1/9/2024 0 Comments Episode 1 overflowSo maybe I'll say a little bit about the class first. And the "Art of the Anthropocene" class that you taught was the kind of instigator for creating the exhibition, correct? So with you as a faculty member, Eugenia, and you as a student, Anna, how you worked together, but also to look at how this project came to be, how the exhibition happened. I wanted to start and talk about how this project came to be and the idea of the podcast is to look at collaborations and to look at cross-constituency kind of collaborations between different aspects of Gallatin. I'm a senior at Gallatin and I am studying a lot of different applications and ways of listening. Hi, I'm Eugenia Kisin, I'm an assistant professor of art and society at Gallatin where I teach classes on contemporary art, museum studies, museum anthropology, and environmental justice, particularly as it pertains to Indigenous contemporary art worlds.Īnd my name is Anna Van Dine. I spoke with them about the thinking behind the show, what it meant to collapse the normal curatorial hierarchies, and what they learned from working together in this way. The curation of Overflow was unusual in that Kisin and her fellow curators, Kirsty Robertson and Keith Miller, collaborated with students from Kisin's "Art of the Anthropocene" course in order to curate and mount the show. For this, our first episode, I spoke with Gallatin faculty member Eugenia Kisin and Gallatin senior Anna Van Dine about Overflow, an exhibition that was shown in The Gallatin Galleries in the summer of 2019. This is Criss Cross: The NYU Gallatin Podcast and I'm your host, KC Trommer.
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