
Cut & Paste
Hosted by Jeremy D. Goodwin, Cut & Paste arts and culture podcast brings you in-depth conversations with artists and cultural drivers. Listeners will hear from artists about their work and why it matters, and also about who they are and how their own personal experiences shape their art-making.
Latest Episodes
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Even if the iconic German-language writer Franz Kafka doesn’t cross your mind on a regular basis, you may still hear the adjective “Kafkaesque” from time…
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Baseball is a game of numbers: batting average , RBIs. ERA.But Connor Wright had to come up with a different kind of number for a project honoring St.…
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The generation gap is said to be narrowing as more millennials move back in with, and seek advice from, their parents. But in St. Louis, the chasm may be…
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A new experimental documentary provides a snapshot of what it was like to grow up in north St. Louis in the 1970s.The project began when artist William…
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Illustrators are storytellers who synthesize thousands of words into just a few images, or even a single frame. We recently invited three prominent local…
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Make no mistake. As a white man, artist Ryan Doyle does not try to "explain" racism to anyone.Doyle’s work is a way to explore his own experiences and the…
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What do you call a group of visual artists inspired by the death of Michael Brown and the social-justice movement it spawned? St. Louis curator Freida…
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It's no stretch to think that Basil Kincaid’s efforts to unite people of African heritage require travel. But pre-paid phone cards, vinyl sheets and a…
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Revolution is not for the faint of heart; neither is parenthood. In The Black Rep’s production of the play “Sunset Baby,” the character Kenyatta finds…
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Making art involves creativity, of course. But for many artists, including St. Louis’ Tate Foley, exactitude is every bit as important.Printmaker Foley is…
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The arts in St. Louis are similar to the fabled elephant described by six men who cannot see: “It’s like a snake!” cried one who grasped the tail. “No, a…
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For multimedia artist Lyndon Barrois Jr., the different genres came together like a stack of building blocks.As a child, he liked to draw, but he didn’t…