Cerebral Women Art Talks Podcast

Phyllis Hollis

The Cerebral Women media platform presents Cerebral Women Art Talks, a podcast that is an extension of @cerebral_women. Conversations offer insights into the visual art world from artists, mainly artists of color, and female artists who freely articulate what inspires their creativity. In addition, you'll hear interesting perspectives from dedicated art professionals who work with artists and the art institutions that feature them. Art Advisors, Art Critics, Collectors, Curators, Gallerists, Museum Professionals.

  1. Siri Devi Khandavilli

    3 days ago

    Siri Devi Khandavilli

    Ep.274 Siri Devi Khandavilli is a multidisciplinary artist whose practice fluidly bridges tradition and innovation, drawing deeply from Indian artistic legacies while engaging in a broader contemporary dialogue. Working across sculpture, painting, and printmaking, she dissolves boundaries between disciplines to explore themes of cultural migration, feminism, ecology, mythology, and the nature of reality. Khandavilli’s artistic foundation was shaped from an early age at the Karnataka Chitrakala Parishath, where she began her artistic journey, learning Mysore Traditional Painting under the tutelage of her aunt, Susheela Devi. She also holds a BFA and an MFA in Intermedia from Arizona State University, as well as another MFA in sculpture from Karnataka Chitrakala Parishath. This diverse education informs a practice that is both meticulous and experimental, embracing elements of chance while also reflecting history, tradition, and transformation. A recurring motif in her work is the act of mirroring, both literally and conceptually. Her pursuit of the “perfect image” led her to invent a mirror finish on her canvases, blurring the distinction between painting and reflection. The image on the canvas is constantly being created in the present yet carries memories and imprints of the past. She also engages in an ongoing exploration of the tension between control and unpredictability, a theme that permeates her sculptural practice. Her methods, mediums, contexts, and surfaces destabilize singular readings, inviting layered interpretations that oscillate between the apparent and the subversive. She believes that an artwork is never about just one thing but rather about everything happening in the world at the time of its creation, as the artist is thinking and experiencing it all. Her works have been shown and are also held in major institutional collections, including the Kiran Nadar Museum of Art, the Nita Mukesh Ambani Private Collection, the Albertina Museum, Durham University Museum, the Fidelity Art Collection, ASU Art Museum, and the Queens Museum, among others. Splitting her time between New Delhi and New York, Khandavilli navigates a transnational space where many experiences overlap, creating a body of work that is both deeply personal and universally resonant. Photo Credit Manoj Kesharwani 2024 Lisa Sette Gallery httpswww.lisasettegallery.comartists41-siri-devi-khandavilliworks Gallery Ragini httpsgalleryragini.comsiri-devi-khandavilli BOMB Magazine httpsbombmagazine.orgarticles20260311siri-devi-khandavilli-by-melissa-joseph Art Centrix Space httpswww.artcentrix.com Meer httpswww.meer.comen88201-40-year-anniversary-exhibition-shaping-a-life-of-curiosity India Art Fair httpsindiaartfair.inexhibitors Scale Magazine httpsscalemag.onlinedesignhighlights-from-the-india-art-fair-2025 Artwork Archive httpswww.artworkarchive.com

