55 episodes

Award winning arts podcast.
Artist stories from concept to community, in the diaspora and beyond.
"Best show to teach you about art" The Guardian.
Executive produced and hosted by Lou Mensah.

Help support the work that goes into creating Shade Podcast. https://plus.acast.com/s/shadepodcast.



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Shade Lou Mensah

    • Arts
    • 5.0 • 17 Ratings

Award winning arts podcast.
Artist stories from concept to community, in the diaspora and beyond.
"Best show to teach you about art" The Guardian.
Executive produced and hosted by Lou Mensah.

Help support the work that goes into creating Shade Podcast. https://plus.acast.com/s/shadepodcast.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Legacy Russell: in conversation with Lou Mensah

    Legacy Russell: in conversation with Lou Mensah

    Legacy Russell is Executive Director & Chief Curator of the experimental arts institution The Kitchen, one of New York's oldest non-profit spaces. She is writer, curator and author of the critically acclaimed Glitch Feminism: A Manifesto. I am delighted to have Legacy join me to talk about Black Meme, which is due to be published on May 7th. Black Meme focuses on the history and production of the ‘Meme’ – tracing through Black visual culture from its first appearance in the early 20th century all the way through to present times. It is a critical dissection of race, class, and gender as performed online and offline and emphasizes the central role that Black contributions have played in the development of digital culture.  
    On the ‘Meme’, Legacy says:’ I want to talk about the economy and engine of this and perhaps push further a discussion about how we can hold ourselves accountable to how this material is produced and circulated.”
     
    Black Meme is available to purchase online and in stores from May 7th.
    Here is a link to Legacy's talk on The New Bend exhibition, as mentioned in Lou's intro.
    Read Shade Art Review 
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    Shade Podcast Instagram
    Shade Podcast is Executive produced and hosted by Lou Mensah
    Music King Henry IV for Shade Podcast by Brian Jackson
    Editing and mixing by Tess Davidson
    Editorial support from Anne Kimunguyi
    Help support the work that goes into creating Shade Podcast. https://plus.acast.com/s/shadepodcast.



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    • 36 min
    Ibrahim Mahama: in conversation with Lou Mensah

    Ibrahim Mahama: in conversation with Lou Mensah

    Ibrahim Mahama is an installation artist who works with textiles, material production and found objects to create large-scale public interventions. He initially garnered widespread attention for his open-air installations made of stitched-together jute sacks that were draped on or over architectural structures, such as libraries, an airport, and a museum, in the cities of Accra and Kumasi, where he is based. His practise involves a collaborative process of sourcing, collecting, reproducing and installing the often-textile based materials he works with. His pieces speak to ideas around historical memories, traditional belief systems, local economies and the democratisation of art. 
    Ibrahim’s works have been shown in various group and solo shows, including The Norval Foundation in Cape Town, The White Cube in London and Hong Kong and has been a part of the Ghana Pavilion for 2019 Venice Biennale, among many others. In this episode, Ibrahim and I discuss his new large-scale public commission at the Barbican, the process behind creating this work and his hopes for its reception.
    Ibrahim Mahama Purple Hibiscus runs at the Lakeside Terrace at the Barbican from April 10 - 18 August 2024 and is free to the public.
    Read Shade Art Review 
    Shade Art Review Series 10 | 20% discount code
    Shade Podcast Instagram
    Shade Podcast is Executive produced and hosted by Lou Mensah
    Music King Henry IV for Shade Podcast by Brian Jackson
    Editing and mixing by Tess Davidson
    Editorial support from Anne Kimunguyi

    Help support the work that goes into creating Shade Podcast. https://plus.acast.com/s/shadepodcast.



