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Momus: The Podcast
Momus
66 episodes
1 week ago
Momus: The Podcast is a monthly arts and culture program hosted by Sky Goodden and Lauren Wetmore. Bringing Momus's unique insistence on criticality into a more conversational register, the podcast is dedicated to transparent conversations with an international cast of artists, curators, critics, and art writers. Momus: The Podcast is in its 6th season and was named one of the top ten art podcasts by The New York Times in March 2020. Subscribe on Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and wherever you get your podcasts. If you would like to advertise on Momus: The Podcast, please contact Chris Andrews, Sales Director, at chrisandrews@momus.ca.
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All content for Momus: The Podcast is the property of Momus and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Momus: The Podcast is a monthly arts and culture program hosted by Sky Goodden and Lauren Wetmore. Bringing Momus's unique insistence on criticality into a more conversational register, the podcast is dedicated to transparent conversations with an international cast of artists, curators, critics, and art writers. Momus: The Podcast is in its 6th season and was named one of the top ten art podcasts by The New York Times in March 2020. Subscribe on Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and wherever you get your podcasts. If you would like to advertise on Momus: The Podcast, please contact Chris Andrews, Sales Director, at chrisandrews@momus.ca.
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Visual Arts
Arts,
Design,
Books
Episodes (20/66)
Momus: The Podcast
Legacy Russell – Season 8, Episode 3
In this episode, we feature Legacy Russell, the writer, curator, and Executive Director and Chief Curator of The Kitchen, an artist-driven non-profit space in New York City. As a cultural critic she has published the books Glitch Feminism (Verso Books, 2020) and Black Meme: A History of the Images that Make Us (Verso Books, 2024), which questions how we define Blackness through mediated material. For the podcast, Russell reads from Lorraine O’Grady’s iconic essay (https://lorraineogrady.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/Lorraine-OGrady_Olympias-Maid-Reclaiming-Black-Female-Subjectivity1.pdf) “Olympia’s Maid: Reclaiming Black Female Subjectivity,” first published in Afterimage in 1992, and collected in New Feminist Criticism: Art, Identity, Action (Routledge, 1994). Russell speaks with Sky Goodden about her relationship to O’Grady’s essay—one that “came before its time and carried us into the future”—and touches on the central conceit that perhaps also explains its controversy: “Lorraine truly believed in a culture that would allow for contestation.” But, Legacy reflects, perhaps our culture hasn’t caught up to her yet. Thanks to this episode’s sponsor, the artist Cui Jinzhe (https://cuijinzhe.com/home.html), for her support of our work.Thanks to Legacy Russell for her contribution to this season.And thank you to Jacob Irish, our editor, and Chris Andrews, for production assistance.
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2 weeks ago
59 minutes 9 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
Nizan Shaked – Season 8, Episode 2
Nizan Shaked is our guest this month! Shaked is Professor of Contemporary Art History, Museum, and Curatorial Studies at California State University, Long Beach, and most recently the author of Museums and Wealth: The Politics of Contemporary Art Collections (Bloomsbury, 2022). She speaks to Lauren Wetmore about the resources offered by criticality, writing for ”liberals that I want to become more radical,” and researching her forthcoming book Art Against the System, for which she recently won a Warhol Arts Writers Grant. Shaked offers artist LaToya Ruby Frazier’s book The Notion of Family (Aperture, 2014) to consider the devastation perpetrated by imperial industry, its connection to art systems, and how artists provide models for how to deal with authoritarianism.Many thanks to this episode’s sponsors, Centre PHI (https://phi.ca/en/?gad_source=1&gbraid=0AAAAADFxj83ZvqL68afnTIgkXXb4jvv1x&gclid=Cj0KCQjw2ZfABhDBARIsAHFTxGzshekdsHmo3AwI_fFJR2FSdlOuASkuxQj1d6Jc90dG8ZqasJNEmm4aAp2ZEALw_wcB) and Night Gallery (https://nightgallery.ca/), for their support of our work.Our deepest thanks to Nizan Shaked for her contribution to this season.And a big thank you to Jacob Irish, our editor, and Chris Andrews, for production assistance.
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1 month ago
59 minutes 28 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
Ajay Kurian – Season 8, Episode 1
Season 8 of Momus: The Podcast launches with Ajay Kurian, an artist, critic, and co-founder of New Crits (https://www.newcrits.studio/), a platform for artist mentorship. Kurian speaks with Sky Goodden about a text by Robert Pogue (https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/G/bo5815522.html) Harrison  (https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/G/bo5815522.html)on the art of the zen garden (Gardens: An Essay on the Human Condition, University of Chicago Press, 2008), and about his artist-writer influences including Robert Smithson, Paul Chan, and Hannah Black. He also touches on his recent response (in Cultured Mag) to Dean Kissick's screed on identity politics (in Harper’s), and what it required to “clean the public restroom” in the wake of Kissick’s feature going viral. ”I think I was more upset by how bad the piece was than the ideas in the piece. […] I think especially for artists of color, like none of that stuff is new to us. And to think that there was massive progress … it could all be taken away in a second. I'm not holding it as new solid ground.”Kurian’s solo exhibition Peanuts (Deluxe) is on view at 47 Canal in New York through March 22.  Many thanks for this episode’s sponsors, CONTACT Photography Festival (https://contactphoto.com/), Plural Art Fair (https://www.plural.art/en), and Workman Arts (https://workmanarts.com/), for their support of our work.Thank you to Jacob Irish, our editor, and Chris Andrews, for production assistance.
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2 months ago
1 hour 1 minute 50 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
Tiana Reid – Season 7, Episode 8
Momus: The Podcast’s Season 07 finale features Tiana Reid, a Toronto-based critic and assistant professor of English at York University. Reid is a former editor at The New Inquiry and her writing has been featured in Frieze, The Nation, The New York Review of Books, and The Paris Review, among others. She reads from an early influence on her practice, Sylvia Wynter, whose text "Jonkonnu in Jamaica: Towards the Interpretation of the Folk Dance as a Cultural Process" (https://ufdc.ufl.edu/UF00090030/00010/36j) (Jamaica Journal, June, 1970) thinks about “what art's function is in unequal and oppressive societies and regimes.” In conversation with host Sky Goodden, Reid also discusses a forthcoming text for Momus, which focuses on an evacuated landscape in Toronto’s cultural institutions due to several curator dismissals, and moves Reid “to this question of action.”Momus: The Podcast is edited by Jacob Irish, with production assistance from Chris Andrews. Many thanks to this episode’s sponsor, Esker Foundation (https://eskerfoundation.com/).
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4 months ago
49 minutes 43 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
Claudia La Rocco – Season 7, Episode 7
Esteemed critic and writer Claudia La Rocco (https://claudialarocco.com/) speaks to Lauren Wetmore about being a “dance partisan” and how “language can nail things down in a way that dance doesn’t.” This wide-ranging conversation touches on artists including Mikhail Baryshnikov, Simone Forti, and Moriah Evans, through critics including Jill Johnston and Megan Metcalf, to consider how dance and writing move through different institutions and histories. La Rocco reads American choreographer Susan Rethorst’s “Dailiness” from A Choreographic Mind: Autobodygraphical Writings (University of the Arts, Helsinki, 2015), which she describes as a text that “was formative for me but still fits me pretty well, and relates to both how I think about writing, and what is so special about dance.” Momus: The Podcast is edited by Jacob Irish, with production assistance from Chris Andrews. Many thanks to this episode’s sponsor, The Blue Building (https://www.thebluebuilding.ca/). 
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5 months ago
56 minutes 28 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
Niela Orr – Season 7, Episode 6
Niela Orr (https://www.nytimes.com/by/niela-orr) is a culture writer and editor who has published in The Baffler, The Believer, and The Organist, among others. Since 2022 she has worked as an editor at the New York Times Magazine. In conversation with Sky Goodden, Orr discusses her editing as being rooted in service, and her abiding sense of responsibility to the writers that she works with. Orr foregrounds this conversation with a reading from Unexplained Presence (Leon Works, 2007; Wave Books, 2024), by Tisa Bryant, a former mentor of hers. She also talks about the profound pleasure and significance of reading fiction and poetry. “If I'm not reading poetry, I feel like I'm losing access to possibility,” she says. And in turn, Orr says, “I write for patient readers.”Momus: The Podcast is edited by Jacob Irish, with production assistance from Chris Andrews. Many thanks to this episode’s sponsors, the Dorothea and Leo Rabkin Foundation (feat. (https://www.rabkinfoundation.org/) The Rabkin Interviews (https://rabkinfoundation.substack.com/s/the-rabkin-interviews)), the Buffalo AKG Art Museum (https://buffaloakg.org/), and Waddington's (http://waddingtons.ca).
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6 months ago
1 hour 5 minutes 22 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
Joshua Schwebel – Season 7, Episode 5
Joshua Schwebel  (https://joshuaschwebel.com/home.html)speaks to long-time collaborator Lauren Wetmore about their shared interest in closing the gap between how art is discursively framed and what it actually does. Schwebel’s artistic practice stems from a deep need to understand the world, coupled with an allergy to authority. “Art is rhetorically positioned as radical,” notes Schwebel, “but what we're doing is advancing capitalism for people who benefit from it and this is not in our interest as artists or workers.” With Nizan Shaked’s Museums and Wealth: The Politics of Contemporary Art Collections (Bloomsbury, 2022) as a prompt, Schwebel and Wetmore talk about their upcoming book project, The Employee (forthcoming from Art Metropole in 2025). They also discuss The Paydirt Seminars, a series of talks dedicated to examining the intersections between art, finance, and resource extraction that Schwebel has organized as part of his current exhibition One Hand Washes the Other at Struts Gallery in Sackville, New Brunswick.Momus: The Podcast is edited by Jacob Irish, with production assistance from Chris Andrews. Many thanks to this episode’s sponsors, NSCAD University (https://nscad.ca/), the Dorothea and Leo Rabkin Foundation (https://www.rabkinfoundation.org/), and Esker Foundation (http://eskerfoundation.com).
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7 months ago
1 hour 1 minute 47 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
Carolina A. Miranda – Season 7, Episode 4
Carolina A. Miranda, a longtime L.A. Times staff culture writer who has recently returned to the wilds of freelance, speaks to Sky Goodden about looking at things from both sides now. In working on a book proposal about the year she spent in Chile following the fall of Pinochet’s dictatorship, and in exploring new genres of writing for different publications, Miranda is changing the focus of her attention. After so many years of writing-as-response, she reflects on the value of sustained research into one subject. “I'd been wanting to explore new directions I could take my writing, and at the L.A. Times, there are certain limitations to the form.” Taking a more personal approach with her book, she’s thinking about “how do artists survive an autocracy? Culture can teach us about the moment, but also point a way forward.”Momus: The Podcast is edited by Jacob Irish, with production assistance from Chris Andrews. Many thanks to this episode’s sponsors, The Dorothea and Leo Rabkin Foundation (https://www.rabkinfoundation.org/) and The Gund (https://www.thegund.org/).
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8 months ago
1 hour 7 minutes 21 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
Fargo Nissim Tbakhi – Season 7, Episode 3
Palestinian-American artist and writer Fargo Nissim Tbakhi (https://fargotbakhi.com/) speaks with Lauren Wetmore about the political implication of form through two texts: Tbakhi’s own piece "Notes on Craft: Writing in the Hour of Genocide" (Protean Magazine, 2023), and Iranian-American poet Solmaz Sharif’s “The Near Transitive Properties of the Political and Poetical: Erasure” (The Volta, 2013). “In times of extreme crisis we end up bumping against particular limitations of art,” reflects Tbakhi, while also reminding us that “the idea of artistic engagement with moments of crisis has been curtailed and limited by state powers and oppressive ideologies in many different forms.” This episode continues the Podcast’s platforming of Palestinian voices in line with Momus’s ongoing commitment to PACBI.Momus: The Podcast is edited by Jacob Irish, with production assistance from Chris Andrews. Many thanks to this episode’s sponsor, Daniel Faria Gallery (https://danielfariagallery.com/).All episodes are available on momus.ca, and through Google Podcasts, Stitcher, iTunes, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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9 months ago
1 hour 11 minutes 9 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
An Inflection Point in Art Publishing – Season 7, Episode 2
Earlier this year, the Momus editorial team gathered for a talk at Plural Art Fair (https://www.plural.art/en) in Montreal. It marked the first time Sky Goodden, Catherine G. Wagley, Jessica Lynne, and Merray Gerges were all together IRL. The lively conversation touched on how we’ve shifted from a discourse of “crisis” in art criticism to its material reality; the ethics of editorial care; and how to address the need for mentorship across all stages of a writer’s career.Thank you to the Momus editorial team for their contribution to this season. Thank you to Artspeaks (https://artspeaks.ca/en/) for sponsoring the panel.Momus: The Podcast is edited by Jacob Irish, with production assistance from Chris Andrews.Many thanks to this episode’s sponsors: Night Gallery (https://www.nightgallery.ca/) and Art Toronto (https://arttoronto.ca/home/visit-art-toronto/?utm_source=website+&utm_medium=banner&utm_campaign=momus).
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10 months ago
53 minutes 28 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
Elvia Wilk – Season 7, Episode 1
Launching Season 7, Elvia Wilk, an essayist, critic, and novelist, talks to Sky Goodden about the decision to quit writing—if only to be able to start again. In discussing rejection, the changing conditions of the field, and the denuding of successful female writers, Wilk also touches on the authors who have modeled quitting ("the authors of the no"), or who have mitigated against their own exposure, including Olivia Sudjic, Enrique Vila-Matas, Rachel Cusk, and Elena Ferrante.Thank you to Elvia Wilk for her contribution to this season.Momus: The Podcast is edited by Jacob Irish, with production assistance from Chris Andrews.Many thanks to this episode’s sponsors: Night Gallery (https://www.nightgallery.ca/) and the AGYU (https://agyu.art/).
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11 months ago
1 hour 9 minutes 5 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
Lara Khaldi – Season 6, Episode 8
Lara Khaldi is our final guest on Season 6 of Momus: The Podcast. A curator, artist, writer, and educator, Khaldi was born in Jerusalem, Palestine, and currently lives in Amsterdam, where she has been newly appointed as director of de Appel (https://www.deappel.nl/en/news/12827-lara-khaldi-is-de-nieuwe-artistiek-directeur-van-de-appel). In this episode, Khaldi speaks to Lauren Wetmore about the Palestinian American artist, activist, and scholar Samia A. Halaby's book “Liberation Art of Palestine: Palestinian Painting and Sculpture in the Second Half of the 20th Century” (H. T. T. B. Publications, 2001). Both Khaldi and Halaby assert that art is a critical part of the Palestinian struggle for liberation. Although representation may feel impossible in the context of the ongoing genocide in Gaza and the West Bank, Khaldi urges that "the least we can do is talk about it, because the more we speak, the truth is said."Thank you to Lara Khaldi for her contribution to the season.Momus: The Podcast is edited by Jacob Irish, with production assistance from Chris Andrews.Many thanks to this episode’s sponsors: the Sobey Art Awards (https://www.gallery.ca/whats-on/sobey-art-award) at the National Gallery of Canada (nominations close March 20th) and The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery. (https://www.thepowerplant.org/)
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1 year ago
54 minutes 42 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
Nasrin Himada – Season 6, Episode 7
For the 50th (!) episode of Momus: The Podcast, Lauren Wetmore speaks to Nasrin Himada, a Palestinian curator and writer who is currently associate curator at the Agnes Etherington Art Centre at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario. "I write for my people. I write for Palestinians, and I write for the liberation of our lands," Himada says of their practice, which foregrounds "embodiment as method, desire as transformation, and liberation through many forms." Wetmore and Himada discuss esteemed Caribbean-Canadian poet and writer M. NourbeSe Philip's text, “Interview with an Empire'' (2003), thinking through how Philip teaches us to decontaminate language from imperialism so that it can "truly speak our truths." Himada touches on strategies, including artistic experimentation, collective action, and love.Thank you to Nasrin Himada for their contribution to the season.Many thanks to this episode’s sponsors: the Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery’s In/Tension podcast, and the Sobey Art Awards (https://www.gallery.ca/whats-on/sobey-art-award) at the National Gallery of Canada.
