Studio Sessions

Matthew O'Brien, Alex Carter

Discussions about art and the creative process. New episodes every other week.  Links To Everything:    Video Version of The Podcast: https://geni.us/StudioSessionsYT  Matt’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/MatthewOBrienYT  Alex’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/AlexCarterYT  Matt’s Instagram: https://geni.us/MatthewIG  Alex’s Instagram: https://geni.us/AlexIG 

  1. 1D AGO

    71. What If Success Is The Unmeasurable Part?

    Send us a message. We open with a 93-year-old woman who ran an oil pump valve repair business and a boutique until she was nearly 100, and what her life says about the post-WWII metrics we've organized our sense of security around — the 401k, the house, the college fund, the car in the driveway. We dig into EM Forster's observation that the novel is sogged with humanity, and what happens to a life when the humanity gets exercised out of it in favor of the spreadsheet. That leads us to a visit with a former fighter pilot and lawyer in Plattsmouth — a man with signed baseballs, original paintings, a wall of 14,000-foot summits, and no visitors. We talk about legacy anxiety, what it means when your life's work has nowhere to go, and why the things that actually give this sliver of time any quality are exactly the things that resist being measured. We end somewhere near the question AI keeps raising: why are you doing this in the first place, and what happens if the answer isn't good? -Ai Support the show  If you enjoyed this episode, please consider giving us a rating and/or a review. We read and appreciate all of them. Thanks for listening, and we'll see you in the next episode.  Links To Everything:  Video Version of The Podcast: https://geni.us/StudioSessionsYT  Matt’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/MatthewOBrienYT  Matt’s 2nd Channel: https://geni.us/PhotoVideosYT  Alex’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/AlexCarterYT  Matt’s Instagram: https://geni.us/MatthewIG  Alex’s Instagram: https://geni.us/AlexIG

    1h 20m
  2. APR 14

    70. You Output What You Input

    Send us a message. We spend a lot of time thinking about what we make, and not enough thinking about what we take in. What we listen to, what we read, what we let interrupt us, what we hand our attention to without really deciding to — all of it shapes the output, whether we're conscious of it or not. This episode starts there. From that we get into the systems designed to keep you feeding them — platforms, algorithms, companies that started with a mission and ended with an optimization — and what it actually costs to let those systems run in the background of your life unchecked. We're not against technology. We use it, depend on it, sometimes love it. But there's a difference between using a tool and being used by one. The thing we keep coming back to is friction. Not difficulty for its own sake, but the kind of slowdown that forces a real relationship with the thing you're doing. When you build something, fix something, choose something deliberately, you feel responsible for it. That responsibility is where the good stuff lives. What you put in dictates what comes out — and most of us aren't being honest about what we're putting in. -Ai  If you enjoyed this episode, please consider giving us a rating and/or a review. We read and appreciate all of them. Thanks for listening, and we'll see you in the next episode.  Links To Everything:  Video Version of The Podcast: https://geni.us/StudioSessionsYT  Matt’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/MatthewOBrienYT  Matt’s 2nd Channel: https://geni.us/PhotoVideosYT  Alex’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/AlexCarterYT  Matt’s Instagram: https://geni.us/MatthewIG  Alex’s Instagram: https://geni.us/AlexIG

    55 min
  3. MAR 31

    69. What If Your Best Work Needs Less Sharing

    Send us a message. This week we got into something we'd been circling for a while: what happens to the work when the work and the content share the same camera, the same hours, the same brain. We used the image of food coloring dropped into water — once it's in, you can't pull it back out — and followed that wherever it went. Which turned out to be pretty far: the scarcity feeling that keeps you posting, the fantasy that a YouTube channel is a path to an artistic life, whether conflict and economic pressure are actually what fuel the thing rather than what threaten it. We also spent time with a more slippery question — what is it you're actually after, and have you looked at that honestly enough to know? We talked about photographers who worked monastically and ones who burned through marriages and health, about Vivian Maier nannying in obscurity, about whether patronage would free you or just kill the plant in a different way. And we kept landing on the same uncomfortable place: you can logic together a roadmap, but that's not what gets you anywhere. We closed on what we're calling is-ness — that quality in certain photographs where something just is, and you feel it, and there's no accounting for it. It's part of what drew us into this conversation in the first place. We didn't solve anything. But we got closer to knowing what we're actually asking. -Ai Support the show  If you enjoyed this episode, please consider giving us a rating and/or a review. We read and appreciate all of them. Thanks for listening, and we'll see you in the next episode.  Links To Everything:  Video Version of The Podcast: https://geni.us/StudioSessionsYT  Matt’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/MatthewOBrienYT  Matt’s 2nd Channel: https://geni.us/PhotoVideosYT  Alex’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/AlexCarterYT  Matt’s Instagram: https://geni.us/MatthewIG  Alex’s Instagram: https://geni.us/AlexIG

