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Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art

Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art

Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution

The Smithsonian's Archives of American Art enlivens the extraordinary human stories behind America's most significant art and artists. It is the preeminent and most widely used resource dedicated to collecting, preserving, and making available for study the papers and other primary records of the visual arts in America.
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Top 10 Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art Episodes

Goodpods has curated a list of the 10 best Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art episodes, ranked by the number of listens and likes each episode have garnered from our listeners. If you are listening to Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art for the first time, there's no better place to start than with one of these standout episodes. If you are a fan of the show, vote for your favorite Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art episode by adding your comments to the episode page.

Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art - Judy Chicago interview excerpt - controversy

Judy Chicago interview excerpt - controversy

Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art

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01/04/11 • 4 min

Judy Chicago's bold do-it-yourself attitude empowered her to make her own reality in the art world. In this excerpt from an interview conducted in 2009 for the Archives of American Art, she talks about her major collaborative piece, The Dinner Party, an installation of place settings for 39 mythical and historical famous women. When The Dinner Party was first exhibited in 1979 to critical acclaim, Chicago was surprised that it also generated controversy. This interview was funded by the Terra Foundation for American Art. The first voice you will hear is interviewer Judith Richards.
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Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art - Joan Snyder interview excerpt - painting

Joan Snyder interview excerpt - painting

Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art

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01/18/11 • 9 min

In the course of a life, there is often one teacher who changes everything. For painter Joan Snyder, that teacher was Billy Pritchard. Snyder was on the path to becoming a social worker when she took an art elective with Pritchard in her senior year at Rutgers. In this excerpt from an oral history interview conducted in 2010 for the Archives of American Art and funded by the Terra Foundation for American Art, Snyder talks about her shift from social work to painting and renting her first studio in New Brunswick, New Jersey, in 1962.
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Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art - Judy Chicago interview excerpt - discovery

Judy Chicago interview excerpt - discovery

Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art

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01/25/11 • 1 min

Feminist artist, author, and educator Judy Chicago inspired a generation of women artists to find a place for themselves in the art world. In this segment of an oral history interview for the Archives of American Art conducted in 2009, Chicago talks about the act of discovery as the central motivating force in her life and art. This interview was funded by the Terra Foundation for American Art.
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Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art - Joan Snyder interview excerpt

Joan Snyder interview excerpt

Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art

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02/08/11 • 6 min

Artist Joan Snyder often includes text in her large, emotionally evocative, abstract paintings. In this excerpt from an oral history interview conducted in 2010 for the Archives of American Art, Snyder considers her conflicted feelings about adding words to her abstractions. The interview was funded by the Terra Foundation for American Art.
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Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art - Luis Jimenez interview excerpt

Luis Jimenez interview excerpt

Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art

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09/23/13 • 6 min

Pop sculptor Luis Jimenez moved from El Paso Texas to New York in 1966, where he apprenticed with Seymour Lipton and rented a studio under Richard Serra. Discouraged by the malaise of rejection from several galleries, he impulsively tried to garner attention of Ivan Karp, the famed director of the Leo Castelli Gallery.
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Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art - Willie Herrón interview excerpt

Willie Herrón interview excerpt

Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art

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11/01/13 • 1 min

Willie Herrón, one of the founding members of the Chicano Avant-Garde collective, ASCO, criticized the "Los Four" exhibition at L.A. County Museum of Art in 1974, which displayed graffiti infused murals inside the museum. In an interview with Jeffrey Rangel, he recalled how the "Los Four" exhibition set the stage for an ASCO interventionist performance.
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Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art - Gilbert Luján interview excerpt

Gilbert Luján interview excerpt

Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art

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11/01/13 • 1 min

The "Los Four" exhibition—considered the first Chicano art exhibition in a Los Angeles museum—opened at the Art Gallery at University of California, Irvine in 1973 and then traveled to the L.A. County Museum of Art (LACMA) in 1974. In this interview, founding member of the Los Four art collective, Gilbert "Magu" Luján, described the show's unexpected success.
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Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art - Otto Wittmann 1981 interview excerpt

Otto Wittmann 1981 interview excerpt

Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art

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11/22/13 • 4 min

Otto Wittmann (1911-2001) was a curator and director of the Toledo Museum of Art from 1959-1976. During World War II, Wittmann served as a Major with the Air Force but was later transferred to the Art Looting Investigation Unit (ALIU) in Washington, D.C. under the Office of Strategic Services. As an ALIU official, Wittmann assisted with looted art recovery in Paris and Munich, investigated transactions in Sweden and Switzerland, and worked with the collection centers in France. In this excerpt, Wittmann talks about his work restituting art looted by the Nazis.
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Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art - George Leslie Stout interview excerpt

George Leslie Stout interview excerpt

Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art

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11/22/13 • 44 min

George Leslie Stout (1897-1978) was a museum director and prominent art conservator in Massachusetts. Stout was one of the first U.S. soldiers to be assigned to the MFAA Section and played a prominent role in the recovery of art work stolen by the Nazis. He was appointed Lieutenant Commander of the MFAA unit and supervised the inventorying and removal of looted artwork hidden in the salt mines of Merkers and Ransbach in Thuringia, Germany and in other repositories in France and the Netherlands. In this audio clip Stout speaks of his experience as a MFAA officer, especially the poor storage conditions in the salt mines.
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Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art - Andrew Carnduff Ritchie interview excerpt

Andrew Carnduff Ritchie interview excerpt

Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art

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11/22/13 • 13 min

Andrew Carnduff Ritchie (1907-1978) was an art administrator and art historian. He was a research assistant and lecturer at the Frick Collection, then the director of the Albright Art Gallery in New York from 1942. After World War II, Ritchie served as a MFAA advisor at the Munich Central Collecting Point where he supervised the restitution of artwork, notably Vermeer's The Art of Painting, which was owned by the Czernin family up until the war. In this audio clip, Ritchie talks about the highlights of his MFAA experiences, especially the fate of the "Czernin Vermeer" and his experience transporting the Imperial Regalia of the Holy Roman Empire from Nuremberg to Vienna.
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FAQ

How many episodes does Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art have?

Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art currently has 21 episodes available.

What topics does Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art cover?

The podcast is about Visual Arts, Podcasts, Arts, Oral History and Government.

What is the most popular episode on Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art?

The episode title 'Judy Chicago interview excerpt - controversy' is the most popular.

What is the average episode length on Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art?

The average episode length on Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art is 11 minutes.

When was the first episode of Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art?

The first episode of Oral History Collection from the Archives of American Art was released on Dec 28, 2010.

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