Art Slice - A Palatable Serving of Art History

Art Slice - A Palatable Serving of Art History

An irreverent, inclusive, and Palatable Serving o…

  • 1 hour 26 minutes
    37: Miguel Covarrubias & Rosa Rolanda with Veka Duncan

    This week we are zooming out . . . wayyy out . . . further . . .further . . .Okay now zoom innnn. . . . to a world without borders through the eyes of artist, illustrator, set-designer, archeologist, and art historian Miguel Covarrubias. And to help us out on this journey, the amazing Veka Duncan @vekaduncan has joined us. 

    WATCH THE VIDEO VERSION HERE: https://youtu.be/BOJ13HZA3Bs

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    Miguel aka El Chamaco, is the other half of that Mexican artist power couple, not named Frida Kahlo & Diego Rivera, from our last episode with Rosa Rolanda: https://youtu.be/w-CVdxpnwBc 


    Some may know him from his Harlem Renaissance series, his Broadway set designs, his groundbreaking book on Bali, or even his covers for Vanity Fair and/or The New Yorker.


    You Texans may know his monumental 1954 glass mosaic mural, "Genesis, the Gift of Life," outside of the Dallas Museum of Art where Miguel reinterprets the story of genesis through a Mesoamerican and Native-American symbols and mythologies.


    Miguel’s work touched on so many subjects; traveling to so many continents, really observing and getting to know the people, their culture and surrounding environments. 


    His groundbreaking archaeological research was revered, his caricatured cultural icons duked it out in his “Impossible Interviews” series, he painted massive murals that highlight all of the people, flora, and fauna that make up our home planet, always blending humor, science, and a real love for everything that makes us human.  


    Like Rosa Rolanda’s work, it’s unbelievable that his work still feels so contemporary despite being made almost a century ago. 


    Topics Include: Tomax and Xamot at Costco, Anthony Bourdain blowing up the 90s glam culinary scene, Cracking your teacher’s skull, Palacio de Cultura Banamex, Harlem Renaissance, Impossible interviews, Animal bucket lists, Empanadas with tentacles


    Support us on Patreon! - Patreon.com/artslicepod


    MUSIC INCLUDES:

    “Keep up the momentum, friend” by Chris Zabriske - https://chriszabriskie.bandcamp.com/album/i-made-this-while-you-were-asleep

    “2013 Toyota Corolla” by 2003 Toyota Corolla - https://hanahata.bandcamp.com/album/2013-toyota-corolla  

    “You’re Magic” by Soft and Furious - https://chezmonplaisir.bandcamp.com/album/bae 



    CREDITS:

    Writing and Research by Stephanie Duenas and Russell Shoemaker

    Editing, Production and Sound Design by Russell Shoemaker

    Logo Design by Russell Shoemaker

    Theme by Russell Shoemaker and Betta Music Pro

    Ending Theme by Russell Shoemaker and Underwood Beats

    Social Media by Stephanie Duenas and Russell Shoemaker

    Newsletter by Stephanie Duenas



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    13 November 2025, 10:00 am
  • 1 hour 2 minutes
    36: Rosa Rolanda - from Broadway Dancer to Surrealist

    We are back, we are wide-eyed, almost Bratz Dolls eyed (!) and South of the Border 🇲🇽 

    This time diving into the work of Rosa Rolanda, who metamorphosis-ized 🦋 from a famous Broadway dancer into a Surrealist late in life. 

    Full video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w-CVdxpnwBc

    Along the way she crossed paths with figures like Man Ray. It's likely she even learned the photogram process from him, which she then made uniquely her own. Her photograms feel like intimate journal doodles crossed with the raw energy of punk zines from the early '90s.


    She also met her soon-to-be partner and collaborator, the Mexican artist Miguel Covarrubias—also known as 'El Chamaco.' 


