Coverbild der Sendung DES Talks with Susanna Beaumont

DES Talks with Susanna Beaumont

Podcast von Design Exhibition Scotland

Englisch

Kultur & Freizeit

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Mehr DES Talks with Susanna Beaumont

DES Talks, a new podcast from Design Exhibition Scotland in which we explore through conversation the lives and work of designers, makers and artists from across Scotland. https://www.designexhibitionscotland.co.uk/

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14 Folgen

Episode Glancing backwards into a time . . . Cover

Glancing backwards into a time . . .

Catch up with a panel discussion recorded at Edinburgh's Fruitmarket last month marking Earth Day. Chaired by Susanna 'glancing backwards into a time that far predates us' is a lively conversation celebrating two exhibitions: Ilana Halperin's What Is Us and What Is Earth (Fruitmarket) and Earth Matters (Inverleith House Gallery, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh) and the life and work of James Hutton, the Edinburgh-born geologist and farmer who was born 300 years ago this year.  Artists Ilana Halperin and Louise Bennetts, writer and performer Karine Polwart, and soil scientist Colin Campbell (Chief Executive of the James Hutton Institute) discuss Hutton’s legacy in the context of contemporary creative practice. Ilana's exhibition [https://www.fruitmarket.co.uk/ilana-halperin-what-is-us-and-what-is-earth/] (closing 17th May) touches upon Hutton's radical rethinking about the creation of the Earth and Earth Matters [https://www.rbge.org.uk/whats-on/earth-matters/65719/] brings together the work of over 30 artists to delve into the ground beneath our feet. Louise talks about her textile work which was inspired by drawings by Hutton's friend and contemporary John Clerk of Eldin. While Karine Polwart [https://www.karinepolwart.com] inspired by Hutton's visit to Siccar Point, a rocky promontory on the Berwickshire east coast, sings her beautiful ballad, Still As Your Sleeping. And Colin shares his deep knowledge of Hutton's life and the theory of unconformity which provided evidence that Earth was far older than previously imagined. Ilana Halperin was born in New York and lives Glasgow. Her work explores the relationship between geology and daily life. She combines fieldwork in diverse locations – on volcanoes in Hawaii, caves in France, geothermal springs in Japan, and in museums, archives and laboratories, with an active studio-based practice. Louise Bennetts is an Edinburgh-based fashion and textiles designer, researcher and maker. She works independently across varied projects, with a particular interest in alternative textile systems, applications, and sustainable material innovation. Karine Polwart is a writer, musician, and storyteller whose work evokes a richness of place, hidden histories, scientific enquiry and folklore. Karine is currently Dr Gavin Wallace Fellow for 2025–26 via the Fruitmarket, Edinburgh and Creative Scotland. Her research and writing under the brief ‘Attached to Land’ is focused on the coastal edge lands and stone ridges of of the Forth Valley, East Lothian and Borders. Colin Campbell is Chief Executive of the James Hutton Institute, which leads research on land and sustainable management. His science focuses on soil ecology. The institute reflects the enduring spirit of Enlightenment science and an appreciation of Hutton’s intellectual legacy: rigorous observation, critical reasoning, and a commitment to applying knowledge for the public good. Susanna Beaumont is a curator and creative produced based in Edinburgh. Projects include the touring exhibition, Ash Rise for Scottish Furniture Makers Association; guest curator for Craft Scotland's presentation for Collect, London and Design for our Times at V&A Dundee. For the last year she has worked with Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh on Earth Matters. She launched DES Talks podcast in 2025.  Image James Hutton, 1776 by Sir Henry Raeburn. National Galleries of Scotland.  Thanks to Edinburgh Geological Society for their generous support and to Fruitmarket and Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh.

