12 episodes

A conversation series with young creators finding their way in the world. Hosted by Reylon Yount in partnership with the Office for the Arts at Harvard.

Music by Reylon. Mixing by Shez Manzoor. Cover art by Cindy Niu. Editorial support by Jenny M Ng.

16 Artists Reylon

    • Education

A conversation series with young creators finding their way in the world. Hosted by Reylon Yount in partnership with the Office for the Arts at Harvard.

Music by Reylon. Mixing by Shez Manzoor. Cover art by Cindy Niu. Editorial support by Jenny M Ng.

    Artistic Identity when No One is Watching (part 2) with Alistair Debling and Rachel Summer Cheong

    Artistic Identity when No One is Watching (part 2) with Alistair Debling and Rachel Summer Cheong

    EPISODE 8 PART 2

    Visual artists Rachel Summer Cheong and Alistair Debling dive deep into how their identities and philosophies have transformed with the pandemic and use of social media. They playfully touch on the ‘artist’ label, external validation, and authenticity.

    Rachel Summer Cheong is a misanthropic art gremlin and entrepreneur living in Austin, Texas. She highly recommends art as a covert way of making friends as an adult. She has an A.B. in the History of Art and Architecture and also (for some reason) a J.D. Plus, a small dachshund.

    With an experimental approach to form, Alistair Debling’s practice encompasses a broad range of time-based media, from video installation and live performance to alternative eco-film processes and AI-generated imagery. Though his work investigates diverse fields, from queer nightlife and ecology to the military-industrial-complex and its architectures, he is continually drawn to the question of what it means to survive. His work has been presented by the Whitney Museum of American Art (New York), Hauser and Wirth (Somerset) and the National Theatre of Great Britain (London).

    This podcast is presented in partnership with the Office for the Arts at Harvard and the Harvard Alumni Association. Learn more at 16artists.com

    Thank you to Jenny M Ng for helping to edit this episode.


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    • 29 min
    Artistic Identity when No One is Watching (part 1) with Alistair Debling and Rachel Summer Cheong

    Artistic Identity when No One is Watching (part 1) with Alistair Debling and Rachel Summer Cheong

    EPISODE 8 PART 1

    Visual artists Rachel Summer Cheong and Alistair Debling dive deep into how their identities and philosophies have transformed with the pandemic and use of social media. They playfully touch on the ‘artist’ label, external validation, and authenticity.

    Rachel Summer Cheong is a misanthropic art gremlin and entrepreneur living in Austin, Texas. She highly recommends art as a covert way of making friends as an adult. She has an A.B. in the History of Art and Architecture and also (for some reason) a J.D. Plus, a small dachshund.

    With an experimental approach to form, Alistair Debling’s practice encompasses a broad range of time-based media, from video installation and live performance to alternative eco-film processes and AI-generated imagery. Though his work investigates diverse fields, from queer nightlife and ecology to the military-industrial-complex and its architectures, he is continually drawn to the question of what it means to survive. His work has been presented by the Whitney Museum of American Art (New York), Hauser and Wirth (Somerset) and the National Theatre of Great Britain (London).

    This podcast is presented in partnership with the Office for the Arts at Harvard and the Harvard Alumni Association. Learn more at 16artists.com

    Thank you to Jenny M Ng for helping to edit this episode.


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    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/16artists/message

    • 24 min
    A Creative Process with Resistance and Resilience (part 2) with Karoline Xu and Kimiko Matsuda-Lawrence

    A Creative Process with Resistance and Resilience (part 2) with Karoline Xu and Kimiko Matsuda-Lawrence

    Part 2 of Episode 7. Kimiko Matsuda-Lawrence and Karoline Xu open up about surviving in racial capitalism and the human need to express one’s truth. These filmmakers of color discuss trauma and solidarity in light of recent and unending atrocities.

    Karoline is an actor, writer, and filmmaker. She studied English at Harvard and acting at Atlantic Acting School and Actors Theatre of Louisville. Off-Broadway: The Hard Problem at Lincoln Center Theater, and the world premiere of [Veil Widow Conspiracy] at Next Door @ NYTW, for which The New York Times singled her out as “terrific.” TV/FILM: Lincoln (NBC), Evil (CBS), PIPPI, Kiss (Means of Production), Softee’s “Oh No.” Her screenwriting has been a finalist of Outfest, Orchard Project, The Future of Film is Female, and WAVE Grant. Her short film PIPPI won the Audience Award at the Dallas International Film Festival. karolinexu.com

    Kimiko Matsuda-Lawrence is a writer-director hailing from Washington, DC and Honolulu, Hawai‘i. Raised in a family of activists, critical race theorists, and freedom fighters, she has always been drawn to storytelling as a means to building a new world. After working in theater in New York, Kimiko transitioned to television and film, writing for TV shows TWENTIES and BOOMERANG. Her past work includes the plays Holding: A Queer Black Love Story; Black Magic; and I, Too, Am Harvard (also a viral photo campaign). Most recently, Kimiko produced the short film little trumpet, set to premiere in Spring 2022.

