Righting the Wrongs of the War on Drugs
Ed Forchion, also known as NJWeedman, was a casualty of the War on Drugs, incarcerated on weed charges at the end of the 1990s. Across the country, Black people were disproportionately harmed by […]
Thursday, December 18 podcast
play_arrow
play_arrow
play_arrow
play_arrow
play_arrow
EPISODE 123 | WORKOUT WOES & DISRESPECTFUL FAMILY DECISIONS podcast
GMA3: Wednesday, December 17 podcast
play_arrow
Episode 273 | I Went To South Korea For The Weekend… podcast
play_arrow
play_arrow
In partnership with Stay Home Gallery, I present Inward, a virtual exhibition curated by Jasmine Wilson, one of the 2021 curatorial fellows. You should think of these special episodes as mini-artist talks for the virtual exhibition. Over the next two weeks, we’ll be dropping mini-episodes featuring all the artists in the show talking about their inspiration and artistic process. In this episode, we talk with paper cut artist Julia Terry. She talks about what she learned about herself working during the pandemic, how her children responded to her working at home and how she approached doing self-portraits. Check out the show at https://www.stayhomegallery.com/exhibitions/inward and listen to the episodes to hear more.
As an exhibition inspired by our collective isolation and intimate encounters with ourselves, Inward centers the work of artists who confront their beauty, identity, and personal struggles through portraiture. This gesture to explore the inner Self, particularly during the global pandemic, is personal in nature and inspired me to call upon this group of artists to provide a visual opening into their inner worlds. The artworks included in this exhibition feature artists’ battles with anxiety and illness, as well as their transcendence of chaos and feelings of inner peace while surrounded by family and loved ones. By centering their narratives, it is my goal to inspire critical discourse surrounding the lessons and realizations that surface as a result of our individual reckoning with the need to transform amid moments of uncertainty and change.
See More: Inward Virtual Exhibition + Julia Terry IG
Follow us:
Jamaal Barber: @JBarberStudio
Support the podcast
www.patreon.com/studionoizepodcast
Ed Forchion, also known as NJWeedman, was a casualty of the War on Drugs, incarcerated on weed charges at the end of the 1990s. Across the country, Black people were disproportionately harmed by […]
Copyright Blackpodcasting 2025