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1 year ago
59 minutes 53 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
Jessica Lynne and Catherine G. Wagley – Season 6, Episode 6
In this episode, Jessica Lynne speaks with Catherine G. Wagley about their shared love for Barbara Christian’s iconically confrontational essay, “The Race for Theory” (1987, Cultural Critique). Christian, a ground-laying literary academic who introduced writers like Toni Morrison and Alice Walker to the academe, goes toe to toe with her peers in this essay, rebuking the constraints and monolith of French theory and championing the approach of learning from the language of creative writers "as a way to discover what language I might use." In it, Christian both names and demonstrates the power of critique from within the institution, and its effective complement to calls for empowerment. And as Lynne and Wagley reflect on how criticism functions through a sense of curiosity and openness in both their practices, Lynne says, “it’s an intervening hand, right? Like, look at all these other planes that we could be living in. And, why not go there? Like, let's go there. In fact, we know writers who are already there. We know artists who are already there.”
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1 year ago
1 hour 9 minutes 29 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
Kate Wolf - Season 6, Episode 5
This episode features Kate Wolf, one of the founding editors of the Los Angeles Review of Books and a critic whose work has appeared in publications including The Nation, n+1, Art in America, and Frieze. Wolf is currently an Editor at Large of the LARB and a co-host and producer of its weekly radio show and podcast, The LARB Radio Hour. In conversation with Sky Goodden, Wolf discusses Reyner Banham's Los Angeles: The Architecture of Four Ecologies (1971) and what she took from it for her own writing practice: “There are many pleasures, as there are pains, but I think the pleasure of writing is unwinding an opinion, a point of view that’s latent inside of you and can become fully expressed. Especially in criticism,” Wolf adds, “the kind of closing mechanism that your brain sometimes furnishes for you where something becomes a story, both by grammar and by very minute plotting … this turn of the key in the door is immensely satisfying.” Thank you to Jacob Irish, our editor, and to Chris Andrews for assistant production.Many thanks to the National Gallery of Canada (https://www.gallery.ca/) and the Sobey Art Foundation (https://sobeyartfoundation.com/en/) for their support.
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1 year ago
1 hour 1 minute 35 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
Drew Kahuʻāina Broderick - Season 6, Episode 4
Drew Kahuʻāina Broderick (https://drewbroderick.com/) (Kanaka ‘Ōiwi) joins Lauren Wetmore in conversation about Māhealani Dudoit’s fundamental text, “Carving a Hawaiian Aesthetic,” published in the first issue of ‘Ōiwi: A Native Hawaiian Journal – He ‘oia mau nō kākou’, which Dudoit co-founded in 1998. Broderick, an artist, curator, and educator from Mōkapu, Oʻahu, champions the text, saying “Kānaka ‘Ōiwi don’t have a lot of writing about our recent stories of art, so the few texts that do exist become more significant with time because they function as rare points of reference that we can all share when we’re reconstructing our own histories.” Broderick discusses challenges faced by Native Hawaiians around stories of their art within institutional settings and the role of writing in his own practice: “I’m an artist, but I have to write now because the work that I make, no matter how understood it is by the communities that I’m a part of, if it’s not written about it doesn’t really exist for a certain audience … Writing for me is a way to no longer have to waste time explaining what I already know.”On the occasion of this episode and especially following the fires in Hawaiʻi, we encourage listeners to visit the Puʻuhonua Society (http://www.puuhonua-society.org/) and consider making a donation.This episode has been generously supported by the Mellon Foundation.
