• Specific Objects: Ep.11 Bryan Zanisnik
    Jan 22 2025

    On this month's edition of "Specific Objects: Talks on Art in the Catskills," host Miriam Atkin speaks with Bryan Zanisnik, an artist working in sculpture, performance, video and photography who lives in the Catskill Mountains. We discuss his fascination with discarded objects and overlooked spaces, and the way artworks can assemble fragments of our material and cultural histories in order to tell new stories, or retell old ones.

    Bryan's Website

    Bryan on Art 21

    Bryan Zanisnik received an MFA from Hunter College and attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. His work has been widely featured in the New York Times, National Public Radio, Art in America, Artforum, ARTnews, and New York Magazine. Zanisnik has been the subject of four documentaries produced by Art21, the most recent of which is titled, “Bryan Zanisnik’s Big Pivot."

    "Specific Objects" is a monthly freeform discussion hosted by Miriam Atkin that invites artists from a variety of disciplines to describe, ponder, interrogate, interpret, and celebrate their current projects. The focus is on guests who live and work in the Hudson Valley/Catskills region, though people will occasionally visit from farther afield. Tune in to learn what artists in your neighborhood are thinking and making right now.

    Miriam Atkin is a Catskills-based writer whose work concerns the possibilities of poetry as a medium in conversation with avant-garde film, music, and dance. She is cofounder of Pinsapo, an international publishing collective, and teaches writing around the Hudson Valley region, at Bard College and the Otisville Correctional Facility.

    Intro music: "Sing Out" by Joanna Mattrey


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    1 hr and 2 mins
  • Specific Objects: Ep.10 Jan Razauskas and Gary Kachadourian
    Jan 15 2025

    On this month's edition of "Specific Objects: Talks on Art in the Catskills," host Miriam Atkin speaks with painter Jan Razauskas and printmaker Gary Kachadourian, both based in Lanesville. We talk about chance and control in abstract painting, and get deep into the nuts and bolts of analog processes for the reproduction of photographic images.

    Jan Razauskas is a visual artist who creates paintings, drawings and mixed media work. She moved to the Catskills in 2018, from Baltimore, by way of a few years in Tulsa, Ok. Her interests in abstract painting include the invention of the image, and the possibilities in combining methods of chance and control. Razauskas has shown extensively in the Mid-Atlantic area and beyond, recent exhibition venues include Monopractice Gallery, Current Gallery and the Maryland Institute College of Art, all in Baltimore, and Twoforty Space in Brooklyn. In addition, she worked for several decades as a non-profit gallery administrator, as well as teaching in various colleges. You can view her work at https://www.janrazauskas.com/.

    For the last six years Gary Kachadourian has been operating Lanesville Press where he publishes small open edition books on an engraving press in his garage. Most of the books comprise four mezzotint copies of photographs or video stills made in collaboration with artists. Before moving to Lanesville he lived in Baltimore where he worked as an art administrator for the city’s arts council for over twenty years while also working on his own art. You can view Lanesville Press projects at www.instagram.com/lanesvillepress/.

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    57 mins
  • Specific Objects: Ep.9 Larry Chernicoff
    Oct 23 2024

    On this month's edition of "Specific Objects: Talks on Art in the Catskills," host Miriam Atkin speaks with Catskill-based composer and instrumentalist, Larry Chernicoff. We discuss his new compositions, which are informed by a long-standing interest in cloudy skies, architectural forms, the teachings of Thich Nhat Hanh, and numerous other elemental, spiritual, and aesthetic influences. Larry’s most recent work has been in collaboration with the Higher Octave Ensemble—an 8-piece group comprising seasoned improvisers, composers, bandleaders, and educators—and our conversation comes just ahead of two performances with the ensemble, on 10/25 and 10/26 in Catskill and Pine Plains. For more information, visit www.larrychernicoff.com.


    Larry Chernicoff is a self-taught composer and instrumentalist, an award-winning recording artist, a recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Fellowship, and a record producer. His compositions combine jazz and classical elements, composition and improvisation, and unusual instrumental colors (often with “orchestral” instruments (clarinet, bass clarinet, cello, violin, oboe, English horn, bassoon, etc.)) in addition to traditionally “jazz” instruments (saxophones, trumpet). He has written for dance, theater, and film. Whenever possible, his ensembles perform with no amplifiers or microphones. He has a strong sense that the world needs acoustic music now more than ever, so his sound is organic, acoustic and unplugged – brass, metal, wood, reed.


    Miriam Atkin is a Catskills-based writer whose work concerns the possibilities of poetry as a medium in conversation with avant-garde film, music, and dance. She is cofounder of Pinsapo, an international publishing collective, and teaches writing around the Hudson Valley region, at Bard College and the Otisville Correctional Facility.


    Specific Objects is a monthly freeform discussion, hosted by Miriam Atkin, that invites artists from a variety of disciplines to describe, ponder, interrogate, interpret, and celebrate their current projects. The focus is on guests who live and work in the Hudson Valley/Catskills region, though people will occasionally visit from farther afield. Tune in to learn what artists in your neighborhood are thinking and making right now.


