved.