Helga WNYC Studios and Brown Arts Institute
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- Society & Culture
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Artist, performer, and host Helga Davis brings a soulful curiosity and love of people to the podcast Helga, where she talks about the intimate lives of creative people as they share the steps they’ve taken along their path. She draws listeners into these discussions with cultural change-makers, whether already famous or rising talents, whose sensibilities expand our imaginations as we explore what we think we know about each other. The new season of Helga is a co-production of WNYC Studios and the Brown Arts Institute at Brown University. WNYC Studios is a listener-supported producer of other leading podcasts including Radiolab, On the Media, and Death, Sex & Money. The Brown Arts Institute at Brown University is a new university-wide research enterprise and catalyst for the arts at Brown that creates new work and supports, amplifies, and adds new dimensions to the creative practices of Brown’s arts departments, faculty, students, and community.
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Designer Tremaine Emory on Validation in Consumer Culture
Tremaine Emory, streetwear fashion designer, discusses self-validation in consumer culture, and what it means to reshape the world into a place different than it was before.
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Director Whitney White on Depth and the Magic of Theater
Whitney White, Obie Award-winning theater director, talks about how powerful moments on stage originate in the body, and how she preserves her inner self amid the demands of large-scale productions.
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Singer Brittany Howard on Creative Rebirth and Spirituality
Singer-songwriter Brittany Howard discusses her early experiences with grief and its impact on her creative awakening, her stages of self-discovery, and her understanding of passion and authenticity.
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Helga Returns For A Sixth Season!
Helga Davis’s fearless conversations with artists and thinkers of all kinds returns for another season. Listen to new episodes every Tuesday!
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Video artist Arthur Jafa on actualizing Black potential, part 2
Black people know this: There’s a difference between what you say and what you mean. It’s been a matter of survival for us.
For over 30 years, American visual artist and cinematographer Arthur Jafa has captured the histories and experiences of Black Americans with projects that exemplify both the universal and particular facets of Black life.
In the second part of this masterclass in Black thought, Jafa continues his free-from improvisation through his breadth of knowledge and understanding of visual culture — embedded with all the references, rhetorics, and personal reflections of someone who has spent a lifetime dedicated to centralizing the varied experiences of Black Being. -
Video artist Arthur Jafa on actualizing Black potential, part 1
I don't want to be the prisoner in a box, even if it's a box I made.
For over 30 years, American visual artist and cinematographer Arthur Jafa has captured the histories and experiences of Black Americans with projects that exemplify both the universal and particular facets of Black life.
In this masterclass in Black thought — the first episode in a two-part series — Jafa shares a free-from improvisation through his breadth of knowledge and understanding of visual culture — embedded with all the references, rhetorics, and personal reflections of someone who has spent a lifetime dedicated to centralizing the varied experiences of Black Being.
Charlie Parker
John Coltrane
Ornette Coleman
Culture Strike
Laura Raicovich
Christina Sharpe
Hortense Spillers
Ultralight Beam - Kanye West
Love is the Message, The Message is Death - Arthur Jafa
John Henrik Clark
Jean-Michel Basquiat
Jimi Hendrix
Cecil Taylor
AGHDRA
Women in Love
Burnt Sugar
Butch Morris
Muddy Waters
Carl Hancock Rux
Virgil Abloh
LMVH
Off-White
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