    Intro music: "Sing Out" by Joanna Mattrey

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • Specific Objects: Ep.8 Stacy Szymaszek
    Sep 23 2024

    On this month's edition of "Specific Objects: Talks on Art in the Catskills," host Miriam Atkin speaks with Catskill-based poet Stacy Szymaszek. Stacy reads from their forthcoming book-length poem titled ESSAY (Krupskaya, 2025), and we discuss the poems, covering topics such as loving beyond usefulness, the essay as form, literary lineages, cows, and poetry as a means of / challenge to survival. You can read learn more about Stacy's work at www.stacyszymaszek.org.


    Stacy Szymaszek is the author of seven books of poetry: Emptied of All Ships (2005), Hyperglossia (2009), hart island (2015), Journal of Ugly Sites and Other Journals (2016), which won the Ottoline Prize from Fence Books and was nominated for a Lambda Literary Award in 2017, A Year From Today (2018), The Pasolini Book (2022), and Famous Hermits (2023). They are the recipient of a 2014 New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship in Poetry, a 2019 Foundation for Contemporary Arts grant in poetry, and are a 2024 MacDowell Fellow. From 2007-2018, they were the Director of The Poetry Project at St. Mark's Church. They live in New York’s Upper Hudson Valley.


    ~


    Specific Objects is a monthly freeform discussion, hosted by Miriam Atkin, that invites artists from a variety of disciplines to describe, ponder, interrogate, interpret, and celebrate their current projects. The focus is on guests who live and work in the Hudson Valley/Catskills region, though people will occasionally visit from farther afield. Tune in to learn what artists in your neighborhood are thinking and making right now.


    Miriam Atkin is a Catskills-based writer whose work concerns the possibilities of poetry as a medium in conversation with avant-garde film, music, and dance. She is cofounder of Pinsapo, an international publishing collective, and teaches writing around the Hudson Valley region, at Bard College and the Otisville Correctional Facility.


    Intro music: "Sing Out" by Joanna Mattrey

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    58 mins
  • Specific Objects: Ep.7 Archival Recordings | William S. Burroughs and Will Alexander
    Jul 23 2024

    This month's broadcast is different in that, rather than conducting an interview, host Miriam Atkin shares archival recordings of conversations with artists she admires. The first half of the broadcast is an interview with WIlliam S. Burroughs by Kathy Acker. The second half is an interview with Will Alexander by Douglas Manuel.


    Videos of these talks are available at:
    https://ubu.com/film/burroughs_acker.html
    https://youtu.be/xB_IGH8Nw9k?si=xQgMUB0f5ukwBW67


    Intro music: "Sing Out" by Joanna Mattrey

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    1 hr and 3 mins
  • Specific Objects: Ep.6 Patrick Costello
    Jun 25 2024

    On this month's edition of "Specific Objects: Talks on Art in the Catskills," host Miriam Atkin speaks with Athens and NYC-based interdisciplinary artist Patrick Costello. We discuss some of Patrick's recent projects (My Pizza, My Idea!, And Eat It Too, and Privy Privy), as well as his experiments in collective art-making and ecological horticulture on 10 acres of raw land in Greene County.

    And Eat It Too
    Privy Privy
    My Pizza, My Idea!

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    1 hr
  • Specific Objects: Ep.5 Lina Azalea Dahbour and Matt Luczak
    May 23 2024

    On this month's edition of "Specific Objects: Talks on Art in the Catskills," host Miriam Atkin speaks with Kingston-based movement artist Lina Azalea Dahbour and Cairo-based noise musician Matt Luczak. We discuss their sound-movement duo DSM-69.


    Specific Objects is a monthly freeform discussion, hosted by Miriam Atkin, that invites artists from a variety of disciplines to describe, ponder, interrogate, interpret, and celebrate their current projects. The focus is on guests who live and work in the Hudson Valley/Catskills region, though people will occasionally visit from farther afield. Tune in to learn what artists in your neighborhood are thinking and making right now.


    Miriam Atkin is a Catskills-based writer whose work concerns the possibilities of poetry as a medium in conversation with avant-garde film, music, and dance. She is cofounder of Pinsapo, an international publishing collective, and teaches writing around the Hudson Valley region, at Bard College and the Otisville Correctional Facility.


    Intro music: "Sing Out" by Joanna Mattrey

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    58 mins
  • Specific Objects: Ep.4 Kimberly Alidio
    Apr 24 2024

    On this month's edition of "Specific Objects: Talks on Art in the Catskills," host Miriam Atkin speaks with Kimberly Alidio, a Catskill-based poet, essayist, historian, and teacher. We discuss Kimberly's summer 2023 book of poems, Teeter (Nightboat), and the essay she wrote about it, "On Being Porous," which was recently published in e-flux journal. The show concludes with a reading of "Dread Poem," which is part of Kimberly's forthcoming book, slated for release in 2025.

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    57 mins