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    • 16 min
    Michael Ohajuru: in conversation with Lou Mensah

    Michael Ohajuru: in conversation with Lou Mensah

    Michael Ohajuru is a London-based art historian who returns to the podcast to discuss the John Blanke project, a large gathering of artists and historians who have come together to re-imagine John Blanke, the black trumpeter to the courts of Henry 7th and Henry 8th and the first person of African descent in British history that we have both a visual and written record of. The participating artists include Keith Piper, Wole Lagunju, Phoebe Boswell, Paul Dash and Larry Achiampong.
    David Olusoga Professor of Public History at the University of Manchester says of the project:
    "The John Blanke Project redefines historical exploration by merging practical scholarship with innovation and critical imagination. Anchored in social justice, it reveals the overlooked narratives of Black Tudor England, enriching our grasp of diversity and British identity. By blending art and history, it encourages a deeper, empathetic engagement with our shared past, advocating for a more inclusive and equitable understanding of history."
    Thanks for listening to this independent podcast. You can support this work by reviewing and sharing the podcast or becoming a Shade Art Review subscriber.
    Read Shade Art Review 
    Shade Art Review Series 10 | 20% discount code
    Shade Podcast Instagram
    Shade Podcast is Executive produced and hosted by Lou Mensah
    Music King Henry IV for Shade Podcast by Brian Jackson
    Editing and mixing by Tess Davidson
    Editorial support from Anne Kimunguyi
    Help support the work that goes into creating Shade Podcast. https://plus.acast.com/s/shadepodcast.



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    • 18 min
    Joy Gregory: in conversation with Lou Mensah

    Joy Gregory: in conversation with Lou Mensah

    Joy Gregory (b. 1959. Bicester, UK). Born in the UK to Jamaican parents, Joy Gregory’s work explores the impact of colonialism on global perceptions of beauty, memory, botany, health and traditional knowledge. As a photographer, Gregory has worked over decades in various media, including video, digital and analogue photography, film installation, Victorian print processes and more recently textiles; exploring photography as technology and as mode of artistic expression. She is interested in understanding how individuals and communities remember and interpret their history, particularly in relation to their connection to the land.
    Joy & Lou discuss the themes of process and practice as they have developed throughout the artist’s four decade career. In June, Art on the Underground will unveil a new series of Joy’s artworks at Heathrow Terminal 4 Underground station - envisaging Heathrow as a portal of entry and exit. I spoke with Joy in February, as she embarked on her partnership with Hillingdon-based charity Refugees in Effective and Active Partnership (REAP) facilitating a series of photographic workshops with asylum seekers living in hotels in the Heathrow area, as well as a community group for Afghan women in Hayes and Harlington. These workshops will inform the creation of her artwork for Heathrow Terminal 4, giving space to the stories of newly arrived Londoners, displaced people whose realities are increasingly maligned and misrepresented. The work will offer an indelible trace of the cultures, languages and hopes which coalesce in London.
    In the Autumn of 2025, Whitechapel Gallery will stage Joy’s first monographic exhibition, surveying a four-decade practice.
    Thanks for listening to this independent podcast. You can support this work by reviewing and sharing the podcast or becoming a Shade Art Review subscriber (follow the link below for details).
    Read Shade Art Review 
    Shade Art Review Series 10 | 20% discount code
    Shade Podcast Instagram
    Shade Podcast is Executive produced and hosted by Lou Mensah
    Music King Henry IV for Shade Podcast by Brian Jackson
    Editing and mixing by Tess Davidson
    Editorial support from Anne Kimunguyi
    Help support the work that goes into creating Shade Podcast. https://plus.acast.com/s/shadepodcast.



    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 21 min
    Tiona Nekkia McClodden: in conversation with Lou Mensah

