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Posts in Visual Arts
Visual Artist Donna Alena Hrabcakova: The Paradox of Beauty

Artist and art therapist Donna Alena Hrabčáková has dedicated her life to the healing capacities of art. She has lived and worked in Ohio, California, Slovakia, and the Red Lake Nation Reservation in Northern Minnesota. Her exquisitely colorful paintings are dreamlike, vivid, and profoundly moving, often evoking joy, sorrow and hope within a single canvas. Her work has been exhibited in many places throughout the US and Eastern Europe. She had recently relocated from the US to her ancestral village of Gigloce, Slovakia, 27 miles from the Ukrainian border, when the pandemic struck. She weathered much of it there, creating extraordinary new work both on canvas and on the walls of her great-grandfather’s home. She’d then returned to the U.S. to manage her visa when the war in Ukraine broke out. This led her to create a series of paintings titled Guardians of the Border, which have been widely shared all over the world. Here she talks with host Tanya Shaffer about her childhood, her dreams, her connection to her ancestors, and her belief in art’s transcendent power to heal.

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Visual Artist Marjorie Morgan: The Landscape of Dreams

Marjorie Morgan has had an extraordinarily varied career in the arts. After receiving a BA in Dance from Oberlin College, she spent over 25 years dancing professionally and creating dances and performance art to be performed by herself and others. When a serious injury compromised her ability to dance, she shifted her focus to the visual arts, where she’s found joy and acclaim as a painter and printmaker. For the past few years, she’s been captivated by the process of making her own inks and pigments from natural materials that she finds near her home in Western Massachusetts. In this conversation, Marjorie discusses how painting saved her after her devastating injury, how unconscious impulses have guided her artistic journey, and how a voice heard in a dream prompted her to cross oceans to visit the site that inspired a series of her paintings.

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Playwright-Performer-Visual Artist Herbert Sigüenza: White Jesus Was the Original Fake News

Herbert Sigüenza is a founding member of the brilliant, hilarious, and politically incisive group Culture Clash, the most produced Latino performance troupe in the country. He’s also the playwright-in-residence at the San Diego Repertory Theatre and has appeared as an actor in theatre, tv and film. He served as a cultural consultant and the voice of the lead character’s two deceased uncles in the Academy-Award-winning film Coco. In today’s episode, he chats with host Tanya Shaffer about a range of topics, including Culture Clash’s beginnings in San Francisco in the ‘80’s, how they create hit shows, his ongoing commitment to progressive politics, and how he remains engaged and excited about his art 35-plus years into a long career. He also shares a delightful monologue from his solo show A Weekend With Pablo Picasso and a thought-provoking soliloquy based on an interview with a Black preacher in Washington, DC.

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Multidisciplinary Artist & Disability Rights Activist Gwynneth VanLaven: Am I Allowed to Laugh at This?

Multidisciplinary artist Gwynneth VanLaven uses photography, installation, performance, writing, and social engagement to challenge stigma, which she says “takes the real experience of real people and squashes it flat into stereotypes and presumptions.” Through work that is both playful and dark, layered with irony and mystery, she seeks to break down the binary thinking that separates “the well” from “the sick” and “the disabled” from “the non-disabled.” In this wide-ranging discussion, host Tanya Shaffer talks with Gwynneth about her improvisational photographic process, her interactive public experiments, and the humor and awkwardness of being fully embodied in art and life.

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