In this episode, photographer Josh Schaedel discusses his work founding and sustaining an artist-run exhibition space in Los Angeles, reflecting on a practice rooted in service, hospitality, and access for emerging artists. He addresses the material and economic realities of photography, including the costs of production and framing, and the structural challenges that limit broader institutional support for the medium. The conversation also considers the impact of digital tools and AI on photographic practice, alongside Schaedel's approach to teaching, which emphasizes tactile engagement through prints and photobooks. Throughout, he situates photography as a medium shaped by constraint and grounded in reality, while advocating for independent spaces and publishing as critical frameworks for sustaining artistic communities.
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295 Donel Williams — Abstraction, Black Figuration, Performance Art & Institutional Critique
294 Faris McReynolds — Painting, Art Market Critique, Artist Labor & Institutional Power
293 Jahn Muller: Painting, Generational Memory & the Experience of Art
292 Katie Hector — Portrait Painting, Beauty Standards, and Contemporary Image Culture
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