A daily short-form podcast for artists and the art curious. Art Musing Daily offers an interesting and insightful daily dose of art history, theory, and technique, as well as tips on boosting creativity and productivity.
4 minutes 56 seconds
Brian Eno on Russian Avant-Garde and Music
In honor of Brian Eno's 71st birthday I'm sharing a quote of his regarding Russian avant-garde. The art movement was an early inspiration to Eno during art school, finding parallels between abstract art and the non-figurative quality of music.
15 May 2019, 6:55 am
10 minutes 46 seconds
Dealing with Criticism as an Artist
Tips on dealing with criticism from Julia Cameron's 1992 bestselling book 'The Artist's Way'
6 May 2019, 7:12 am
12 minutes 15 seconds
Hilma af Klint at The Guggenheim
Hilma af Klint is all the buzz this year after her record-breaking exhibition at the NYC Guggenheim. It seems Klint met the broader public at the right time aesthetically, with the recent popularity of geometric abstraction, muted tones, and science and spiritual symbolism. I'll talk a little of her backstory, her style, and my experience of her exhibit in today's episode.
1 May 2019, 7:54 am
6 minutes 1 second
The Crushing Loss of a Lucian Freud Painting
Sometimes the works of master artists get ripped, punctured, burned, or in the case of a Lucian Freud painting, crushed in a trash compactor.
30 April 2019, 7:12 am
5 minutes 48 seconds
Zombie Formalism - How the Art Market Dominates Creativity
The market for art has become the influencer on what type of art is being made. I read a paragraph from Walter Robinson's "Flipping and the Rise of Zombie Formalism" where he coins the term "Zombie Formalism" to describe this twist of the art market dominating creativity.
Today I read a 1945 Pablo Picasso quote in defense of the power of art.
18 April 2019, 12:00 pm
5 minutes 12 seconds
Van Gogh's Death Instrument is on the Auction Block
The rusty old revolver believed to have taken the life of Vincent Van Gogh will soon be up for auction. The artifact was discovered in a field in Auvers-sur-Oise, France decades after Van Gogh fired it. Also in this episode: you get to hear me attempt to pronounce a very complicated French village name followed by me quickly moving along in hopes nobody notices I butchered it. Hey, I took Spanish.
17 April 2019, 12:00 pm
6 minutes 49 seconds
Kandinsky and Synesthesia
Although Wassily Kandinsky wrote extensively about his experience with color, which went beyond the average viewer's perception, it's unclear whether or not he was a true synesthete or a just an artist who required textbook-like structure to create. Also: Dang, this woman (me, that's me) is figuring out the audio recording stuff and it shows in this episode.
16 April 2019, 12:00 pm
8 minutes 25 seconds
What is Art?
What is art? I dare to answer this age-old question, at least for me personally and what it'll mean for future podcast episodes.