Art Moves
Using the arts as a bridge, we connect youth and artists with resources to reach their full potential. PlatteForum is a 501 (c)3 non- profit organization located in Denver, Colorado, U.S., founded in 2002. The Art Moves Podcast hosts in depth conversations with our Resident Artists to learn about their work, their process, and their inspirations.
info_outline
Episode 17: On the Table with Eileen Roscina
11/19/2024
Episode 17: On the Table with Eileen Roscina
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, sculpture/installation with natural materials and alternative photographic processes. She has exhibited film internationally, and visual art at Museum of Contemporary Art Denver, Denver Art Museum, Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art (Boulder), Museo de Las Americas (Denver), Vicki Myhren Gallery at University of Denver (Denver), Center for Visual Art (Denver), Arvada Center (Arvada), Dairy Art Center (Boulder), University of Colorado (Boulder), Salina Art Center (Kansas) and was the 2019 Resident Artist for the National Western Stock Show, a 2018-2020 resident at RedLine Contemporary Art Center, Denver. She is represented by Walker Fine Art Gallery in Denver, CO. combat apathy look inward environment recommit shift lifestyle willing sacrifice climate powerless reexamine luxury energy river colorado diet big corporation now self future melancholia solutions changes problem not someone else's fire land time out of rain cooperation stress resilience loss news alfalfa beef lever live without nests everything bottom converse legumes anxiety cultural spreading knowledge zero waste cooking garden information spread repurpose together choice plastic assess recycle compost uplift native lawns impact consume less true cost dinner methane greenhouse grassroots decentering humans indirect enjoy wonder potential driver reflect fly less what's at stake implicate table meal inhibit motivate bandaid compromise irrigation destruction make changes comforts decenter responsibility courage despair vote spend ozone deep time generations from now bring it to the table Instagram:
/episode/index/show/0ed4f2bd-9e6e-47d6-b695-c7451c5cb81f/id/34004677
info_outline
Episode 16: How Strange it is to be Anything at All with Lexy Ho-Tai
08/15/2024
Episode 16: How Strange it is to be Anything at All with Lexy Ho-Tai
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!). She’s bad at small talk, convinced that everything is made up, and uses art to explore alternative ways of being in this world. Lexy’s a core member of eco-theater groups Superhero Clubhouse and Agile Rascal Bicycle Touring Theatre. She’s had solo shows at the Museum of Arts and Design and Flux Factory, and has also shown work at the Abrons Art Center, The Highline, and the Museum of Modern Art. Past residencies include Watermill Center, Flux Factory, ARoS Museum, Everglades National Park, Art Farm, Elsewhere Museum, Wassaic Project, Vermont Studio Center and the Museum of Arts and Design, where she was a Van Lier Fellow. Recently, she was a part of the American Craft Council’s Emerging Artist Cohort. Her exhibition with PlatteForum, “How Strange it is to be Anything at All” is lovingly crafted, and features slightly existential soft sculptures, puppets, wearables, and drawings which come to life in a new stop-motion animation and installation. Throughout Lexy’s residency, she has worked with our ArtLab interns to create mixed media wearable monster costumes and explored the following questions: What does it mean to be human? How can we free our minds? How can our bodies be home? Lexy invites viewers into a space where you can rest, create, and be amongst the many beings there, which are extensions and mirrors of ourselves. After all, everything is made up and we can be anything at all. So, loosen up your human suits – all parts of you are welcome here. This is a soft place to land. Blog: Instagram: @
/episode/index/show/0ed4f2bd-9e6e-47d6-b695-c7451c5cb81f/id/32595632
info_outline
Episode 15: What Makes it Home with Heather Schulte
06/20/2024
Episode 15: What Makes it Home with Heather Schulte
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 internationally. Her work has been featured in publications such as, "Fiber Art Now," the "Surface Design Journal," The Denver Post, W.I.R.E.D., and numerous podcasts and independent magazines. She received her BFA from the University of NE-Lincoln in 2003. Her exhibition explores the notion of “home” as a site for dialogue about socio-political issues. Through an immersive and interactive installation, guests will be invited to settle in and engage with domestic objects, materials, and settings as an intersection of private and public space. We will consider questions of shelter, health, and safety and how they are inextricable from each other and economic and political contexts. In the midst of growing housing crises, refugees seeking asylum, genocidal conflict, and the ongoing effects of a global pandemic, how can we expand our ideas and beliefs about “home” to radically welcome not only other people, but also fully embrace our own selves? Can we reanimate our most intimate spaces and admit these places of dialogue and conflict, illness and healing, cohabitation of private and public selves? IG: @