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1 year ago
1 hour 7 minutes 13 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
Sháńdíín Brown - Season 6, Episode 3
This episode features an interview with Sháńdíín Brown (Diné), continuing our series talking to participants in the Momus residency "Estuaries: An International Indigenous Art Criticism Residency (https://momus.ca/momus-emerging-critics-residency/)" co-hosted with Forge Project. Lauren Wetmore talks to Sháńdíín Brown, a citizen of the Navajo Nation and the first Henry Luce Curatorial Fellow for Native American Art at Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) Museum, about two very different texts written almost a century apart: Laura Tohe's "There is No Word for Feminism in My Language" (2000) and Uriah S. Hollister's "The Navajo and His Blanket" (1903). Brown speaks about these two texts in the context of the exhibition she has curated Diné Textiles: Nizhónígo Hadadít’eh (They Are Beautifully Dressed), which opens in early September at the RISD Museum. In highlighting the important role of women in Navajo culture, and Brown's own work as a facilitator of that culture, she speaks against racist writing about Indigenous art: "When someone so boldly says 'the Navajos are going to go extinct,'" Brown says of Hollister's text, "you're like, me being here, having Native people in museums, having Native people invited to be collaborators, and working in art history is a big deal."Diné Textiles: Nizhónígo Hadadít’eh (They Are Beautifully Dressed) curated by Sháńdíín Brown, will be on view from September 2nd, 2023 to September 29th, 2024.Thanks to our Editor, Jacob Irish; Assistant Producer, Chris Andrews; and many thanks to Gulf Coast Magazine's Toni Beauchamp Critical Art Writing Prize (https://www.uh.edu/class/giving/giving-news/toni-beauchamp-critical-art-writing-prize-announced/#:~:text=The%20Toni%20Beauchamp%20Prize%20recognizes,arts%20in%20Houston%20and%20Texas.) for their support.This episode has been generously supported by the Mellon Foundation.
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1 year ago
1 hour 7 minutes 12 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
Megan Tamati-Quennell - Season 6, Episode 2
Throughout the season, Lauren Wetmore and Sky Goodden will speak with participants of the Momus residency, “Estuaries: An International Indigenous Art Criticism Residency (https://momus.ca/momus-emerging-critics-residency/),” created with Forge Project (https://forgeproject.com/) and led by Dr. Léuli Eshrāghi (Sāmoa) and Candice Hopkins (Carcross/Tagish).To launch this series, Wetmore speaks with writer and curator Megan Tamati-Quennell (https://sharjahart.org/sharjah-art-foundation/people/megan-tamati-quennell), who is of Te Āti Awa, Ngāi Tahu, KātiMāmoe, and Waitaha Māori descent and is Curator of Modern and Contemporary Māori and Indigenous Art at Museum of New Zealand | Te Papa Tongarewa (https://www.tepapa.govt.nz/) in Wellington, New Zealand. Wetmore and Tamati-Quennell discuss a 2006 text on artist Michael Riley (http://www.michaelriley.com.au/michael-riley/) by Australian historian Nikos Papastergiadis (http://nikos.papastergiadis.com/), as well as Tamati-Quennell’s own writing and research, where she makes use of "Whakapapa," a knowledge system that binds all Māori people."The joy is being able to put something into the world, and honor some people, and maybe shift some ground,” says Tamati-Quennell about her ongoing work.Our deepest appreciation to this episode's advertiser, SFU Galleries (http://www.sfu.ca/galleries.html), whose special project, Witnessing Tsēmā Igharas: Hughadēsłēł — give it all away (http://www.sfu.ca/galleries/special-projects/current/witnessing-ts_m_-igharas--hughads---give-it-all-away.html), is available for listening now.This episode has been generously supported by the Mellon Foundation.