    23 min
  2. Rosson Crow

    16 Jun

    Rosson Crow

    Ep.273 Born in 1982 in Dallas (Texas, USA), Rosson Crow lives and works in Los Angeles (California, USA). Rosson Crow graduated from Yale University, New Haven, (MFA obtained in 2006), and from the School of Visual Arts, New York (BFA obtained in 2004). The artist was in residency at the prestigious Cité Internationale des Arts in Paris in 2006. She is part of the emerging artist generation of the young contemporary arena both in the US and in Europe. Rosson Crows' work comprises immersive paintings, each steeped in a nostalgic atmosphere, with superimposed impressions and touching reminders of masterpiece films from the French New Wave, which she cites as one of her main artistic references. Rosson Crow recognizes in these literary films themes that are important to her: the fundamentally ambivalent character of reality, memory, experiential confusion and the multiple layers of interpretation that derive from them. By projecting this universe into a saturated future, with psychedelic colors and invasive ornamentations, Rosson Crow navigates between utopia and dystopia, at a time when the planet is threatened by our massive overconsumption: "In a way, the paintings are about the collective hubris of humanity, our bad behavior, inheriting a dream world and destroying it." Rosson Crow’s work was featured in important solo exhibitions throughout the US, and Europe. She has a strong presence in prestigious public and private collections. Rosson Crow has been represented by la Galerie Nathalie Obadia, Paris/Brussels, since 2005. Portrait credit Rose Eichenbaum Galerie Nathalie Obadia https://www.nathalieobadia.com/artists/37-rosson-crow/biography/ Miles McCenery https://www.milesmcenery.com/artists/rosson-crow CNAP https://www.cnap.fr/rosson-crow-la-rupture ArtsHebdoMedias https://www.artshebdomedias.com/agenda/rosson-crow-la-rupture/ Arts in the city https://www.arts-in-the-city.com/265337-rosson-crow-a-la-galerie-nathalie-obadia Le Journal Des Arts https://www.lejournaldesarts.fr/evenement/2026/rosson-crow-la-rupture-182905 Actu Arts https://actu.art/event/la-rupture-rosson-crow/ Ocula https://ocula.com/artists/rosson-crow/artworks/ Art Currently https://artcurrently.com/rosson-crow-on-the-seductive-destruction#:~:text=In%20line%20with%20her%20continued,and%20deconstruction%20of%20current%20America.

    27 min
  3. David Smalling

    10 Jun

    David Smalling

    Ep.272 David Smalling (b. 1987, Kingston, Jamaica) lives and works in New York. He studied Mathematics at Yale University, where he also trained at the Yale School of Art, and holds a Ph.D. from Harvard University. Smalling’s painting practice examines the invisible architectures through which cultural hierarchies, inherited rituals, and social taboos shape identity. Working through the visual language of Mannerism, Dutch Golden Age still life, and Old Master painting, he approaches the panel as a diagnostic surface: a place where shame, desire, aspiration, and restraint are staged with theatrical precision. His meticulous compositions often unfold within domestic and ceremonial interiors, where silver platters, pearls, ribbons, brass instruments, mattresses, and other charged objects become symbols of belonging and control. These objects appear seductive at first, but gradually reveal systems of pressure: codes of class, gender, decorum, and performance that shape the body before the body itself appears. In Smalling’s paintings, the feast, the bedroom, and the still life become psychological arenas in which access to elite or aspirational spaces is granted only through subtle forms of compliance. Drawing from the tradition of vanitas painting, Smalling reanimates the memento mori for a contemporary world whose inherited codes have aged but not disappeared. The snail, a recurring motif in his work, operates as a quiet agent of entropy: a slow, viscous disruption within otherwise pristine arrangements of wealth and beauty. Its trace becomes a measure of time, decay, and the instability beneath polished surfaces. Smalling’s practice is also shaped by a rigorous computational process. Through proprietary systems developed by the artist, including Autoglaze and Wide Gamut Pigment, he decomposes images into physically realizable layers of translucent oil paint, translating questions of color, optics, and perception into a precise choreography of material execution. This fusion of algorithmic structure and classical craft allows his paintings to inhabit a space between artifice and revelation, where beauty becomes both seduction and evidence. In 2026, TEMPLON New York presented Elizabethan Collar, Smalling’s first exhibition with the gallery. Taking its title from the veterinary device colloquially known as the “cone of shame,” the exhibition explored conditional belonging, the cost of access, and the fragile performance of identity within spaces of prestige. Through lacquered surfaces, artificial light, and meticulously staged symbolic objects, Smalling invites viewers to recognize the systems they inhabit, and the roles they have learned to perform within them. Headshot Photo Credit: Timothy Greenfield-Sanders Artist https://www.david-smalling.com/ Templon Gallery https://www.templon.com/artists/david-smalling/ Impulse Magazine https://www.impulsemagazine.com/articles Galerie Magazine https://galeriemagazine.com/must-see-solo-gallery-shows-april-2026 Whitehot Magazine https://whitehotmagazine.com/articles/elizabethan-collar-at-galerie-templon/7720 Ocula https://ocula.com/art-galleries/daniel-templon/exhibitions/elizabethan-collar/ Yale University Radio https://museumofnonvisibleart.com/interviews/david-smalling/ Heni News https://heni.com/news?artist=David%20Smalling Palo Gallery https://www.palogallery.com/exhibitions/32-david-smalling-wood-and-water/works/ ArtRabbit https://www.artrabbit.com/events/david-smalling-wood-and-water