/episode/index/show/0ed4f2bd-9e6e-47d6-b695-c7451c5cb81f/id/31826362
info_outline
Episode 14: The Moon in Her Mouth with Tricia Waddell
05/06/2024
Episode 14: The Moon in Her Mouth with Tricia Waddell
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 depression and negative self-talk. Inspired by the beliefs in many cultures that objects and dolls can hold protective, healing, and magical powers as talismans, she strives to create intimate works that embody quiet emotional power and empathy. Her goal is to create space for people to feel seen and heard, while also removing the stigma of discussing mental health, particularly in marginalized communities. Exhibitions include “A Spiral is Linear” at Friend of a Friend Gallery (2023), “Pink Progressions: Collaborations” at the Arvada Center Gallery (2020), and various art pop-ups in the Denver area. She’s a board member at Tilt West and an artist member of the Colorado Art Therapy Association. When she’s not in the studio, she works as an editor, writer, and storyteller creating content for artists and non-profits. @
/episode/index/show/0ed4f2bd-9e6e-47d6-b695-c7451c5cb81f/id/31147938
info_outline
Episode 13: The Oracle of AI with Paulus van Horne
05/06/2024
Episode 13: The Oracle of AI with Paulus van Horne
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.
/episode/index/show/0ed4f2bd-9e6e-47d6-b695-c7451c5cb81f/id/31147868
info_outline
Episode 12: Once Lost Now Found: One Drop of Blood Between Us
05/06/2024
Episode 12: Once Lost Now Found: One Drop of Blood Between Us
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 beginning of a new chapter of discovery both personally and artistically. To learn more about Michael: To learn more about PlatteForum:
/episode/index/show/0ed4f2bd-9e6e-47d6-b695-c7451c5cb81f/id/31147843
info_outline
Episode 11: To Dusk with Kenzie Sitterud
05/06/2024
Episode 11: To Dusk with Kenzie Sitterud
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:
/episode/index/show/0ed4f2bd-9e6e-47d6-b695-c7451c5cb81f/id/31147828
info_outline
Episode 10: Indigo with Jahna Rae Church
05/06/2024
Episode 10: Indigo with Jahna Rae Church
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 emerging Muralist in Denver, Colorado. She received her degree in Illustration at The Academy of Art University in San Francisco, CA in 2017. Jahna Rae specializes in portrait painting and abstraction. She is exploring topics of spirituality, diversity, symbolism, and self-discovery. To learn more about Jahna visit:
/episode/index/show/0ed4f2bd-9e6e-47d6-b695-c7451c5cb81f/id/31147793
info_outline
Episode 9: Collected Perspectives with Jennifer Maravillas-Bell
05/06/2024
Episode 9: Collected Perspectives with Jennifer Maravillas-Bell
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 places we exist. In this episode, you will hear intern voices woven together with a series of field recordings inspired by the concept of audio maps as interns speak of places that have impacted them. To learn more about Jennifer Maravillas-Bell visit:
/episode/index/show/0ed4f2bd-9e6e-47d6-b695-c7451c5cb81f/id/31147748
info_outline
Episode 8: Concrete Redundancy with Raquel Meyers
05/06/2024
Episode 8: Concrete Redundancy with Raquel Meyers
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:
/episode/index/show/0ed4f2bd-9e6e-47d6-b695-c7451c5cb81f/id/31147713
info_outline
Episode 7: Annette Isham and Nori Pao
05/06/2024
Episode 7: Annette Isham and Nori Pao
Our current Artist in Residence, Annette Isham, takes over the podcast! Annette is an artist and professor living in Denver, Colorado. She creates captivating mirrored, animated and layered videos within landscapes where she explores identity but more specifically, how a woman of mixed race can appropriate the masculine myth of the American West. Annette invited her friend Nori Pao to discuss the intersectionality of ideas and concepts in their creative practices. Nori is a ceramicist and also works in several other mediums such as photography, drawing and digital fabrication, her works explores themes of time, memory and identity, she like Annette uses landscape and location in a very interesting way to reference the self. Together they talk about embracing obstacles, getting into the flow state, breaking the rules, working with limitations and collaborating with materials vs controlling them. Born in the Dominican Rep and growing up in Colorado, Annette received her M.F.A. from The American University in Washington, DC and currently teaches 4D and Animation at Rocky Mountain College of Art + Design. To learn more about Annette visit: To learn more about Nori visit:
/episode/index/show/0ed4f2bd-9e6e-47d6-b695-c7451c5cb81f/id/31147558
info_outline
Episode 6: Portraits of Change
05/06/2024
Episode 6: Portraits of Change
Jonathan and Letishia Kelley, talk about what it was like to document the Minneapolis uprising and the protests at the 2020 Fourth of July GOP rallies at Mount Rushmore. They discuss the skewed media portrayal of the events, Lakota protest tactics and the beauty of seeing all kinds of people come together for the good of all. They will be sharing their collection of photographs and video in an exhibition titled, “Portraits of Change” November 5th at PlatteForum in Denver, CO. As a creative husband/wife duo Jonathan Kelley (Afro Indigenous) and Letishia Kelley (Diné), are storytellers that aspire to create narratives that evokes awareness, unity, and collaboration. As lifelong learners, researchers and students of the visual arts, the emotional connections to their motives lead them to capture the most intimate moments. The themes that they choose come from a place of intuition and an impulsive desire to partake in the unique stories that unfold around them. The beauty and the essence of their body of work is truly based on the unique characters and creative storylines from an internal point of view. As Filmmakers, Music Producers, Editors, Photographers, Creative Writers, and Community Activists they use complementary perspectives which produce thought-provoking, candid, dramatic and authentic forms of self-expression. Letishia Lynn Kelley (Diné) was born and resided on the Navajo Nation Reservation in Northern Arizona until she was 18 years of age. She attended the University of Arizona and Pima Community College in Tucson, AZ where she studied Psychology and Native American Studies. Having a long affinity for film, particularly Star Wars and Documentaries, Letishia decided to pursue Photography and Filmmaking along with other creative passions. As an Indigenous Leader, Letishia is the CEO of iiCreatives which is a Creative Agency Co-Founded with her husband and creative partner Jonathan Kelley. Letishia’s 1st photo exhibition titled “Portraits of Change '' will be opening at PlatteForum in Denver, CO on November 5, 2021. Jonathan Kelley (Afro-Indigenous) was born and raised in Oakland, CA. He spent some of his youth living in Orlando, FL after his parents divorced at a very young age. He graduated from Johnson and Wales University (Denver, Colorado) with a degree in Business Administration in 2002 and in 2016 he returned to Denver, CO with his creative partner Letishia Kelley to be a contributor to the blossoming art, cultural, innovative, and creative community in Colorado. In 2017 he graduated from the Colorado Business Committee for the Arts (CBCA) Leaderships Arts Program. Upon graduation he served on the Board of Directors for PlatteForum, a youth arts organization and on November 5, 2021, his 1st photo exhibition “Portraits of Change” will open at PlatteForum. Website: Instagram: @
/episode/index/show/0ed4f2bd-9e6e-47d6-b695-c7451c5cb81f/id/31147503
info_outline
Episode 5: Collective Futures
05/06/2024
Episode 5: Collective Futures
Alejandra Abad talks about her upcoming exhibition at PlatteForum, reveals her creative process and asks ArtLab interns what traditions they would like to see passed down, as they imagine a collective future together through her upcoming exhibition. Alejandra Abad was born in Venezuela and partially raised in Florida. She is an interdisciplinary artist with a penchant for dense, fantastical landscapes through abstraction and light. Her style is informed by her studies in Architecture at Florida Atlantic University and in Film, Video, and New Media at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where she received her BFA. In 2018 she received a fellowship at CU Boulder, in Spring of 2021 she will have earned an MFA in Interdisciplinary Media Arts Practices. Currently she is part of the 2020-2021 Engaged Arts and Humanities Graduate Student Scholars cohort at CU Boulder. Her recent projects feature conceptual and collaborative pieces that work to break down the barriers between artist and audience. She creates honest and symbolic narratives in a visual language that depicts fragmentation, mythology, and folklore that reflect her identity and values. Her installations use analog and digital processes – including painting, animation, sculpture, audio, projection, etc. – to make immersive environments that investigate wellness, community, equity, empathy and imagined futures. Art Moves is a new PlatteForum podcast 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/ To learn more about Alejandra visit her website:
/episode/index/show/0ed4f2bd-9e6e-47d6-b695-c7451c5cb81f/id/31147448
info_outline
Episode 4: Steven Frost and Kim McCarty
04/05/2024
Episode 4: Steven Frost and Kim McCarty
Steven Frost, PlatteForum’s most recent resident artist and Kim Estes McCarty, Executive Director of PlatteForum candidly chat about Steven’s residency at PlatteForum, working with youth, organizational equity, queer art, fiber art and the changes that PlatteForum is currently undergoing. Steven was PlatteForum’s 2021 summer resident artist, he is an interdisciplinary artist with a focus on textiles, memes, queer history, pop culture and community development in DIY spaces and libraries. He is also a professor of media studies at the University of Colorado Boulder. Kim is the Executive Director of PlatteForum, Through Kim’s collaborative leadership style, PlatteForum has achieved great success in building trusting relationships with teens, using art to educate them on important social issues, and helping them become highly engaged citizens and leaders. As executive director, Kim plays an active role in guiding youth as they transform from quiet observers to vocal contributors, and has been inspired by their active engagement in student council and school boards, participation in activist organizations and events, purposeful outreach to elected officials, and enrollment in college majors that lead to public service careers. To make a donation visit:
/episode/index/show/0ed4f2bd-9e6e-47d6-b695-c7451c5cb81f/id/30699703
info_outline
Episode 3: Migration Connects Us All
04/05/2024
Episode 3: Migration Connects Us All
Artist and activist Laura Soto joins us in this episode to discuss and celebrate recent immigration bills that have passed favoring immigrant rights in the state of Colorado. Laura eloquently shares her personal story and experience through poetry both in Spanish and English. This episode ends in multiple mini interviews with PlatteForum community members who offer what they think Americans should know about the immigrant experience from their perspective. Laura Soto is a DACA recipient, Mexican ARTivist who currently resides in Longmont, CO and works at Philanthropiece Foundation as Operations Manager. Through her position, Laura serves in many local initiatives in a Bilingual and Bicultural capacity under the themes of Latinx leadership, immigrant rights, indigenous advocacy, climate justice, economic justice and youth engagement. She is an active member of the SVVSD Parents Involved in Education (PIE) Taskforce, the Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition (CIRC) and the Latinx Advisory Committee to Congressman Joe Neguse. She has co-founded local grassroots organizations Voces Unidas of Boulder County and Colectivo Cultura. Laura shares her activism via performance, spoken-word and written poetry. She has performed for Motus Theater, Latino Community Foundation of Colorado, City of Longmont, City of Lafayette, Migrant Youth Leadership Institute, Noche de Peña in Boulder, Tonos Latinos, Latino Advocacy Day, the Hispanic Access Foundation among others. Laura says: " Through my work as an artivist I say that “I was born a warrior.” In part because I want to honor all the struggles and adversities my family, my ancestors, my people, and I have lived through, but also because I wish to inspire this “fighter spirit” onto my community; to show that resilience is not something we do only through hard times, but that it is a way of life." 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. Special thanks to: Kevin, Brice, Eriko, Tsogo and Edna To make a donation or learn about upcoming exhibitions, visit our website:
/episode/index/show/0ed4f2bd-9e6e-47d6-b695-c7451c5cb81f/id/30699648
info_outline
Episode 2: Biophilia
04/05/2024
Episode 2: Biophilia
In 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: Learn more about Lauri Lynnxe Murphy: Learn more about Jonna McKone:
/episode/index/show/0ed4f2bd-9e6e-47d6-b695-c7451c5cb81f/id/30699553
info_outline
Episode 1: Art and Repair
04/05/2024
Episode 1: Art and Repair
This debut episode explores a Black artist's journey of self discovery and healing interweaved with a dive into the Japanese art and philosophy of Kintsugi. Denver artist and photographer, Narkita Gold shares her personal story of self growth and healing while we also hear from Japanese Arts Network Founder and Creative Producer, Courtney Ozaki about the art of repair through Kintsugi. Art Moves is a new PlatteForum podcast 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: learn more about Narkita Gold and the Japanese Arts Network:
/episode/index/show/0ed4f2bd-9e6e-47d6-b695-c7451c5cb81f/id/30699408