Art Slice - A Palatable Serving of Art History

De: Stephanie Dueñas & Russell Shoemaker / Art Slice
  • Resumen

  • 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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Episodios
  • CREATURE FEATURE rerun: Hokusai's House of Plates & Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh's Perfumed Death
    Apr 17 2025

    Our SCARY releases continue . . . well, RE-RUN in this case.

    WATCH HERE: https://youtu.be/hYONIhxxKUQ

    In celebration of our new 2025 Creature Double Feature episodes, we went back to the vault and added VISUALS to our Creature Feature episode with Japanese printmaker Hokusai (1760-1849) and Celtic Spook School alum Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh (1864-1933) and their terrifying contributions to spooky art history.

    Both works were inspired by female protagonists who were WRONGED: one from ancient Japanese folklore and the other via the imagination of a fascist Italian playwright.

    Real talk: this was one of our favorite episodes we recorded years ago! Hope you enjoy it, NEW EPISODE OUT SOON. <3 Russell + Stephanie






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    1 h y 4 m
  • 30: Illustrated by Harry Clarke ⇝ ⇝ Creature Feature: Grotesque Excess Edgar Allan Poe's King Pest
    Mar 18 2025

    We are back with another edition of our CREATURE DOUBLE FEATURE where we discuss TWO different artworks by TWO different artists and compare what makes them so terrifying!


    Video version ⟶ https://youtu.be/NpOsfts4sgU


    Usually, we are able to squeeze them into one episode but not this time!


    And we kick off our 2025 CDF edition with illustrator, painter, and stained glasser Harry Clarke (1889-1931).


    Harry hailed from Dublin, Ireland and grew up during the Celtic Revival.


    Harry was just as popular for his book illustrations during the Golden Age of gift-books as well as his other-wordly religious stained glass in churches.


    While his masterpiece is the Geneva Window, a breathtaking example of Harry’s skill and mastery of stained glass, we will be focusing on an illustration from the book of Tales of Mystery and Imagination by Edgar Allen Poe (1919, 1923).


    Yes, horror-ific Edgar. Allan.Poe.


    The work in question is that of “King Pest” from 1919, a story about two drunken sailors bumbling about a 19th century plague-stricken London.


    Sounds chill but the combo of grim and gory Poe plus Harry’s scary talent of visualizing such tales will give you the heebie-jeebies (not all speaking from experience 👀).


    Click PLAY if you dare and get ready to be HARRY-FIED!


    Topics include E-Girl socks, El Chavo del Ocho, island getaways, pampooties, Derry Girls, Guinness, TB vaccines and much, much more!



    Song: "Yesterday" by Holiznacc0 https://holiznacc0.bandcamp.com/track/yesterday



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    1 h y 6 m
  • 29: Mongol Zurag - Mongolian Art of Resistance with Orna Tsultem
    Jan 30 2025

    Listeners, we are excited to share a very special interview with Orna Tsultem, curator and art historian of Mongolian art, where we dive into the origins of Mongol Zurag, the art of resistance.

    We cover A LOT of images in this one so we highly recommend watching when you have the time: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QchXwHybmfk&ab_channel=ArtSlicePod

    You can also follow along here: https://www.artslicepod.com/episodes/mongol-zurag-art-of-resistance


    In this episode, we discuss the origins of Mongol Zurag which began as benign secular painting, which was a significant change from the traditional Buddhist thangka paintings.

    After Mongolia became a Soviet satellite state, Mongol Zurag, slowly but surely, became the voice of resistance from Mongolian artists looking to rediscover their cultural heritage.

    The Mongol Zurag style continues today and the Mongolian artists’ message which most of us can relate to in the year 2025 living under neo-liberalism and capital greed.

    You can learn more about Mongolian Art here:

    https://www.artmongolia.org/

    MUSIC:

    Yesterday Album - Lofi And Chill Artist - HoliznaCC0 https://holiznacc0.bandcamp.com/album...

    01 Album - 2013

    Toyota Corolla Artist - 2003 Toyota Corolla https://hanahata.bandcamp.com/album/2...





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    50 m
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