Art Moves
Eileen Roscina is an artist, experimental filmmaker and naturalist from Denver, Colorado. She holds an MFA in Art Practices from the University of Colorado, Boulder and a BFA from Emerson College in Boston, MA, and also trained at the School of Botanical Art and Illustration in Denver. Through biomimicry and the study of biophilia, her work examines human’s spiritual and social (dis)connection with nature, and seeks to raise questions about realizing a radically different metaphoric mapping of time, space and our place in the world. Roscina works in 16mm film and animation,...
info_outline Episode 16: How Strange it is to be Anything at All with Lexy Ho-TaiArt Moves
Lexy Ho-Tai is an artist, educator and goopey human. Her practice is expansive and ever-changing, but often rooted in exploring human connection, otherness, our inner-child and world-building through craft, play, DIY, monsters and collaboration. Recent projects include: creating a collaborative giant textile cuddle monster with 500+ elementary students, building and burning a wearable heartbreak monster, and making her first stop motion animation featuring tiny puppets of her family. She’s currently dreaming of a surrealist All-Ages Kids TV show with puppetry, masking and more (stay tuned!)....
info_outline Episode 15: What Makes it Home with Heather SchulteArt Moves
Heather Schulte is an interdisciplinary artist in Boulder, CO. Her work combines hand-made textile materials and techniques with digital fabrication and design processes, analyzing the intersection of personal and public forms of language and communication. In 2020 she founded ‘Stitching the Situation,’ a collaborative tapestry documenting the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic in the US. She has exhibited throughout Colorado at numerous galleries and contemporary art spaces, including RedLine Contemporary and the Denver Art Museum, as well as various galleries and museums nationally and...
info_outline Episode 14: The Moon in Her Mouth with Tricia WaddellArt Moves
Tricia Waddell is the textile artist behind Studio Blkbird, based in Denver, Colorado at Tank Studios. Inspired by her degree in fashion design from the Fashion Institute of Technology and a variety of surface design workshops, her work combines painting and screen-printing with reactive dyes and resists to create visual textures inspired by abstract art, ceramics, and graphic design. Often incorporating mixed media and fiber elements, her current work focuses on soft sculptures that are interior self-portraits exploring mental health issues from processing raw internalized emotions to...
info_outline Episode 13: The Oracle of AI with Paulus van HorneArt Moves
Paulus van Horne, a multimedia artist and technology researcher from Lafayette, Colorado, specializes in AI, machine learning, game design, and large-scale audiovisual installations, often incorporating supposedly autonomous digital technology. Their next exhibition, The Oracle of AI, explores the spiritual intimacy between humans and technology, Paulus prompts viewers to contemplate the implications of AI's role in replacing human emotional care.
info_outline Episode 12: Once Lost Now Found: One Drop of Blood Between UsArt Moves
Hailing from Albion, MI, Michael Dixon is an oil painter and full professor of art at Albion College. Dixon was born in 1976 to a white mother and black father in San Diego, CA. After participating in genetic testing Dixon found a sister, and subsequently learned he was one of eleven children. This discovery also provided his biological father’s name and identity. Having never met his biological father, Once Lost Now Found: One-Drop of Blood Between Us is a new body of work about his missing biological father and his new-found family members. After 47-years of wondering, Dixon is at the...
info_outline Episode 11: To Dusk with Kenzie SitterudArt Moves
In this episode, Kenzie Sitterud shares their process and approach for generating new work in an upcoming exhibition, To Dusk. To Dusk replicates the landscape of the Utah desert through material metaphor and is inspired by Sitterud’s Mormon cultural heritage and place of origin. Kenzie shares detail about growing up with quilting and how the desert landscape has inspired sound art and a gradient of colors that can be experienced in To Dusk. To learn more about Kenzie:
info_outline Episode 10: Indigo with Jahna Rae ChurchArt Moves
Jahna Rae Church shares her inspiration for creating art and the meaning behind her striking portrait paintings. She discusses her journey of facing and overcoming mental health challenges and how it has made her a stronger person. Jahna also talks about the new Community Mentee Residency Program at PlatteForum and invites listeners to attend her debut solo exhibition on January 13th at PlatteForum's Annex Gallery. Tune in for an inspiring and thought-provoking conversation with Jahna Rae about her journey toward strength and resilience. Jahna Rae Church is a Multidisciplinary Artist and...
info_outline Episode 9: Collected Perspectives with Jennifer Maravillas-BellArt Moves
Jennifer Maravillas-Bell is a multimedia artist focusing on cartography and land. She utilizes collage, acrylic paint, and found objects to create portraits of cities and places that tell stories of our collective pasts. In her upcoming exhibition, the Artlab interns and Maravillas-Bell will create a series of maps that give voice to their lived experiences and identities as together they explore their immediate surroundings in Denver. She hopes to inspire empowerment for the youth and the viewers involved in this examination and creation while also inspiring connection and investment in the...
info_outline Episode 8: Concrete Redundancy with Raquel MeyersArt Moves
Making connections with brutalist architecture, 8 bit pixel graphics, teletext and future fossils in her upcoming exhibition, “Concrete Redundancy,” Raquel Meyers uses obsolete technologies as tools to create animations and pose questions around our unhealthy relationship patterns with technology. Her work explores ideas around the naivety of brutalist architecture ethics and technology that emerged post world war II, exposing the dystopian undercurrents left in its wake. To learn more about Raquel Meyers visit:
info_outlineIn this episode, bio artist and sculptor, Lauri Lynnxe Murphy and photographer, filmmaker and producer Jonna McKone muse about nature, bugs, trees and changing landscapes, touching on the lingering effects of colonialism on our environment.
Art Moves is a new podcast by PlatteForum where resident artists and community members talk about what means the most to them within their practice, in a space where art meets social change.
To make a donation or learn about upcoming exhibitions, visit our website: platteforum.org/
Learn more about Lauri Lynnxe Murphy: www.laurilynnxemurphy.com/
Learn more about Jonna McKone: www.jonnamckone.com/