    Together, they became Mexico's first artistic power couple, predating even Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera. Their groundbreaking work, the book "Island of Bali," was the first comprehensive account of Balinese culture for the Western world, detailing its art, music, dance, and rituals.


    But it's her paintings that have this incredible, haunting feeling of anemoia—a nostalgia for a time you've never known. This gives them a distinct '90s or early 2000s vibe. On the surface, they seem simple and illustrative, but on a second, third, or even fourth look, you start to peel back all these incredible visual and narrative layers."


    Topics include:

    Bratz Dolls and Crazy Town

    Frida Kahlo and Arte Popular at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston

    the Museo de Arte Moderno

    Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art

    Smart and Final yellow

    Marion Morgan’s Morgan Dancers

    Man Ray’s photograms or Rayograms 

    Rat Fink for some reason

    Mexico City’s first artist power couple 

    Tina Modotti, Nickolas Muray, Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera

    Gwen Stefani's Harajuku Girls 

    Miguel Covarribus and Rosa Rolanda’s Island of Bali book from 1937 

    Las Mañanitas scene from “El Rapto” starring Maria Felix

    The 60th Venice Biennale “Foreigners Everywhere”

    LACMA’s 2012 exhibition “In Wonderland: The Surrealist Adventures of Women Artists in Mexico and the United States”

    And what Visual Art can learn from performative art like dance


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    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The featured song was “Cascades” from Kris Keogh’s new album Processed Harp Works, Volume 3 on the Japanese imprint - Muzan Editions.


    https://muzaneditions.bandcamp.com/album/processed-harp-works-volume-3  


    The album is amazing - It’s like drifting off in a meditative trance, being brought back to awareness, before drifting again. If you like artists like The Caretaker - you really need to spend time with these albums. 


    Other tracks featured:


    Elvenheim - “At Night” https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Shamil_Elvenheim/momentum

    Holizna - “First Snow” https://holiznacc0.bandcamp.com/album/winter-lo-fi-2 




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    CREDITS:

    Writing and Research by Stephanie Duenas and Russell Shoemaker

    Editing, Production and Sound Design by Russell Shoemaker

    Logo Design by Russell Shoemaker

    Theme by Russell Shoemaker and Betta Music Pro

    Ending Theme by Russell Shoemaker and Underwood Beats

    Social Media by Stephanie Duenas and Russell Shoemaker

    Newsletter by Stephanie Duenas





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    28 October 2025, 10:55 am
  • 54 minutes 12 seconds
    35: Finding YouTopia - ArtCurious' Jennifer Dasal on The American Girls Club of Paris

    LISTENERS we’re back with maybe a little glimmer of hope?


    “Impossible” you say! Eye Rolls you do!


    But after our conversation with Jennifer Dasal of the ArtCurious podcast, we had to ask ourselves, could a historical sanctuary for artists offer a vision for today's creators? 


    You can WATCH this episode here: https://youtu.be/H42eI7V1eek


    In her new book, The Club: Where American Women Artists Found Refuge in Belle Époque Paris," Dasal uncovers the story of The American Girls Club of Paris. This remarkable institution provided hundreds of expatriate American women artists with housing, tea gardens, libraries, and—most importantly—dedicated studio and exhibition space.


    Far from home and full of ambition, artists like Florence Lundberg, Anne Goldthwaite, Alice Morgan Wright, and Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller found refuge and community in this unique "u-topia" (or as we like to call it, a "YOU-topia").


    Building Your Modern Creative Community

    With resources for artists often scarce, the story of The Club is more vital than ever. It reminds us of the importance of nurturing our creative practices and finding ways to support each other.


    Whether it's a physical space or a dedicated online community, we must be generous with our time and energy to foster collective creativity. This episode explores how to carve out these personal utopias, drawing parallels to diverse examples like Mexican chinampas (floating gardens), Kristin Ghodsee’s "Everyday Utopia," and… the…. 00s UK rap group The Streets.



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    Support the show!

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    Merch ➫ 

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    CREDITS:

    Writing and Research by Stephanie Dueñas and Russell Shoemaker

    Editing, Production and Sound Design by Russell Shoemaker

    Logo Design by Russell Shoemaker

    Theme by Russell Shoemaker and Betta Music Pro

    Ending Theme by Russell Shoemaker and Underwood Beats

    Social Media by Stephanie Dueñas and Russell Shoemaker

    Newsletter by Stephanie Dueñas


    MUSIC INCLUDES:

    “Soul for Sale” by StevenAndolf

    “Lighter than Air” by HoliznaCC0

    “Limbo” by HoliznaCC0

    “Yesterday” by HoliznaCC0

    “Hard bay light” by The Library




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    23 September 2025, 11:00 am
  • 52 minutes 6 seconds
    34: The Greatest Art Heist That Never Was ➫ Maria Lani: The Woman With Fifty Faces ➫ w/ Jonathan Lackman & Zachary J Pinson

    Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/gK2OcbuE7Oo


    When the dazzling German actress Maria Lani arrived in Paris in the late 1920s, her presence set the art world abuzz. She quickly recruited over fifty artists—including Pierre Bonnard, Jean Cocteau, Marc Chagall, André Derain, Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso (he said no), Man Ray, Georges-Henri Rouault, Fernand Léger, and Suzanne Valadon—to depict her in paintings, photographs, and sculptures for an upcoming film.


    There was just one problem: "Maria Lani" was a construct. She wasn’t a famous actress—she wasn’t even "Maria Lani." So what did she plan to do with all these artworks?


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    When Maria Lani disappeared along with the pieces, rumors spread that she had stolen the works and sold them to unsuspecting collectors in the United States. Was this the art heist of the century? Or was something else going on?


    We sit down with Author and Illustrator - Jonathan Lackman and Zachary J. Pinson - to uncover the truth—and discuss The Woman with Fifty Faces, a stunning new graphic novel from Fantagraphics that explores the enigmatic life of this maligned figure.


    Support the show!

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    http://patreon.com/artslicepod

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    https://www.artslicepod.com/


    For more on Maria Lani ➫ 

    https://marialani.com/

    https://jonlackman.com/


    To see more of Zachary's work ➫ 

    https://www.instagram.com/zachary_j_pinson/



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    21 August 2025, 11:00 am
  • 1 hour 38 minutes
    33: Mary Cassatt's LOST mural ➩ ➪ A reimagining of Eve |||| special guest Klaire Lockheart

    ✅ ლ(o◡oლ) MAGIC MIND ლ(o◡oლ) helped fuel our noggins during the making of this episode -to give your brain some choice fuel, use ARTSLICE20 for 20-48% off your order HERE:


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    VIDEO VERSION: https://youtu.be/0_9up1-1b2U


    Mary Cassatt, known for her paintings of women and babies (then and now), made a surprising move to accept a mural commission for the Chicago World’s Fair of 1893.


    This gig was a big deal, especially if you were a younger artist- it could be a career-making move. But when Mary, decades into her own art career, first received the invitation . . .

    well, here’s what she had to say:


    “When the committee offered it to me to do, at first I was horrified, but gradually I began to think it would be great fun to do something I had never done before and as the bare idea of such a thing put (Cassatt's best frenemy) Degas into a rage and he did not spare every criticism he could think of, I got my spirit up and said I would not give up the idea for anything.”


    So . . . maybe a little spite inspired this mural? 


    Spite and...a surprising reimagining of the story of Eve.  


    Unfortunately, this mural has been lost to the sands of time...and we're (maybe, foolishly) diving in with the only surviving grainy black and white photos to guide us.