    Tiona Nekkia McClodden: in conversation with Lou Mensah

    This evening, 21 March '24
    6 - 8pm GMT: Artist Talk - Tiona Nekkia McClodden at White Cube Bermondsey, London. Tiona will discuss the impetus of her solo exhibition ‘A MERCY | DUMMY’, which spans two discrete bodies of works produced alongside each other. McClodden will explore the impulse to present two bodies of works together for the first time in her career through a choreographed sharing of her collection of archival research, music, video, and texts. Reserve a spot here. MERCY | DUMMY runs until 24 March.
    Tiona Nekkia McClodden (b.1981, Blytheville, Arkansas) spent her formative years throughout the American South. Trained as a filmmaker, McClodden worked largely within the punk and club scene in Atlanta before moving to Philadelphia in 2006 and expanding her practice to include painting, sculpture, photography and installation.
    Recent solo exhibitions include Baltimore Museum of Art, Maryland (2023); Kunsthalle Basel, Switzerland (2023); The Shed, New York (2022); 52 Walker, New York (2022); The Triple Deities, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (2021); and Company Gallery, New York (2019). Selected group exhibitions include Solomon R. Guggenheim, New York (2023–24); El Museo del Barrio in New York (2022–23), touring to Phoenix Art Museum, Arizona (2023) and Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami, Florida (2023–24); ICA Los Angeles, California (2022); Prospect 5, New Orleans, Louisiana (2021–22); Philadelphia Museum of Art, Pennsylvania (2021); New Museum, New York (2021); Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin (2019); and the Whitney Biennial, New York (2019). Other presentations of her work have been on view at MOCA, Los Angeles, California (2017); MCA Chicago, Illinois (2017); and MoMA PS1, New York (2016). In recent years, McClodden has won prestigious grants and fellowships, including the Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant (2022), Princeton Arts Fellowship (2021–23); the Bucksbaum Award, Whitney Museum of American Art (2019); Guggenheim Fellowship in Fine Arts (2019); the Louis Comfort Tiffany Award (2017); and the Pew Fellowship (2016), while running Conceptual Fade, a project gallery and library she founded in 2020 that hosts micro-exhibitions and publications centred on Black art and conceptual practice.
    Work by McClodden is in the permanent collections of the Baltimore Museum of Art, Maryland; MoMA, New York; Philadelphia Museum of Art, Pennsylvania; and Rennie Museum, Canada.
    Read Shade Art Review 
    Shade Art Review Series 10 | 20% discount code
    Shade Podcast Instagram
    Shade Podcast is Executive produced and hosted by Lou Mensah
    Music King Henry IV for Shade Podcast by Brian Jackson
    Editing and mixing by Tess Davidson
    Editorial support from Anne Kimunguyi
    Help support the work that goes into creating Shade Podcast. https://plus.acast.com/s/shadepodcast.



    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 31 min
    Cynthia Lawrence John

    Cynthia Lawrence John

    Welcome to the final episode in my seven part, end of year series! Inspired by the Black radical tradition of the harmony between the lyrical and visual, I am joined by friends to explore the musical influences that inspire their work. We also look to the people, real and imagined, familial and ancestral who guide them.
    Cynthia is a costume designer, whose work you will have seen in successful British films, like the recent Rye Lane directed by Raine Allen-Miller. Cynthia's currently showing work at Somerset House in London as part of the exhibition Missing Thread, which charts the shifting landscape of Black British culture and the unique contribution it's made to Britain's design history. Our friendship began in the early 2000s, when we worked together in my capacity as a photographer.
    It was Cynthia's generosity of ideas and her unique approach to design that inspired me and makes her one of the most revered costume designers today. Cynthia and I sneaked in a super quick, ten minute conversation whilst she was on set last week. She shares her musical influences and talks about how music is the foundation of her design for all of her characters.
    Please share and review this independent Black art show. Thank you!
    ENJOY!
    Follow us:
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    Missing Thread Exhibition Somerset House
    Cynthia Lawrence John Agent
    Cynthia Lawrence John Instagram
    This series was produced and hosted by Lou Mensah
    Music King Henry IV for Shade Podcast by Brian Jackson
    Mixing by Tess Davidson
    Help support the work that goes into creating Shade Podcast. https://plus.acast.com/s/shadepodcast.



    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 13 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
17 Ratings

17 Ratings

Scamp Patel ,

LOVE

Such an important podcast, love the voices spotlighted and the conversations ~ Thank you

_cadavis ,

conversations well worth listening to

Shade is one of the few shows out there that is critically minded and focused on the structures within which we all live. Love the way Lou steps back to let her guests talk about their art, processes, and motivations behind their work. Listen, subscribe today!

Godspeedy ,

Beautiful!

It’s incredibly rare to find a podcast like yours that deals with the history and ongoing systemic oppression pertaining to POC. A podcast such as this is such a necessity for our white counterparts to listen, study, and understand EXACTLY what the marginalized is facing. Great show.

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