    43 min
  4. Ruba Katrib

    2 Jun

    Ruba Katrib

    Ep.271 Ruba Katrib is Chief Curator and Director of Curatorial Affairs at MoMA PS1 in New York, where she steers the museum’s program and is a member of the leadership team. At PS1 she has curated exhibitions such as The Gatherers (2025), Ayoung Kim: Delivery Dancers Codex (2025), Sohrab Hura: Mother (2024), Rirkrit Tiravanija: A LOT OF PEOPLE (with Yasmil Raymond, 2023), Jumana Manna: Break, Take, Erase, Tally (2022), Frieda Toranzo Jaeger: Autonomous Drive (2022), Greater New York (2021), Niki de Saint Phalle: Structures for Life (2021), Simone Fattal’s retrospective in 2019, and solo shows by Edgar Heap of Birds (2019), Karrabing Collective (2019), Fernando Palma Rodríguez, and Julia Phillips (2018). From 2012–2018 she was the Curator at SculptureCenter in New York, where she organized over twenty exhibitions including 74 million million million tons (2018, co-organized with artist Lawrence Abu Hamdan) and solo shows by Carissa Rodriguez, Kelly Akashi, Sam Anderson, Teresa Burga, Nicola L., Charlotte Prodger, Rochelle Goldberg, Aki Sasamoto, Cosima von Bonin, Anthea Hamilton, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Magali Reus, Gabriel Sierra, Erika Verzutti, and David Douard. In 2018, Katrib co-curated SITE Santa Fe’s biennial, Casa Tomada, along with José Luis Blondet and Candice Hopkins. She is an advisory board member of CCA Berlin and a board member of Topical Cream, and regularly writes for periodicals and museum catalogues. Photo credit : John Kim Ruba Katrib https://www.rubakatrib.com/ MoMA https://www.moma.org/magazine/authors/92 MoMA PS1 https://www.momaps1.org/en/events/663-ayoung-kim-in-conversation-with-dawn-chan-and-ruba-katrib MoMA Greater New York Artists https://www.momaps1.org/en/programs/754-greater-new-york-artist-talks Venice Biennale Qatar Pavilion Announcement Art Basel Unlimited Announcement Unlimited May 26, 2026 interview https://www.artbasel.com/stories/art-basel-2026-unlimited-ruba-katrib-moma-ps1-curator Biennial Foundation https://biennialfoundation.org/2026/04/national-pavilion-of-qatar-at-the-61st-venice-biennale-presents-untitled-2026-a-gathering-of-remarkable-people/ Qatar Museums https://qm.org.qa/en/calendar/untitled-2026/Art Newspaper https://www.artnewspaper.fr/2025/09/02/ruba-katrib-nommee-commissaire-du-secteur-unlimited-dart-basel Document Journal https://www.documentjournal.com/2025/10/the-curators-shaping-the-future-of-archives-ruba-katrib/ Le Quotidien De l’Art https://www.lequotidiendelart.com/articles/27830-ruba-katrib-commissaire-d-unlimited-%C3%A0-art-basel-2026.html Anderson Ranch https://www.andersonranch.org/people/ruba-katrib/ Oolite Arts https://oolitearts.org/event/talks-ruba-katrib/ Site Santa Fe https://www.sitesantafe.org/en/artists/ruba-katrib/ Culturalee https://culturalee.art/art-basel-names-ruba-katrib-as-curator-of-unlimited-sector/ Cultured https://www.culturedmag.com/article/2025/09/02/art-basel-unlimited-ruba-katrib-curator/ Canvas https://canvasonline.com/ruba-katrib-appointed-curator-of-art-basel-unlimited/ Dazed https://www.dazed.me/news/forever-and-always-ruba-katribs-favourite-selection-of-dazed-mena-features