    Special thanks to Klaire Lockheart! https://www.instagram.com/klairelockheart


    ==============================

    ✅ NEW: Mary Cassatt "Eve Freed Us" tee

    https://artslicepod-shop.fourthwall.com/products/mary-cassatt-eve-freed-us-tee


    ==============================

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    ==============================

    ✅ MUSIC FROM THIS EPISODE:

    Holinzacc0 - "Yesterday"

    https://holiznacc0.bandcamp.com/album/lofi-and-chill


    Blear Moon - "Fortitude"

    https://blearmoon.bandcamp.com/album/love-in-ruins


    Holinzacc0 - "First Snow"

    https://holiznacc0.bandcamp.com/album/winter-lo-fi-2


    ==============================

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    31 July 2025, 12:04 pm
  • 1 hour 18 seconds
    32: Violeta Parra - Chile's Frida Kahlo? ➩ ➪ Parra's incredible visual work & life with Ericka Verba

    ლ(o◡oლ) MAGIC MIND ლ(o◡oლ) helped fuel our noggins during the making of this episode -to give your brain some choice fuel, use ARTSLICEJUNE for 50% off your order HERE:

    ➩ ➪ ➩ ➪ https://magicmind.com/ARTSLICEJUNE


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    We highly recommend watching this one if possible as Violeta Parra’s works are so breathtaking and impactful:

    ➩ ➪ ➩ ➪ https://youtu.be/g0vESB_nKvE


    This month, we dive into Violeta Parra’s (1917-1967) multifaceted legacy with her biographer, Ericka Verba.

    You can find Ericka’s book, “Thanks to Life” on her website: www.erickaverba.com as well as more Violeta Parra resources.

    Violeta’s artistic journey has many parallels to Frida Kahlo’s: both artists began painting while bedridden; drew from their personal experience with the folk arts of their country, Frida in Mexico and Violeta in Chile.

    They both lived and worked during a time when their respective countries were at a crossroads and made it their mission to capture the folk culture of their countries:

    Frida with a paint brush and Violeta through song, poem, painting and arpilleras (embroidery).

    And while most of us have only heard of Frida Kahlo, both artists achieved international fame in their lifetime and their legacies continue to this day.

    Violeta Parra became the first Latin American artist (period) to have a solo exhibition at the Louvre in Paris in 1964 at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs.

    And more recently, her arpilleras were featured in the 2022 Venice Biennale “Milk of Dreams” which also featured some Art Slice favorites like Leonora Carrington, Remedios Varo and Dorothea Tanning, to name a few.

    While she was putting her own twist on this traditional folk medium during her lifetime, arpilleras took on a much different meaning under the brutal, US-backed Pinochet dictatorship several years (1973-1990) after her sudden death (suicide) in 1967:

    They became a protest symbol and tool of resistance against the regime for Chilean women, as well as a way for them to grieve their disappeared loved ones.

    But before arpilleras, Violeta had become internationally known for her music. When she began her artistic career, she started with painting.

    Her paintings explore deep emotions and personal experiences. The planes of color and vague interiors really mind us of Richard Diebenkorn and Florine Stettheimer.






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    5 June 2025, 12:00 pm
  • 1 hour 15 minutes
    31: Wanda Gág - WHODUNIT? ⇝ ⇝ Millions of Cats creator's mysterious fairy tale mayhem ⇝ Creature Feature part 2

    MAGIC MIND helped fuel our noggins during the making of this episode -to give your brain some choice fuel, use ARTSLICEJUNE for 50% off your order HERE:

    ➩ ➪ ➩ ➪ https://magicmind.com/ARTSLICEJUNE


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    WATCH THE EP HERE: https://youtu.be/9Y4po7xiX5o


    We’re back with the 2nd dose of our CREATURE DOUBLE FEATURE series, featuring the mysterious 1944 lithograph “Whodunit?” by artist, illustrator, printmaker and children’s book author: Wanda Gág!

    We also discuss her work bringing German fairy tale energy to children’s literature in “Millions of Cats” from 1928.