12. Mai 2026 - 1 h 18 min
Episode Celebrating the artist Wilhelmina Barns-Graham Cover

Celebrating the artist Wilhelmina Barns-Graham

Welcome to DES Talks, our podcast exploring creativity across Scotland, presented by Susanna Beaumont.    She looks forward to sharing with you inspiring conversations with some of the most adventurous, curious and brilliant designers, artists, makers and curators. We talk ideas and inspiration, challenges and influences, the contemporary and the historic.  In this episode, we explore the life and work of the brilliant artist Wilhelmina Barns-Graham with Rob Airey, director of the Wilhelmina Barns-Graham Trust and Mark Cousins, the renowned Edinburgh-based Northern Irish filmmaker. We discuss her work and the making of Mark's extraordinary film, A Sudden Glimpse to Deeper Things, which celebrates her life and mind. Willie, as she was known throughout her life, was born in St Andrews in 1912 and studied at Edinburgh College of Art and went on to live in Cornwall's St Ives within its celebrated community of artists and writers. Exploring landscape and pushing towards abstraction, it was a trip to Switzerland in 1949 to climb the Grindelwald glacier that promoted Willie to dive ever more deeply into texture, colour and form. She died in 2004. Explore Willie's work on the Barns-Graham Trust [https://www.barns-grahamtrust.org.uk] website. Watch A Sudden Glimpse to Deeper Things [https://player.bfi.org.uk/search?availability=1&q=a+Sudden+glimpse] on BFI player. There is soon to be released a Blu-Ray / DVD version of the film. Read Mark Cousins interviewed by the BFI [https://www.bfi.org.uk/interviews/mark-cousins-wilhelmina-barns-graham-sudden-glimpse-to-deeper-things]. Earth Matters [https://www.rbge.org.uk/whats-on/earth-matters/65719/]at Inverleith House, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh until 1 November Wilhelmina Barns-Graham - Nature in Motion [https://www.museumbelvedere.nl/en/upcoming/] at Museum Belvédère, the Netherlands 20 June - 20 September 2026 Wilhelmina Barns-Graham [https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-st-ives/wilhelmina-barns-graham] at Tate St Ives 24 October 2026  - 11 April 2027 Thanks so much for listening to DES Talks. Please do spread the word, share, subscribe and rate and rave [https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/des-talks-with-susanna-beaumont/id1813857654]! We really want to share these conversations far and wide.  And don’t forget to explore our previous 12 podcasts such as Viv Lee and Jonathan Wade talking clay and the making of Earth Becoming for Earth Matters, the exhibition I curated with Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh at Inverleith House or our conversation on the work of Donald Locke, the Guyanese artist who studied at Edinburgh College of Art in the 1960s whose solo show is currently on at Camden Arts Centre [https://camdenartcentre.org/whats-on/resistant-forms?elevation=Headline], London.    Huge thanks to musician Malin Lewis for Cycle Lane which accompanies DES Talks and Ryan Scott Media [https://www.ryanscottmedia.com] for production.

29. Apr. 2026 - 44 min
Episode Viv Lee & Jonathan Wade talk wild clay Cover

Viv Lee & Jonathan Wade talk wild clay

Welcome to DES Talks, Design Exhibition Scotland’s lively exploration of making and creating. We talk ideas and inspiration, challenges and influences and of course the joy of creativity with artists, makers, designers and curators from across Scotland.  In this episode Susanna meets makers Viv Lee and Jonathan Wade in their workshop within Glasgow Ceramic Studio. We talk about their recent residency at the Hugo Burge Foundation in the Scottish Borders where they collected wild clay and explored a landscape once farmed by the 18th century revolutionary thinker, James Hutton and author of the Theory of the Earth. We talk about their early years - Viv grew up in Hong Kong and was always happiest outdoors. Later she studied law in London and it was not until she studied at Glasgow School of Art in her thirties, that she first encountered clay. Whereas Jonathan who grew up in rural England encountered clay at an early age, thanks to an art teacher at school and went on to study at the Royal College of Art. Both Viv and Jonathan talk about their own practices - Studio Viv Lee & Ingot Objects - but how collaborating together can unleash new possibilities and an exciting sense of adventure. This is the only the second time they have collaborated on a project, the first being for Bard, a craft gallery in Leith, Edinburgh a few years ago. And we chat about their new work Earth Becoming. A series of wild clay lidded boxes and their delight in working closely with clay they have collected with their own hands.  Earth Becoming is soon to be seen at Earth Matters [https://www.rbge.org.uk/whats-on/earth-matters/65719/], an exhibition curated by Susanna and Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh which celebrates Hutton in the tercentenary year of his birth. Earth Matters at Inverleith House runs from 20 March to 1 November. https://www.studiovivlee.com/ [https://www.studiovivlee.com/] https://www.ingot-objects.com/ [https://www.ingot-objects.com/] Thank you so much listening to DES Talks. Please do spread the word, share, subscribe and rate and rave! We really want to spread DES Talks far and wide. And don’t forget to explore our previous podcasts such as our conversation about the work of Donald Locke, the Guyanese artist who studied at Edinburgh College of Art in the 1960s or our exploration of Thread Memory: Embroidery from Palestine which is currently on at V&A Dundee or hear more about the life and fabulous outfits of textile designer, Bernat Klein who lived in the Scottish Borders.  Huge thanks to musician Malin Lewis for Cycle Lane which accompanies DES Talks and Ryan Scott Media for production.

