Arrogance
The tone of this podcast makes clear that this host revels in her place among those in the wealthy, overindulged world of "artists who matter:" those who decide what art is and those who decide what art goes where in museum displays and warehouses. She fawns over those who had the financial backing to drink themselves stupid, spew superficial nonsense about politics and spew superficial nonsense on the ground, in rock, and on canvas and call it revolutionary. The writing is sophomoric and the host's very limited framing of this era and of the people involved are not what I expected from Pushkin.Read full review »
bmanning2 via Apple Podcasts · United States of America · 03/31/23
More reviews of Death of an Artist
Well that was a great podcast, the Art World has been & still is complicit in misogyny & this podcast shows us we are all victims of a patriarchal society.
LauraC40 via Apple Podcasts · Great Britain · 10/22/22
This podcast revisited a time in NY that I’d totally forgotten. The host and writer make it clear that we have yet to grapple with issues that still face us - violence against women, why women artists still don’t get the coverage of their work that men do and how to discuss and frame work by...Read full review »
Sieggles via Apple Podcasts · United States of America · 10/23/22
Sad and interesting story that I knew nothing about before the podcast. The evidence presented shows Carl Andre clearly to be a creep and a murderer. The pod also does a good job of setting the time and place in the 1980s NY art world. The narrator is the only downside. She undercuts whatever...Read full review »
HaitiMD via Apple Podcasts · United States of America · 10/27/22
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