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Bad at Sports Episode 930: Antonio Darden

Bad at Sports

Release Date: 03/10/2026

Bad at Sports Episode 944: Amy Kligman show art Bad at Sports Episode 944: Amy Kligman

Bad at Sports

Recorded live at NADA Art Fair, this episode finds the crew in full fair-mode: cramped booths, warm beverages, and the particular energy of artists, curators, and dealers trying to make something real happen in public. Joining the conversation is Amy Kligman, founder of Special Effects Gallery, a Kansas City–based gallery barely out of the gate and already showing at fairs. Alongside Tom Sanford, the conversation moves quickly from logistics and booth banter into something deeper: how artists carry histories, how objects hold people, and how a gallery can function less like a marketplace and...

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Bad at Sports Episode 943: Nanako Kono and Olivia Zubko show art Bad at Sports Episode 943: Nanako Kono and Olivia Zubko

Bad at Sports

From the humid chaos of Miami Art Week, Bad at Sports drops into the garden at NADA for a conversation with two artists from Western Exhibitions: Nanako Kono and Olivia Zubkov. A loose, funny, and surprisingly thoughtful discussion about painting that isn’t painting, sculpture that remembers your body, and bathrooms as sites of intimacy, memory, and quiet surveillance. Nanako walks through her hyper-flat, acrylic-based “paintings” that live somewhere between screen, object, and comic logic. Olivia counters with slip-cast porcelain sculptures drawn from domestic life. Towels, tiles, soap...

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Bad at Sports Episode 942: Embajada Gallery show art Bad at Sports Episode 942: Embajada Gallery

Bad at Sports

Recorded live at NADA Art Fair, Episode 942 features a deeply generous conversation with gallerist and artist Christopher Rivera—founder of Embajada (“Embassy”) Gallery in Puerto Rico. Joined by hosts Ryan Peter Miller, Tom Sanford, and William “Bill” Pereda, Rivera discusses artist-led infrastructures, building a gallery as a political and conceptual project, and the evolving ecosystem of Puerto Rican contemporary art. At the center of the conversation is Rivera’s presentation of artist Taina Cruz whose hybrid practice—spanning painting, robotics, and installation—anchors the...

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Bad at Sports Episode 941: Myra Greene show art Bad at Sports Episode 941: Myra Greene

Bad at Sports

Recorded live in Atlanta at the Art Papers Symposium at Ponce City Market, Duncan MacKenzie and Brian Andrews sit down with artist, educator, and department chair Myra Greene for a conversation on materiality, identity, and the long arc from photography to textiles to weaving. The conversation centers on practice as evolution, about what happens when an artist refuses to stay in one lane, and about how material decisions carry conceptual weight. Greene reflects on her move from Columbia College Chicago to Spelman College, where she helped build a program grounded in storytelling,...

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Bad at Sports Episode 940: Emily Llamazales show art Bad at Sports Episode 940: Emily Llamazales

Bad at Sports

Recorded live during the Art Papers Symposium in Atlanta, Duncan MacKenzie and Brian Andrews sit down with artist Emily Llamazales to talk speculative biology, adaptive futures, and sculptural ecosystems that feel equal parts laboratory experiment and sci-fi relic. Emily’s work merges biochemistry, ecology, and material experimentation into immersive sculptural forms that hover between organism and artifact. From translucent photo-printed fabrics to ceramic “creatures” built from invasive species logic, her practice imagines a world where mutation is survival and adaptation is aesthetic...

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Bad at Sports Episode 939: Sarah Higgins show art Bad at Sports Episode 939: Sarah Higgins

Bad at Sports

Art Papers, Fire Ecology, and Ending Well This week on Bad at Sports, we sit down in Atlanta with Sarah Higgins, Executive and Artistic Director of Art Papers, during the Art Papers symposium. What unfolds is a candid, generous, and surprisingly hopeful conversation about what it means to end something well. As Art Papers approaches its final chapter after nearly 50 years, Higgins lays out a model for institutional closure that resists panic, rejects compromise, and instead asks: what if ending is a form of contribution? From the “fire ecology” framework to radical transparency about...

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Bad at Sports Episode 938: Tori Tinsley show art Bad at Sports Episode 938: Tori Tinsley

Bad at Sports

Recorded live at the Art Papers Symposium in Atlanta, this episode features a deeply personal and wide-ranging conversation with Tori Tinsley. Joined by Brian Andrews and Duncan MacKenzie, Tinsley reflects on caregiving, grief, motherhood, and the evolution of her “hug” figures across painting, sculpture, and animation. Her practice emerges from lived experience, particularly her mother’s diagnosis with frontotemporal dementia, and expands into a broader inquiry into emotional labor, embodiment, and the absurdity of contemporary life. Humor, instability, and tenderness coexist in work...

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Bad at Sports Episode 937: Nato Thompson show art Bad at Sports Episode 937: Nato Thompson

Bad at Sports

This week on Bad at Sports, Duncan MacKenzie, Brian Andrews, and Abigail Satinsky sit down with Nato Thompson for a conversation that spans collapsing institutions, alternative economies, and what it actually means to sustain a life in art. Recorded in the context of an art fair ecosystem that increasingly blurs community, commerce, and survival, Thompson reflects on his path from Creative Time to Philadelphia Contemporary (RIP unrealized museum), and into his current multi-pronged practice: consulting, artist support, and the evolving Alternative Art School. What starts as a casual catch-up...