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1 year ago
42 minutes 20 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
Sky Goodden – Season 6, Episode 1
To launch our sixth season, Lauren Wetmore interviews Sky Goodden on a book that has recently got her all "twirled up." They discuss Art Writing in Crisis (Sternberg Press, 2021) which sits adjacent to an exhausting list of books on art criticism in crisis and points instead to the emancipatory potential of criticism, and, as Goodden and Lauren term it, the "present imperfect" of a field actively redefining itself. "I think it's important to understand what art writing and criticism has recently been in order to have a sense of its future," reflects Goodden. "However, I find that, for decades now, we can get so stuck in what it's been, we never get to the second part."All thanks to Jacob Irish (Editor) and Chris Andrews (Assistant Producer).Our deepest appreciation to this episode's advertisers: Plural Contemporary Art Fair (https://www.plural.art/en) and Maleko Mokgosi: (https://agyu.art/project/mokgosi/) Imaging Imaginations at the Art Gallery of York University.Look for us on Google Podcasts (https://podcasts.google.com/?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9tb211cy5jYS9mZWVkL3BvZGNhc3Qv), Spotify (https://open.spotify.com/show/5i3zzCD5YPIXWuiL1IA5aL), Stitcher (https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/momus-the-podcast), iTunes (https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/momus-the-podcast/id1342481337), and wherever you get your podcasts.Please consider donating through our Patreon campaign (https://momus.ca/patreon/).To inquire about advertising opportunities or other forms of support, please contact: skygoodden@momus.ca (mailto:skygoodden@momus.ca).
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2 years ago
41 minutes 31 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
Jessica Lynne and Kemi Adeyemi - Season 5, Episode 10
The season finale for Momus: The Podcast’s fifth season features a conversation between writer, art critic, and co-founder of ARTS.BLACK, Jessica Lynne, and Dr. Kemi Adeyemi, an “art-adjacent academic” and Director of The Black Embodiment Studio at the University of Washington. Adeyemi talks about her new book, Feels Right: Black Queer Women and the Politics of Partying in Chicago (Duke University Press, 2022), an ethnography of how Black queer women in Chicago use dance to assert their physical and affective rights to the city. Her conversation with Lynne looks at the pleasures (and challenges) of working between the classroom and the dance floor in an effort to pay a different kind of attention to Black queer women’s lives. “What pleasures are sweeter than talking with your friends about the brilliant things they write, create, and offer to us?” asks Lynne. Our thanks to Jacob Irish (Editor) and Chris Andrews (Assistant Producer), and thanks especially to Jessica Lynne and Dr. Kemi Adeyemi for their contribution to our fifth season finale.Many thanks, as well, to Cui Jinzhe (https://cuijinzhe.com/home.html) for her support.Look for us on Google Podcasts (https://podcasts.google.com/?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9tb211cy5jYS9mZWVkL3BvZGNhc3Qv), Spotify (https://open.spotify.com/show/5i3zzCD5YPIXWuiL1IA5aL), Stitcher (https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/momus-the-podcast), iTunes (https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/momus-the-podcast/id1342481337), and wherever you get your podcasts.Please consider donating through our Patreon campaign (https://momus.ca/patreon/).To inquire about advertising opportunities or other forms of support, please contact: skygoodden@momus.ca (mailto:skygoodden@momus.ca).
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2 years ago
1 hour 10 minutes 34 seconds

Momus: The Podcast
Momus: The Podcast is a monthly arts and culture program hosted by Sky Goodden and Lauren Wetmore. Bringing Momus's unique insistence on criticality into a more conversational register, the podcast is dedicated to transparent conversations with an international cast of artists, curators, critics, and art writers. Momus: The Podcast is in its 6th season and was named one of the top ten art podcasts by The New York Times in March 2020. Subscribe on Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and wherever you get your podcasts. If you would like to advertise on Momus: The Podcast, please contact Chris Andrews, Sales Director, at chrisandrews@momus.ca.