    In this episode, we discover Wanda Gag’s life lesson through her winding, warping, wonky, and wobbling images of interiors and landscapes.

    Wanda was raised in a Bohemian community of German immigrants in New Ulm, Minnesota, in a house built and designed from scratch in the Queen Anne style by her artist father, Anton Gag. 

    Wanda’s story really is that of a modern fairytale involving a magical childhood, German Märchen, creative energy, (unfortunately) tragedy, and a coming of age lesson we can all glean from: life is what you make it and despite the forces telling you otherwise, it CAN be full of whimsy and creativity.

    Her struggle as a young artist doing commercial work to stay afloat while attending the Art Students League in NYC NYC reminded us a lot of Dorothea Tanning’s story - finding yourself working odd jobs like ‘lamp shading’ for Wanda or serving canapes to men in suits dressed in hula skirt like Dorothea.

    The grind is part of being an artist, or really most of us, in the modern world and we found Wanda’s story not only relatable but extremely relevant to our times.

    As we learned more about her ethos and way of working, we found that she and Charles Burchfield, another Art Slice fav (ep 12) have SO MUCH in common: their works come from hours of observation of their subjects, beit the mundane indoors or sublime outdoors, and their results complement one another, yin and yang, if you will.

    Topics include Howard, non-euclidian fun, Russell’s version of “Kiss the Girl”, dog stables, bedazzled witch boots, and grey soup. 

    MUSIC:

    "FIRE WALK WITH ME" by Kenobit - kenobit.bandcamp.com

    Magic Mind helped fuel our noggins during the making of this episode - to give your brain some choice fuel, use ARTSLICE20 for 20-48% off your order!

    ᓚᘏᗢ Special thanks to the folks at the Wanda Gag House - click here to learn more ᗢᘏᓗ



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    6 May 2025, 6:30 pm
  • 1 hour 3 minutes
    CREATURE FEATURE rerun: Hokusai's House of Plates & Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh's Perfumed Death

    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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    17 April 2025, 11:45 am
  • 1 hour 6 minutes
    30: Harry Clarke ⇝ Edgar Allan Poe's King Pest | Creature Feature part 1

    MAGIC MIND helped fuel our noggins during the making of this episode - to give your brain some choice fuel, use ARTSLICEJUNE for 50% off your order HERE:

    ➩ ➪ ➩ ➪ https://magicmind.com/ARTSLICEJUNE


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


    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!


    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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    18 March 2025, 12:00 pm
  • 49 minutes 44 seconds
    29: Mongol Zurag - Mongolian Art of Resistance with Orna Tsultem

    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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    30 January 2025, 2:30 pm
  • 37 minutes 33 seconds
    28: Mary Cassatt at Work ➬ a bonus conversation with curator Emily Beeny

    To watch ➬ mosey on over here ➬ : https://youtu.be/3H3ittr_RNY


    We present a very special bonus interview with Emily A. Beeny, Chief Curator at the Legion of Honor in San Francisco about the Mary Cassatt At Work exhibition.


    Since her day, Mary Cassatt (1844-1926) has been known for her paintings of bébés and upper class women but there’s another layer - a radical one - that has been overlooked until now.


    Join us as we discuss how this new exhibition explores the idea of labor surrounding Cassatt’s studio practice as well as her radical subject matter: the bébés being cared for by, more often than not, nannies, nurse-maids, governesses etc. 


    Our conversation with Emily revolves around Cassatt's “A Goodnight Hug” a pastel from 1880.


    Topics include the artist as laborer, shedding light on domestic work, her and Cassatt’s involvement in women’s suffrage in the US.


    The exhibition closes January 26th, 2025 - don’t miss it!!


    You can learn more about the exhibition here:


    https://www.famsf.org/exhibitions/mary-cassatt


    MUSIC: HoliznaCC0 - “First Snow” 

    https://holiznacc0.bandcamp.com/



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    5 December 2024, 9:30 pm
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