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Bad at Sports Episode 936: Damon Locks show art Bad at Sports Episode 936: Damon Locks

Bad at Sports

Locks’ exhibition operates as a split composition: the back gallery leans into layered, exploratory collage rooted in his teaching experience with Prison + Neighborhood Arts/Education Project at Stateville Correctional Center, while the front gallery delivers sharper, declarative works built around text and figuration. The conversation frames this as a kind of A-side / B-side logic, with one space functioning like improvisational jazz and the other like a stripped-down, urgent punk track. Locks pushes back on easy analogies, but embraces the underlying idea: that both bodies of work are...

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Bad at Sports Episode 935: Chicago Critics Roundtable show art Bad at Sports Episode 935: Chicago Critics Roundtable

Bad at Sports

Guests: Annette LePique, Curtis Anthony Bozif, Pia Singh, Gareth Kaye Recorded with the support of Columbia College Chicago - Colum.edu What happens when you gather a room full of critics in a moment when criticism itself feels both endangered and newly alive? In this long-awaited return to the Chicago Critics Roundtable, Duncan sits down with a new multi-hyphenate crew of writers, curators, artists, and exhibition-makers to unpack the shifting role of criticism in a fractured “art ecology.” What emerges is a conversation about care, attention, subjectivity, labor, and the strange intimacy...

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Recorded in Atlanta during the Art Papers symposium: Fire Ecology

Artist Antonio Darden joins Duncan MacKenzie and Brian Andrews in Atlanta, where the conversation opens with one of the most arresting images in Darden’s recent work: an alien laid out on an autopsy table. What begins as a discussion of a strange installation quickly unfolds into a deeply personal exploration of grief, memory, and the ways artists translate trauma into form.

Darden describes the work Last One Left, a project that emerged from a cascade of personal losses: the deaths of his mother, brother, and father, leaving him the final surviving member of his immediate family. The alien body becomes a surrogate figure, a way to approach unbearable realities obliquely. Humor, conspiracy culture, and pop imagery become tools for making painful subjects accessible without dulling their impact. As Darden explains, confronting audiences with a literal body can shut down reflection, but a grey alien opens a space where grief can be processed at a distance before it lands.

The conversation moves through the complicated emotional landscape that shaped these works: family histories stretching from Trinidad to New York, the lingering trauma of police violence after his brother’s death in Atlanta, and the strange burden of becoming the keeper of a family archive of memories, objects, and stories. Darden reflects on what it means to inherit not only possessions but also responsibility for the narrative of a family’s past.

From there, the discussion shifts to Darden’s increasingly theatrical performance practice. He recounts a recent performance staged in an entirely blacked-out theater that blended wrestling mythology, Atlanta rap history, gospel music, cinematic references, and sculptural staging into a chaotic and emotional ritual. Undertaker imagery, Pastor Troy, Lil’ Kim, and The Naked Gun collide in a deliberately excessive spectacle meant to mirror the overwhelming density of memory and grief.

Throughout the conversation, Darden describes his work as a kind of mental montage. Cars, hip-hop, conspiracy theories, television shows, and family trauma coexist in the same symbolic landscape. Rather than separating high and low culture, he embraces the full range of references that shape lived experience.

The episode also turns toward the future, as Darden reflects on fatherhood and the challenge of raising a young son while carrying the weight of family history. In contrast to the losses that haunt his work, his son’s creativity and confidence offer a different kind of legacy.

What emerges is a portrait of an artist using humor, spectacle, and cultural collage to navigate the most difficult questions of survival, responsibility, and memory.

Name Drop List:

Antonio Darden – https://www.antoniogdarden.com
Craig Drennen – https://craigdrennen.com
Jared Christian – https://www.instagram.com/jaredchristian
Devonté Hynes – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dev_Hynes
Blood Orange – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_Orange_(musician)
Young Thug – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Young_Thug
Shawty Lo – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shawty_Lo
Pastor Troy – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pastor_Troy
Lil’ Kim – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lil%27_Kim
John P. Kee – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_P._Kee
Gillian Anderson – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gillian_Anderson
Dana Scully – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dana_Scully
The X-Files – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_X-Files
Tupac Shakur – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tupac_Shakur
Michael Jackson – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Jackson
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_%26_Order:_Special_Victims_Unit
Olivia Benson – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olivia_Benson
Gordon Ramsay – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gordon_Ramsay
Kitchen Nightmares – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitchen_Nightmares
Kanye West – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kanye_West
Bound 2 – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bound_2
The Ponderosa Twins Plus One – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Ponderosa_Twins_Plus_One
The Undertaker – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Undertaker
Priscilla Presley – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Priscilla_Presley
Leslie Nielsen – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leslie_Nielsen
The Naked Gun – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Naked_Gun
Cyclops – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclops_(Marvel_Comics)
X-Men ’97 – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-Men_%2797
Radcliffe Bailey – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radcliffe_Bailey
Art Papers – https://www.artpapers.org/
Fire Ecology – https://www.artpapers.org/fire-ecology/