    25 min
  5. Ayotunde Ojo

    26 May

    Ayotunde Ojo

    Ep.270 Working primarily within the medium of painting AYOTUNDE OJO is a Nigerian artist whose practice explores the emotional intensity of human relationships and experiences. Born in 1995, Ayotunde Ojo is a Nigerian artist whose practice explores the emotional intensity of human relationships and experiences. Working primarily within the medium of painting, his work draws inspiration from the intimate moments in daily life, the unspoken language of bodily gestures and the hidden tranquillity of interior spaces. “I am interested in making paintings that contemplate the silent conversations that go on between self and space, pivoting between scenes of everyday life,” he has noted. “I am drawn to the idea of solitude and the melancholy that often accompanies these moments within a lived space.” Whether representing himself or close friends, Ojo views his paintings as self-portraits influenced by memory, the subconscious, encounters and exchange with people and his environment. Ojo completed a degree in fine art and graphic design from the Yaba College of Technology in Lagos in 2018. He works in a variety of mediums including charcoal, pastel, oil and acrylic, and embraces a muted colour palette, allowing for subtle tones and delicate hues to create an introspective and somber mood. His debut solo exhibition, These Four Walls, opened in 2024 at Southern Guild Cape Town. Ojo’s work has otherwise been included in group shows at Volery Gallery (Dubai), Harper’s Books (New York), Dida Gallery (Abidjan), Ko Gallery (Lagos), Rele Gallery (Lagos), and Mauani Mercier Gallery (Zaventem, Belgium). He has held residencies at Superzoom Art Gallery in Paris, and Southern Guild’s GUILD Residency in Cape Town in 2024. Southern Guild has also presented his work at Investec Cape Town Art Fair (2024) and at Expo Chicago (2024). Photo: Courtesy of the artist. Artist https://www.ojoayotunde.com/ Southern Guild https://southernguild.com/artists/ayotunde-ojo Tiwani Contemporary https://www.tiwani.co.uk/artists/132-ayotunde-ojo/ Litro Magazine https://www.litromagazine.com/arts-and-culture/ayotunde-ojos-rooms-refuse-to-stay-still-at-tiwani-contemporary-lagos/ Volery Gallery https://www.volerygallery.com/ojo-ayotunde Metal Magazine https://metalmagazine.eu/en/post/ojo-ayotunde-a-call-to-pause Maruani Mercier https://maruanimercier.com/artworks/4240-ojo-ayotunde-unanswered-2023/ Frieze https://www.frieze.com/tags/ayotunde-ojo | https://www.frieze.com/event/ayotunde-ojo-life-its-own Knowthisartist https://knowthisartist.com/artists/ayotunde-ojo C& | Contemporaryand https://contemporaryand.com/en/events/ayotunde-ojo-these-four-walls

