Craftsmanship

Harriet Salmon

Harriet Salmon interviews fabricators and craftspeople who assist in the production of contemporary artworks. This podcast will document fabricator’s experiences to shine a light on the amazing breadth of talent in the field and to capture this particular moment in the art world. We're interested in conversations about hierarchies within craft vs. concept, questions of intellectual property, trends of de-skilling in art, wealth disparity, and the conflict felt by many fabricators between working in art production and being artists in their own right.

  • 1 hour 4 minutes
    Episode 14 - Caitlin Riordan: Room Tone

    Caitlin Riordan is a master printer who trained with Peter Pettengill at Wingate Studios located in Hinsdale, New Hampshire. Caitlin started off in printmaking with a B.F.A. from the Maine College of Art and went to work with Peter in the multiple plate aquatint etching studio. There she printed with many artists including Louise Bourgeois and Walton Ford. After Wingate, Caitlin went to work at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn where she currently is Head Printmaking Technician and Visiting Instructor in Print. Along with artists and educators Kelley Driscoll and Grayson Cox, she founded and runs PIE (or Pratt Institute Editions), a program which invited artists to campus to publish a print with the resources at the school and in collaboration with the students. Caitlin’s favorite tool is either her collection of glass telephone pole insulators or a Le Deuil etching press.

    23 January 2021, 8:29 pm
  • 51 minutes 47 seconds
    Episode 13 - Chelsea Culpepper: Sticky Wax

    November 20th, 2020

    Chelsea Culpepper is an artist, fabricator and project manager at Workshop Art Fabrication foundry in Kingston, NY. Workshop was started by Andrew Pharmer and Vincent DiDonato in 2015 after they’d worked together for over 17 years at Polich Tallix foundry and provides an intimate and  “boutique” experience; offering artists services including metal casting and fabrication, mold and pattern making, project development and management, patina and paint applications and conservation and restoration. Chelsea began working for Workshop shortly after they opened as a recent BFA graduate from University of Alabama, Birmingham and trained in the wax room - later becoming a trusted artist liaison for artist such as Frank Benson, Kiki Smith and Huma Bhabha. Her favorite tool is a broken chad.

    14 December 2020, 6:04 pm
  • 52 minutes 41 seconds
    Episode 12 - Vanessa Hoheb: The Discipline of Ego

    Vanessa Hoheb has filled many roles in the fabrication world; from enlarger to mold maker, teacher to facilitator, artist representative and liaison, production and project manager- she is ultimately an artisan. She talks with me about growing up in her father, Bruce Hoheb’s enlarging studio and learning the ropes with some of the giants of the New York art world. After decades working closely with artists at Polich Tallix Foundry, Vanessa now works with blue chip artist to realize complex projects with Workshop Workshop Art Fabrication foundry in Kingston, NY. Her favorite tools is a steel sculpting spatula.

    14 November 2020, 7:32 pm
  • 49 minutes 34 seconds
    Episode 11 - Nellie Davis & Kelsey Knight Mohr: Soft Material Manipulation

    August 16th, 2019

    Nellie Davis and Kelsey Knight Mohr are both textile fabricators and printmakers specializing in silkscreen printing. With decades of combined experience in stitching, tufting, draping, embroidery, pattern making, puppetry and costume design, they have worked with many artists, including Jim Hodges, to realize large-scale textile artworks. We discuss the excitement and tensions created by the textile renaissance in contemporary art, the misconceptions surrounding the term “fiber artist,” the challenges of translating from two dimensions to three and the technical skill required to add movement to fabricating sculptural objects.

    1 February 2020, 4:05 pm
  • 1 hour 1 minute
    Episode 10 - Ivin Ballen: Raspberry Pie

    October 16th, 2019

    Ivin Ballen is an artist and co-founder of Lenscloud, a Brooklyn based 3D scanning technology business that specializes in solutions for high volume data capture using a custom built, portable unit. A former mold maker, Ivin now specialized is digital file generation for other artists, companies and events and is currently working with MIT's Immersion Lab on a photogrammetry scanner for high-speed avatar creation. Ivin talks about the hardware and software that he and his two business partners developed, it’s possible role in the art world and how technology can help artists be more playful.

