FUSE, photo by Michela Del Forno
FUSE, photo by Michela Del Forno
Play!
Celeste Lab, Celeste Prize
Originally aired on Monday, November 28th, 2011

A profile of the evening-long opening of an exhibition at The Invisible Dog Art Center in Brooklyn, celebrating the artists of the Celeste Network and the awarding of its 2011 prize in a variety of disciplines. Celeste Lab, the associated online community of the project, invited ARTonAIR.org to streamcast and document the project with artist and co-producer Roberto Paci Dalò. Paci Dalò also gathered worldwide partners from Zagreb, Bologna, Newcastle, Berlin, Prague and elsewhere who simultaneously created, streamed, shared, and relayed sound and video works.

This program features interviews, music and audio documentation of artworks, and captured streamcasts from around the world. They are, in order of appearance, Daniel Bonhomme’s Sea of Roofs with music by Half Asleep, the soundtrack from Jonathan Gilley’s video Higg’s Bridge, curator Vivi Yip talks about Indonesian artist Syagini Ratna Wulan, performance of Harry by the Paris-based artists A-li-ce (André Fèvre and Domitille Sanyas), the streamcast of STREETMUSIC 3CITIES berlin by mlp, Canada-based artist Alex Grguric talks about his work, audio from the installation N1.0 by FUSE, the soundtrack for Rome-based artist Andreij Pollister’s video La Creazione, the muzak loop soundtrack from Indian artist Chinmoyi Patel's video Shall We? and, of course, the award presentation by Steven Music, founder of the Celeste Network.

The 2011 Celeste Prize winners were chosen by jurors Eugene Tan and Sara Reisman. Visit celesteprize.com to see extensive documentation and information on those participating in the Celeste Network, along with thousands of other artists.

The Invisible Dog Art Center opened in October, 2009 at 51 Bergen Street in Brooklyn, a raw space in a vast, converted factory building with a charmed history and an open-ended mission: to create, from the ground up, a new kind of interdisciplinary arts center.

Other shows from Living History
Hosted by Alanna Heiss , Eve Essex
Originally aired Friday, May 11th, 2012

Artist Eve Essex and Clocktower Director Alanna Heiss gathered a group of music enthusiasts from different backgrounds and experiences together for casual but topical discussion on the evolving art of instrument building and its impact on music.


Read More
Hosted by Alanna Heiss
Originally aired Tuesday, April 24th, 2012

On the occasion of their visit to New York to open their London Pictures exhibition at Lehmann Maupin Gallery and Sonnabend (26 April – 23 June 2012) Gilbert & George sat down at the Clocktower Gallery with Alanna Heiss and Jessica Craig-Martin.


Read More
Originally aired Monday, March 5th, 2012

From a Hard Press Editions event at the CUE Art Foundation in New York, Irving Sandler and Marylyn Dintenfass discuss the significance of automobiles and color in her installation, "Parallel Park" and the impact of public art installations overall.


Read More
Originally aired Monday, September 19th, 2011

A glimpse into the people and history behind Exit Art, the NYC alternative gallery and art center known for provocative exhibitions and an activist commitment to new ideas. Ingberman's August 2011 death is an immeasurable loss to our art community.


Read More
Originally aired Monday, May 30th, 2011

Lynn Hershman Leeson’s film !Women Art Revolution has a theatrical premiere at New York City’s IFC Center on June 1, 2011. Robot Radio? Her next project is with Tilda Swinton and Marilyn Manson as part of her Teknolust Trilogy (DNA in cyborgs!).


Read More
Originally aired Friday, October 29th, 2010

A talk with the director of the Queens Museum of Art director Tom Finkelpearl on the subject of Survival Strategies for the Recession-Weary Museum Leader. This is a compelling must-listen for anyone involved in arts organizations.


Read More
Originally aired Friday, October 22nd, 2010

From a 1966 Pixie Records release by Dr. Timothy Leary, the man who coined the phrase, "Turn on, tune in, drop out", who was called "the most dangerous man in America" by Richard Nixon, outlines chapter and verse of his LSD gospel.


Read More
Hosted by Michael Rush
Originally aired Monday, October 11th, 2010

Constructing histories and obstructing understanding fascinates artist Laurent Grasso who discusses all this and more in a lecture at the School of Visual Arts from September 2010 (with comments by curator Béatrice Gross).


