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Change Lab Presents: Scene On Radio

Why AxS from ArtCenter

Release Date: 11/05/2020

Why AxS Podcast from ArtCenter: Rosetta Mission show art Why AxS Podcast from ArtCenter: Rosetta Mission

Why AxS from ArtCenter

Welcome to the Why AxS, ArtCenter’s podcast featuring brilliant scientific and artistic minds ponder the big why's that come with being a tiny part of this universe.  Our first episode, How to Land on a Comet, takes you aboard JPL’s Rosetta Mission, as we’re joined by mission planner Art Chmielewski + alum/illustrator Liz de la Torre (BFA 13), who mapped the surface of speeding comet for a first-of-a-kind rendezvous with a spacecraft — from a single pixel. Rosetta remains one of the world’s most ambitious — and arduous — space exploration missions. Landing on a comet as it...

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Why AxS Podcast from ArtCenter show art Why AxS Podcast from ArtCenter

Why AxS from ArtCenter

Join us for ArtCenter’s new mini-series investigating the powers of art and science–and the extraordinary, unexpected outcomes when the two fields intersect. The four-part series, launching September 12, features prominent artists–often with connections to ArtCenter–and scientists tackling big ideas about dark matter and transcendence from right- and left-brain points of view. At ArtCenter, science and art often cross paths–after all, CalTech and NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory are in our backyard, allowing for unique collaborations through programs, exhibitions, internships and...

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Karen Hofmann on building an accessible, affordable and inclusive education show art Karen Hofmann on building an accessible, affordable and inclusive education

Why AxS from ArtCenter

To many of our listeners, this guest needs no introduction. She is someone who has burst through seemingly impenetrable ceilings – glass and otherwise – to claim leadership roles historically held by men. She rose through the ranks as a strategic industrial designer before returning to ArtCenter, her alma mater, for a transformative stint as Chair of our Product Design department. She was also a driving force behind ArtCenter’s innovative DesignStorm program, through which major brands engage our stud

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Jackie Amezquita on migration, memory and making art show art Jackie Amezquita on migration, memory and making art

Why AxS from ArtCenter

When we first heard from Jackie Amezquita four years ago, she was an ArtCenter Fine Art student on the cusp of graduating. In a raw and revealing interview, she traced the arduous path she’d walked to find the stability she needed to risk everything for her art. 

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Aimee Mullins on Finding a World of Possibilities in Every Problem show art Aimee Mullins on Finding a World of Possibilities in Every Problem

Why AxS from ArtCenter

Aimee Mullins is a true polymath. Her passions and professional pursuits are as varied and boundless as the awards and groundbreaking strides she’s achieved within her many chosen fields. She broke new ground in athletics as the first amputee in history to compete against able-bodied athletes in the NCAA’s Division 1 track and field events. She went on to set records in the 100 and 200 meter races and the long jump.

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Artist Lita Albuquerque on Regeneration After the Fire show art Artist Lita Albuquerque on Regeneration After the Fire

Why AxS from ArtCenter

We’re lucky as artists that we can recover much faster because we can express. Nature recovers and we recover. 

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Artist Kim Schoenstadt on finding redemption through creativity and kinship show art Artist Kim Schoenstadt on finding redemption through creativity and kinship

Why AxS from ArtCenter

Client hypothetical. This is the term pioneering architect and designer Eileen Gray used to classify the many Modernist masterpieces she designed in the absence of actual paid commissions. She was simply making things because that was what she was made to do. 

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James Meraz on creating a path through unimaginable loss  show art James Meraz on creating a path through unimaginable loss

Why AxS from ArtCenter

James Meraz joined the faculty of ArtCenter’s Environmental Design department in September of 2001, shortly before 9/11. In the wake of that tragedy he wavered about how to proceed with his planned curriculum. How would it all be relevant? In the end, he resolved to lean into the uncertainty of that “cataclysmic moment,” realizing that the only way out of the pain, chaos and confusion was to go through it. 

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Change Lab Season 10: Forged in Fire, Make to Heal show art Change Lab Season 10: Forged in Fire, Make to Heal

Why AxS from ArtCenter

The next season of Change Lab debuts on March 23. We’re calling it Forged in Fire: Make to Heal and we’re looking at the ways in which adversity can be a conduit for creativity and, more importantly, how creativity can offer solace during the hardest of times. 

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53 Google's Ivy Ross on Reimagining the Life You're Meant to Live show art 53 Google's Ivy Ross on Reimagining the Life You're Meant to Live

Why AxS from ArtCenter

As Google’s vice president of hardware design, Ivy Ross is breaking new ground in the physical world for a trillion-dollar company synonymous with building tools for navigating the virtual one. Since assuming the role in 2014, she’s been tasked with translating a corporate identity consisting of a primary colored logo and blinking cursor into three-dimensional products and environments that are inviting, accessible and add value to people’s lives in ways big and small. 

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More Episodes

Welcome to our third episode of Change Lab Presents

Throughout this season, on alternating weeks, we’ll feature a handpicked episode from podcasts by, for or about the Black community.

This week we’re excited to share an episode from Scene On Radio, produced by host John Biewen, in conversation with series collaborator Chenjerai Kumanyika.

Scene on Radio is a Peabody-nominated podcast that dives deeply into issues central to American society. The show comes from the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University and is distributed by PRX. 

Today’s episode features Myra Greene, who for years explored blackness through her photography, often in self-portraits. She then explored what it would mean to take pictures of whiteness. By photographing friends, peers, and mentors, Greene visually ponders whether photography can capture and describe the nuances of whiteness.  

Please enjoy this Change Lab Presents episode of Scene on Radio.


Scene On Radio Website

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