    This podcast is presented in partnership with the Office for the Arts at Harvard and the Harvard Alumni Association. Learn more at 16artists.com

    Thank you to Jenny M Ng for helping to edit this episode.


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    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/16artists/message

    • 32 min
    A Creative Process with Resistance and Resilience (part 1) with Karoline Xu and Kimiko Matsuda-Lawrence

    A Creative Process with Resistance and Resilience (part 1) with Karoline Xu and Kimiko Matsuda-Lawrence

    Part 1 of Episode 7. Kimiko Matsuda-Lawrence and Karoline Xu open up about surviving in racial capitalism and the human need to express one’s truth. These filmmakers of color discuss trauma and solidarity in light of recent and unending atrocities.

    Karoline is an actor, writer, and filmmaker. She studied English at Harvard and acting at Atlantic Acting School and Actors Theatre of Louisville. Off-Broadway: The Hard Problem at Lincoln Center Theater, and the world premiere of [Veil Widow Conspiracy] at Next Door @ NYTW, for which The New York Times singled her out as “terrific.” TV/FILM: Lincoln (NBC), Evil (CBS), PIPPI, Kiss (Means of Production), Softee’s “Oh No.” Her screenwriting has been a finalist of Outfest, Orchard Project, The Future of Film is Female, and WAVE Grant. Her short film PIPPI won the Audience Award at the Dallas International Film Festival. karolinexu.com

    Kimiko Matsuda-Lawrence is a writer-director hailing from Washington, DC and Honolulu, Hawai‘i. Raised in a family of activists, critical race theorists, and freedom fighters, she has always been drawn to storytelling as a means to building a new world. After working in theater in New York, Kimiko transitioned to television and film, writing for TV shows TWENTIES and BOOMERANG. Her past work includes the plays Holding: A Queer Black Love Story; Black Magic; and I, Too, Am Harvard (also a viral photo campaign). Most recently, Kimiko produced the short film little trumpet, set to premiere in Spring 2022.

    This podcast is presented in partnership with the Office for the Arts at Harvard and the Harvard Alumni Association. Learn more at 16artists.com

    Thank you to Jenny M Ng for helping to edit this episode.


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    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/16artists/message

    • 29 min
    The Value of Music Beyond Mastery with Rose Whitcomb and Isaac Alter

    The Value of Music Beyond Mastery with Rose Whitcomb and Isaac Alter

    Music director Isaac Alter and music educator Rose Whitcomb give insight to how the pandemic halted the theatre world and further stunted the existing struggle of student access to arts education. They discuss the varied ways our society can appreciate music and how citizen-artists can shape the next generation’s experience of the performing arts.

    Isaac is a freelance pianist and conductor in New York. He has performed for Frozen, Dear Evan Hansen, King Kong, Wicked, and Moulin Rouge on Broadway, and served on the development teams for Waitress, The Great Comet of 1812, and Frozen. He also has worked on many workshops and readings for new musicals. Since the pandemic began, he has worked as a research associate at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.

    Rose is a musician and educator in the greater Boston area. She has taught general music in Everett Public Schools for 3 years, currently working at two different schools for grades K-12. She also teaches enrichment piano classes at Prospect Hill Academy Charter School in Cambridge, MA. Rose graduated with a Master’s in Music Education from Boston University this spring.

    This podcast is presented in partnership with the Office for the Arts at Harvard and the Harvard Alumni Association. Learn more at 16artists.com

    This episode was co-edited by Jenny M Ng.



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    • 44 min
    Centering Black Stories & Creating in Community with Joshuah Brian Campbell and Eli Wilson Pelton

    Centering Black Stories & Creating in Community with Joshuah Brian Campbell and Eli Wilson Pelton

    Parsing intertextual memes; learning on the job with Cynthia Erivo and Issa Rae; collectively centering Black stories in entertainment --  these are some of the experiences GRAMMY- and Oscar-nominated composer/singer Joshuah Brian Campbell and HBO television writer Eli Wilson Pelton cover in their conversation.

    JOSHUAH BRIAN CAMPBELL is a singer, composer, songwriter, ministry worker and actor from Cheraw, South Carolina. He is the co-writer, along with Cynthia Erivo, of the Grammy and Oscar-nominated and World Soundtrack Award-winning “Stand Up” (performed by Cynthia Erivo and produced by William Wells and Gabe Fox-Peck '20). Joshuah grew up groomed by Southern Black gospel traditions, and this grounding serves as his vantage point to all the music he performs and composes. He's finishing a master of divinity at Union Theological Seminary (NYC) in May 2021, where he does work in Hebrew and Greek translation, Christian/faith education, biblical interpretation, and Black religious studies.

    Eli Wilson Pelton is a television writer living in Los Angeles, CA. He has written for High Fidelity on Hulu, Insecure on HBO, and Generation on HBOMax, among others. He studied History and Literature but somehow got out of writing a thesis because he’s lazy. He also hates bios and doesn’t know how to end this so just will.

    This podcast is presented in partnership with the Office for the Arts at Harvard and the Harvard Alumni Association.

    Learn more at 16artists.com. #16artists


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    • 35 min

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