    21 min
  6. Chidy Wayne

    19 May

    Chidy Wayne

    Ep.269 Chidy Wayne (Spain, 1981) is a Spanish-Guinean artist working primarily in painting and sculpture. His practice addresses fundamental questions such as identity and inner conflict through a gestural, material-based figuration that incorporates oils, acrylics, textured surfaces, and sculptures in wood, iron or plaster. Influenced by both the artistic avant-garde and ancestral cultural elements, Wayne revisits the primitive through a contemporary language, building a repertoire of signs with timeless resonance. His work establishes a dialogue between the rational and the instinctive, where matter becomes language and the energy of gesture acquires a spiritual dimension. Each piece confronts the viewer with their own human condition. Wayne’s body of work inhabits the space between the archaic and the contemporary, the intimate and the collective. From this position, he consolidates a practice that connects the force of the ancestral with the forms of the present. Photographed by: Maral Fard Artist https://chidywayne.com/ Southern Guild https://southernguild.com/artists/chidy-wayne Grege Gallery https://www.gregegallery.com/artists/chidy-wayne Francis Gallery https://francisgallery.com/exhibitions/ancestral-futures Frieze 2026 https://www.thecut.com/article/frieze-new-york-2026-art-scene-report-people-watching.html Imagicasa https://imagicasa.be/en/story/past-and-imagination-chidy-wayne-at-male-castle Luxembourg Art Week https://luxembourgartweek.lu/en/programme/chidy-wayne-solid-ego-005 Art Paris https://www.artparis.com/fr/gallery/4204 Boon Paris https://boonparis.com/chidy-wayne Sight Unseen https://www.sightunseen.com/2024/02/chidy-wayne-artist/ Creative Voyage https://creative.voyage/products/chidy-wayne-in-the-mirror?srsltid=AfmBOoq4pAl2IYXKeU_dEy2nwMNEatrMQteZkTChRRX153i4wMuc4n0G Milk Decoration https://www.milkdecoration.com/los-angeles-le-peintre-chidy-wayne-expose-ses-oeuvres-neo-primitives-a-la-francis-gallery/ Artsper https://www.artsper.com/fr/artistes-contemporains/espagne/113865/chidy-wayne Art Shortlist https://artshortlist.com/fr/artiste/chidy-wayne Boon Room https://boon-room.com/talents/42-chidy-wayne/?srsltid=AfmBOopS-37afSKbWM4Jre6mlL7BkYdp1EB7dcb3mED_FfMHWxycAQ1F

    22 min
  7. Laurena Finéus

    5 May

    Laurena Finéus

    Ep.268 Laurena Finéus is a Haitian-Canadian interdisciplinary artist working primarily in painting, performance and social practice. In her practice, Finéus has been concerned with representations of black geographies, maroon thought, and migratory histories through an array of painterly imagined landscapes. The teachings of Haitian scholar Michel-Rolph Trouillot in ‘Silencing the past’ informs her understanding of visual narration in her practice. Finéus’ strategies include the collapsing of history in order to question its production and mechanisms. Finéus is an MFA graduate from Columbia University (2024) and the University of Ottawa with a Bachelor of Fine arts (2020). Her work has been exhibited at the SHED NY (2025), Brooklyn Museum (2024), Hudson River museum (2023), the Ottawa art gallery (2021), and Art mûr (2019) among others . She is part of a range of private and public collections internationally such as the Canada Council Art Bank , the City of Ottawa’s Art Collection and Google. She is the recipient of the Saunderson Prize (2024), the Helen Frankenthaler fund (2023), the Elizabeth Greenshields foundation grant (2022-2023) , the Ottawa arts council IBPOC emerging artist award (2022), and the Ineke Harmina Standish memorial (2019). Finéus is based in Brooklyn, NY. Credit Photo: Avery Savage for SHEER WORLDWIDE Artist https://laurenafineus.com/ Fridman Gallery https://fridmangallery.com/2025/07/03/artists-laurena-fineus/ Essence https://www.essence.com/art/the-shed-nyc-portals-exhibition/ Columbia University https://www.vaexhibitions.arts.columbia.edu/class-of-2024/laurena-finus University of Ottawa https://www.uottawa.ca/fr/toutes-nouvelles/celebrer-lhistoire-culture-haitiennes-travers-lart-laurena-fineus Forbes https://www.forbes.com/sites/janelevere/2025/07/27/early-career-nyc-artists-display-new-work-at-the-shed-in-hudson-yards/ Hyperallergic https://hyperallergic.com/these-are-the-200-artists-in-the-brooklyn-museum-open-call-show/ Juxtapoz https://www.juxtapoz.com/news/magazine/features/laurena-fineus-love-letters-to-haiti/ Sheer Worldwide https://www.sheerworldwide.com/art/features/2025/8/7/artists-to-know-laurena-finus Jenkins Johnson Gallery https://www.jenkinsjohnsongallery.com/artworks/4308-laurena-fineus-nou-te-gen-yon-paradi-pou-antere-we-2022/ Blackcopper https://www.blackcopper.org/featured-artists/l Ambassade-Haiti https://ambassade-haiti.ca/uncategorized/laurena-fineus/ Haitian Times https://haitiantimes.com/fr/%C3%89tiquette/laurena-fineus/ The Next Contemporary https://thenextcontemporary.com/laurena-fineus/ Haiti Cultural Exchange https://haiticulturalx.org/programs/artists-opportunities/lakou-nou/laurena-fineus/