    1h 15m
  4. MAR 17

    68. Protect The Work At All Costs

    Send us a message. We started this one talking about whether building a content ecosystem around photography risks turning the work into content, and how the pressure to produce on a content timeline can collapse the space that photographs actually need. When you're operating from scarcity, you grab the recognizable brand for cheap instead of holding out for the thing that represents what you're building. That tension between immediacy and long-term identity ran through most of the conversation, how we each relate to our own work. We spent a lot of time on taste and self-criticism. Matt talked about genuinely loving many of his photographs and wondering whether that's a kind of happy cluelessness or something closer to what Eggleston described when he said he loves all his pictures. We talked about the Winogrand documentary again, the thousands of undeveloped rolls, what it means that the act of shooting might have mattered more to him than the output, and how the art world commentary around his work sounds increasingly hollow on repeat viewings. That led into mimicry versus voice, and the moment content stops being performance and starts being the thing itself. -Ai  If you enjoyed this episode, please consider giving us a rating and/or a review. We read and appreciate all of them. Thanks for listening, and we'll see you in the next episode.  Links To Everything:  Video Version of The Podcast: https://geni.us/StudioSessionsYT  Matt’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/MatthewOBrienYT  Matt’s 2nd Channel: https://geni.us/PhotoVideosYT  Alex’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/AlexCarterYT  Matt’s Instagram: https://geni.us/MatthewIG  Alex’s Instagram: https://geni.us/AlexIG

    1h 7m
  5. FEB 3

    65. Attempting A Low-Stakes Space For Photography And Conversation: PART 2

    Send us a message. WE STILL HAVE NO NAME... We spend most of this episode wrestling with what to name our new gallery space. The conversation moves through dozens of possibilities—from "Synchronicity" to "Room" to "Keyframe"—trying to find something that isn't pretentious, that wears well over time, and that captures the intersection between a photography gallery, Josh's furniture showroom, and a functional creative space. We talk about Star Wars naming, city names, and why the best names feel obvious once you hear them. Beyond the naming problem, we dig into what this space actually needs to be. Not a stark white-wall gallery, not a packed vintage shop, but something in between—a place that feels lived-in and functional while still formally presenting work. We discuss projectors versus CRT TVs, lighting strategies, and how to arrange furniture so the space encourages conversation rather than commerce. The bigger goal emerges: creating a scene in Omaha for street photographers and creative people, a place comparable to Warhol's Factory or the Neistat brothers' studio—somewhere work gets made because there's a community constantly pushing each other. We talk about curation philosophy, the difference between selling objects and presenting a way of seeing, and building trust with an audience by being selective about what gets shown. -Ai  If you enjoyed this episode, please consider giving us a rating and/or a review. We read and appreciate all of them. Thanks for listening, and we'll see you in the next episode.  Links To Everything:  Video Version of The Podcast: https://geni.us/StudioSessionsYT  Matt’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/MatthewOBrienYT  Matt’s 2nd Channel: https://geni.us/PhotoVideosYT  Alex’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/AlexCarterYT  Matt’s Instagram: https://geni.us/MatthewIG  Alex’s Instagram: https://geni.us/AlexIG

    58 min
  6. JAN 20

    64. Attempting A Low-Stakes Space For Photography And Conversation: PART 1

    Send us a message. We talk through the unexpected opportunity to create a photography exhibition space in Omaha's Old Market. The conversation covers how a casual connection through vintage reselling led to subletting a space for three months—low financial risk, no formal contracts, just the chance to experiment. We discuss rejecting the traditional gallery model entirely: no price tags, no sales pressure, just a place for photographers to gather, show work, and build community. The episode explores the tension between excitement and anxiety that comes with actually doing something instead of just talking about it. We examine why this informal approach feels right—how the lack of commercial pressure creates freedom to experiment, try different exhibition ideas, and focus on creating experiences rather than moving product. The metaphysical alignment between collaborators, the value of physical gathering spaces, and standing at the threshold of something that could either fail quickly or turn into something unexpected. -Ai  If you enjoyed this episode, please consider giving us a rating and/or a review. We read and appreciate all of them. Thanks for listening, and we'll see you in the next episode.  Links To Everything:  Video Version of The Podcast: https://geni.us/StudioSessionsYT  Matt’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/MatthewOBrienYT  Matt’s 2nd Channel: https://geni.us/PhotoVideosYT  Alex’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/AlexCarterYT  Matt’s Instagram: https://geni.us/MatthewIG  Alex’s Instagram: https://geni.us/AlexIG

    50 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
4 Ratings

About

Discussions about art and the creative process. New episodes every other week.  Links To Everything:    Video Version of The Podcast: https://geni.us/StudioSessionsYT  Matt’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/MatthewOBrienYT  Alex’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/AlexCarterYT  Matt’s Instagram: https://geni.us/MatthewIG  Alex’s Instagram: https://geni.us/AlexIG 

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