Read More
Originally aired Friday, April 23rd, 2010

In this historic panel, Tariq Ramadan makes his first appearance in the U.S. since being barred from the country in 2004. He discusses the multiplicity of identities that all people have, specifically the identities of Muslims in Western societies.


Read More
Originally aired Friday, April 9th, 2010

In this conversation at James Cohan Gallery, Don J. Cohn, Senior Editor of ArtAsiaPacific Magazine, interviews Yun-Fei Ji about his new body of work, his relationship with China, and the Three Gorges region of China's impact on the artist.


Read More
Hosted by Alanna Heiss
Originally aired Friday, April 9th, 2010

AIR Director Alanna Heiss speaks about her close friend Malcolm McLaren shortly after hearing of his passing on April 8, 2010. With links to more McLaren features on ARTonAIR.org.


Read More
Originally aired Monday, April 5th, 2010

The panel Scent, Sensors and the Expanded Realm of Sensation traverses such wide olfactory terrain as the process of creating and interpreting scent and how smell helps orient--or disorient--us from ourselves and our environments.


Read More
Originally aired Friday, February 5th, 2010

Architect Avi Oster led a discussion in the Architect Talks lecture series' Focus on 13th Street series, hosted by the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation and the Sheila C. Johnson Design Center at Parsons.


Read More
Originally aired Friday, January 29th, 2010

This presentation by Vincenzo Lombardo, that included surround sound and a virtual video recreation, revealed the content and technique that became the legendary Poème électronique at the 1958 Brussels World's Fair's Philips Pavilion.


Read More
Originally aired Friday, December 18th, 2009

Moderated by the Executive Director of the West Harlem Art Fund, Inc., this conversation focuses on the role of art in the public arena and how the various purposes of public art may be defined. Panelists include Chakaia Booker and other artists.


Read More
Originally aired Friday, October 23rd, 2009

In front of a remarkable and chilling projected backdrop by Jenny Holzer, artists, activists and operatives read memos, testimonials, and transcripts documenting torture and torture policies. Plus hear testimony from former Guantanamo detainees.


Read More
Originally aired Friday, July 31st, 2009

New media artist Fred Forest presents a lecture on the moral crisis he sees affecting the world. Forest combines his knack for provocation with his exploration of notions of territory in this new work, The Experimental Center of the Territory.


Read More
Originally aired Sunday, April 12th, 2009

In 1911, New York's Triangle Shirtwaist Factory caught fire as a result of the building's unsafe conditions. Rose Imperato speaks with The Triangle Fire Remembrance Coalition, an organization that honors the memory of those who died in the fire.


Read More
Originally aired Monday, November 17th, 2008

Matthew Higgs, Director of White Columns, interviews artist Peter Saville about the recent release of his new book, Estate, as well as the birth of his career designing record sleeves for Factory Records artists, most notably Joy Division.


Read More
Originally aired Monday, June 30th, 2008

Hans Ulrich Obrist, the Van Alen Institute's New York Prize Senior Fellow, interviews architect Rem Koolhaas and artist Yoko Ono in his Formulas for Now, a collection of filmed interviews exhibited at the Van Alen Institute in 2008.


Read More
Originally aired Monday, May 19th, 2008

In this discussion, artist Paul Chan discusses his Middle East travels, recent site-specific theater in New Orleans and his 7 Lights series, displayed at the New Museum, containing human silhouettes projecting the Armageddon in progress.


Read More
Originally aired Monday, April 21st, 2008

Cliff Preiss assembled this historic collection that investigates the assimilation of jazz into the mainstream. We hear records for young people produced in the 1940s-60s that trace the sources of jazz, tell personal stories, and survey the scene.


Read More
Originally aired Thursday, April 3rd, 2008

In this two-part conversation, art critic and curator Hans Ulrich Obrist speaks with architect Enrique Walker and artist Paul Chan about the appropriation and his mission to interview every artist and cultural leader that piques his interest.


Read More
Originally aired Monday, May 7th, 2007

The Oil of the 21st Century: Perspectives on Intellectual Property was a conference on intellectual property rights and conflicts. It was coordinated by Bootlab; based on a concept by Partner gegen Berlin; produced with The Thing, and Waag Society.


Read More
Originally aired Monday, October 2nd, 2006

David Remnick, author, reporter, and editor of The New Yorker, has a new collection, Reporting: Writings from The New Yorker, which profiles some of the most important, complex - and, in many cases, reclusive - people of our time.


Read More