    31 min
  8. Modou_Dieng Yacine

    28 Apr

    Modou_Dieng Yacine

    Modou Dieng Yacine . Born in Saint-Louis (Senegal), Modou Dieng Yacine studied at the École Nationale des Beaux-Arts, Dakar (Senegal) and later earned an MFA from the San Francisco Art Institute in California. He currently lives and works in Chicago, and is also active as a curator/co-founder of the curatorial company Blackpuffin. Dieng Yacine works across painting, photography, collage, and mixed media. He often uses non-traditional materials such as denim, burlap, cardboard, vinyl records, archival prints, and hybrid materials layered onto surfaces. He explores spatial/architectural motifs, layering of materials, de-construction of façades, and reveals negative space (cut-outs, hollows) as a strategy. Major themes in his practices are identity, migration, postcolonial history, architecture & habitat, and the intersection of African and Western cultures. Dieng Yacine references the notion of asymmetrical parallelism (a term from poet/philosopher Léopold Sédar Senghor) to describe rhythmic repetition in time/space, which he applies in his compositions. The structure of the canvas itself often becomes part of the message (e.g., exposing stretcher bars, hollows behind façades) to comment on erasure, grief or absence. Modou Dieng Yacine is represented in numerous collections, among these are the collections of the Studio Museum in New York, the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art in Washington DC, Gervanne and Mathias Lerind Collection in Paris, Kranzberg foundation in St Louis, Fondation Gandur in Geneva and Carlsberg foundation in Copenhagen. Image courtesy of artist Artist as Curator Blackpuffin.co 193 Gallery https://www.193gallery.com/fr/artists/62-modou-dieng-yacine/ ICI https://curatorsintl.org/collaborators/22963-modou-dieng-yacine Specta https://www.specta.dk/modou-dieng-yacine Dakart News https://dakartnews.com/2025/05/02/modou-dieng-yacines-poetics-of-memory-and-identity-interview/ Artsper https://www.artsper.com/fr/artistes-contemporains/senegal/117864/modou-dieng-yacine Povos Chicago https://povoschicago.com/usr/documents/exhibitions/list_of_works_url/33/steve-doc-modou.pdf Laboratório de Actividades Criativas https://lac.org.pt/en/roots-2025-modou-dieng-yacine-sn/ Meer https://www.meer.com/en/97714-i-will-go-where-your-music-takes-me-dot-dot-dot Artisanal Metals https://artisanalmetals.com/2025/05/05/from-dakar-to-venice-the-postcolonial-art-journey-of-modou-dieng-yacine/ On-Art Media https://www.onart.media/evenements-autour-de-lart-contemporain-africain/black-venezia-une-exploration-artistique-de-modou-dieng-yacine-a-la-193-gallery/ Pilchuck https://www.pilchuck.org/workshop-staff/modou-dieng-yacine Juliet Art Magazine https://www.juliet-artmagazine.com/en/the-imaginary-architecture-of-connections-modou-dieng-yacine-and-zoila-andrea-coc-chang-in-venice/

    20 min

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About

The Cerebral Women media platform presents Cerebral Women Art Talks, a podcast that is an extension of @cerebral_women. Conversations offer insights into the visual art world from artists, mainly artists of color, and female artists who freely articulate what inspires their creativity. In addition, you'll hear interesting perspectives from dedicated art professionals who work with artists and the art institutions that feature them. Art Advisors, Art Critics, Collectors, Curators, Gallerists, Museum Professionals.

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