Reading

BmoreArt Interview with Sharon Louden, Zoë Charlton, and Tim Doud

Previous Story
Article Image

BmoreArt’s Picks: Baltimore Openings, Galle [...]

Next Story
Article Image

Sensuality in Precision: Njideka Akunyili Crosby [...]

A Conversation between Culture Producers: Cara Ober, Sharon Louden, Zoë Charlton, and Tim Doud discuss altruism among artists and how this can manifest in a career.

This program originally aired on Untitled Radio on Thursday, December 9, 2017 at 3pm EST, live from the Untitled art fair in Miami Beach.

During Untitled, Miami Beach 2017, we invited Cara Ober, founding editor at BmoreArt (a Baltimore-based art magazine, a publication dedicated to critical discourse, artist-centric conversations, and equity in the art world) to conduct a series of interviews with diverse figures in the art world.

On December 9, Cara Ober interviewed Sharon Louden (author of The Artist as Culture Producer: Living and Sustaining a Creative Life) and professors Zoë Charlton and Tim Doud, the founding partners at |sindikit| art space in Baltimore and co-authors of an essay for Louden’s book.

Related Stories
The Baltimore Institution Aims to Bring the Excitement of Auctions to a Broader Public with Online and Local Showrooms

“When people are having conversations about art in Baltimore, I just want Alex Cooper to be a part of it.”

Nimble, Collaborative, and (Almost) Global—The Kids are Alright

Robin Vuitch—a proudly self-described “MICA dropout”—wins the prestigious Premi Fundació Úniques, a new director thinks a more collaborative artworld can survive market turbulence, and fair highlights.

The Reginald F. Lewis Museum Offers Visitors an Immersive Way to Meet Their Eponym

While Lewis was a bona fide history maker, he’s not a household name in the way that other Baltimore icons are. One of the goals of the TITAN exhibition is to change that.

In Partnership with Arts for Learning Maryland, BAI Offers City Highschool Students Paid Internships with Arts Organizations Across Baltimore

The program had its inaugural year in Baltimore in 2017. Since then, it has grown from 25 to 50 interns, and the number of worksites has increased each year as well. This summer BAI interns are working with 32 arts organizations across Baltimore.