Fellows Friday: with CAConrad
We speak to 2011 Pew Fellow and prolific poet CAConrad, well known for poetry collections such as A Beautiful Marsupial Afternoon and The Book of Frank.
What drives cultural practitioners to experiment, discover, and create?
We speak to 2011 Pew Fellow and prolific poet CAConrad, well known for poetry collections such as A Beautiful Marsupial Afternoon and The Book of Frank.
Experimental theater artist Romeo Castellucci speaks with Philadelphia Museum of Art curator Carlos Basualdo about his training, art history, performance art, and the use of the image in theater.
Osby is an award-winning contemporary jazz musician, a 2012 Pew Fellow, and the recipient of such honors as a Doris Duke Composition Fellowship and the Chamber Music America Composers Award.
A 2013 Leeway Transformation Award winner, Lori Waselchuk’s photographs have appeared in magazines and newspapers such as Time, LIFE, the New York Times, and the Los Angeles Times.
Since receiving his Pew Fellowship, Kevin Varrone has developed Box Score: An Autobiography, an app for iPad and iPhone that features work from his bookEephus—a collection of prose poems about baseball—paired with collages.
In part I of this short, two-part interview between Tate Modern curator Catherine Wood and choreographer Jérôme Bel, they discuss the concept of "amateurism."
We spoke to 2012 Pew Fellow Dan Murphy, who makes up one half of the artist duo Megawords, along with Anthony Smyrski.
Tate Modern curator Catherine Wood and choreographer Jérôme Bel discuss the concept of "theatricality."
In this excerpt from her June 2014 talk at The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage, eminent philosopher Avital Ronell reflects on the relationship between thinking and bodily movement.
We spoke to 2012 Pew Fellow Matthew Mitchell, whose musical compositions address intersections and cross-pollination among various strains of acoustic, electric, composed, and improvised new music.