    30 November 2019, 10:05 pm
  • 41 minutes 45 seconds
    Episode 09 - Amy Jacobs: Master Collaborator

    September 28th, 2019

    Amy Jacobs is an artist and extremely skilled paper maker who works with the nonprofit Dieu Donné as their Co-Director of Artistic Projects and Master Collaborator. She works with the institution to serve established and emerging artists through the collaborative creation of contemporary art using paper making. Amy talks about the vast potential of paper, from making a simple sheet to pulp painting to mold making and the rewards of collaborating with artists such as Ursula von Rydingsvard, Anne Hamilton, Jim Hodges, Erin Riley, and Carrie Moyer. Amy’s favorite tool is a good pair of sharp tweezers and the Fogg It nozzle.

    4 November 2019, 7:25 pm
  • 1 hour 5 minutes
    Episode 08 - Brooklyn Research: Anthropomorphic Data Sets

    September 4th, 2019

    This episode is an unedited recording of a talk series called Tradecraft done in partnership with the nonprofit Brooklyn Research. I interviewed the three founding members of Brooklyn Research; Alex Dodge, Ezer Longinus, and Johnny Lu, on starting a fabrication company that specializes in interactive systems, prototypes and technological experiences. We discuss the conservation concerns that come with digital art, working with corporate clients vs. fine art clients and how Brooklyn Research has transitioned into an nonprofit serving its community with membership space and programming.

    30 September 2019, 10:47 pm
  • 47 minutes 12 seconds
    Episode 07 - Allyson Vieira: Ancients

    August 19th, 2019

    Allyson Vieira is an artist, educator and author of the book “On the Rock” (Soberscove, 2019), an oral history project documenting the experiences of the marble carvers working on the restoration of the Acropolis in Athens. Allyson talks about the physical and political history of the site and walks us through the step-by-step process of repairing a broken block of marble. She details tool, technique and material continuity on the project and tracks how many of the skills span huge and complicated histories. Her favorite tool is her Dewalt angle grinder and from the book, the specificity of the marble carving chisels.

    31 August 2019, 4:46 pm
  • 39 minutes 25 seconds
    Episode 06 - Jamie Foster: The Chorus

    March 31st, 2019

    Jamie is an artist and fabricator who has worked on extensive sculptural projects with artists such as Banks Violet and Robert Gober. He reminisces about how he got into fabrication, being a young artist trying to make ends meet in the pre-2008 New York art world and what he wishes he could go back tell himself now he has a little more experience. We discuss how technical skills can highlight class distinctions in MFA programs and the relationship labor has within the art world. We admit to making art for a chorus of voices in our heads and what it would mean to quit. Jamie’s favorite tool is a pre-drill counter sink drill bit.

    31 July 2019, 6:19 pm
  • 47 minutes 52 seconds
    Episode 05 - Jason Brown: Foreign Matter is a Fact of Life

    May 24th, 2019

    Jason talks about learning the craft of spray coating technology and paint science from his early career as a painter at Jeff Koons’s Studio. Now the owner of the renowned shop Alchemy Paint Works, he discusses the language choices used with clients, the process of filing a patent for a specific coating he invented, the gap between an industrial process and a contemporary art application and being flown around the world. His favorite tools is a German engineered spray gun called a Sata.

    1 July 2019, 1:04 am
  • 41 minutes 54 seconds
    Episode 04 - Matt Dilling: The Buddhist Podcast

    May 16th, 2019

    Matt Dilling, the owner of Lite Brite Neon Studios, talks about the history of neon and how it’s entered the contemporary art visual language. He describes working with both commercial and art clients and how to tackle and learn from positive problem solving with such an exacting material.

    31 May 2019, 4:26 pm
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