5. März 2026 - 38 min
Episode Celebrating the artist Donald Locke Cover

Celebrating the artist Donald Locke

Welcome to DES Talks, lively conversations celebrating creativity from Design Exhibition Scotland. In this episode Susanna explores the life and work of the outstanding artist Donald Locke who studied at Edinburgh College of Art in the 1960s. Born in Guyana in 1930, Locke's work in ceramic, on canvas, in sculpture and film meld together materials, ideas and politics. It's radical, powerful work. Locke died in 2010. Susanna is joined by Brenda Locke, Locke's wife and manager of the Donald Locke Estate and curator Tiffany Boyle. Tiffany, co-founded of the curatorial agency Mother Tongue, curated Revisiting the Work of Black Artists in Scotland Through New Collecting at the Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow in 2022. The exhibition which included ceramic work by Locke, vitally raised awareness of his work. Locke's work has since been acquired by Glasgow Museums, National Museums of Scotland and the University of Edinburgh. A brilliant retrospective exhibition of Locke's work, Resistance Forms, is currently on at  Camden Arts Centre [https://camdenartcentre.org/?gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=20196117269&gbraid=0AAAAApZ0Y6vt5gTL9u2fZGjIWueV05_Hm&gclid=CjwKCAiAjc7KBhBvEiwAE2BDOXBrxZ2-f7cO6pmUnkroCIdS6pEhqB1QkfRDJtisdOZO5Du9ywJy-hoCP1EQAvD_BwE], London until 30 August 2026. It was previously at Spike Island [https://www.spikeisland.org.uk/programme/exhibitions/donald-locke/], Bristol and Ikon [https://www.ikon-gallery.org/exhibition/donald-locke], Birmingham. Further reading / viewing Curator's talk - Robert Leckie on Resistance Forms [https://www.spikeisland.org.uk/programme/exhibitions/donald-locke/] Panel discussion - Hew Locke, Giulia Smith & Robert Leckie on Resistance Forms [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PDLXqaLCMaQ]  Guardian review [https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2025/jun/02/donald-locke-review-incredible-powerful-uncomfortable-shocking] of Resistance Forms Mother Tongue on GoMA: Revisiting Black Artists in Scotland Through New Collecting  [https://mothertonguecurating.com/newcollecting-goma] Tiffany Boyle's article in Map [https://mapmagazine.co.uk/caribbean-connections-scotland] magazine Donald Locke Foundation [https://www.donaldlocke.com] Thank you for listening to DES Talks. Please do spread the word, share, subscribe, rave and rate. We are new to this game and keen to reach as many listeners as possible, far and wide. And do explore our previous podcasts - we explore V&A Dundee's exhibition Thread Memory: Embroidery from Palestine with V&A curator Rachel Dedman and artists Leena Nammari and Aya Haidar; we talk Harvest, Craft Scotland's recent showcase of contemporary craft with curator Stacey Hunter and potter, Samuel Sparrow and weaver, Julia Rebaudo. Or tune into Frances Priest or Cara Guthrie talking about clay and Gráinne Rice discussing the pure beauty of the clothes designed by the visionary textile artist, Bernat Klein.  Design Exhibition Scotland [https://www.designexhibitionscotland.co.uk/]was founded by Susanna Beaumont in 2018 to celebrate and champion making and creating through exhibitions, conversations, commissions and now podcasts. Production Ryan Scott Film [https://www.ryanscottfilm.com/] Music Malin Lewis  [https://www.instagram.com/malinlewismusic/]

30. Dez. 2025 - 46 min
Episode Exploring Bard, Custom Lane & Brown's of Leith Cover

Exploring Bard, Custom Lane & Brown's of Leith

Welcome to DES Talks! In this episode Susanna is out and about in Edinburgh's port Leith, which lies to the north of the city. It is where the Water of Leith from its source 20 miles south in the Pentland Hills, flows into the Firth of Forth and the onwards into the North Sea. It was once a place of ship building, trade, sea transport and travel - a place of glass works and bottling, soap factories and barrel makers and warehouses. Today many of these former spaces have been transformed into artist studios and workshops. There’s Coburg House Studios, Cyan Clay Works, SilverHub Studios, Mote exhibition space and Leith School of Art.  Our focus today is on Custom Lane, located beside the Water of Leith and behind an imposing early 19th century building, Custom House. We explore Custom Lane, its gallery space and the exhibition Feminine Literacy; we talk craft, materials and making with Hugo Macdonald, founder of Bard, an intimate haven for the hand-made and we chat to Gunnar Groves Raines, architect and founder of GRAS Studios, who has turned Custom Lane in a thriving space that celebrates art, craft and making.  And we hear more on Gunnar's new venture, Brown’s of Leith. Until recently, home to the engineering company, George Brown and Sons, it is now a place to meet, eat and drink with visionary plans to transform the upper spaces in to showcase for craft and design.  We hope you enjoy DES Talks.  Bard [https://www.bard-scotland.com] is at 1 Customs Wharf Leith Edinburgh EH6 6AL and is open Friday - Sunday 11am - 5pm or by appointment. Brown's of Leith [https://customlane.co/event/browns-of-leith-opening/] is at 4 - 6 Shore Leith EH6 6QS and is open Thursday - Sunday 8am - 8pm. Feminine Literacy was curated and presented by Doyenne Studio [https://www.doyenne-studio.com/about]. Thank you for listening to DES Talks. Please do spread the word, share, subscribe, rave and rate. We are new to this game and keen to reach as many listeners as possible, far and wide. And do explore our previous podcasts - we explore V&A Dundee's exhibition Thread Memory: Embroidery from Palestine with V&A curator Rachel Dedman and artists Leena Nammari and Aya Haidar; we talk Harvest, Craft Scotland's recent showcase of contemporary craft with curator Stacey Hunter and potter, Samuel Sparrow and weaver, Julia Rebaudo. Or tune into Frances Priest or Cara Guthrie talking about clay and Gráinne Rice discussing the pure beauty of the clothes designed by the visionary textile artist, Bernat Klein.  Design Exhibition Scotland [https://www.designexhibitionscotland.co.uk/]was founded by Susanna Beaumont in 2018 to celebrate and champion making and creating through exhibitions, conversations, commissions and now podcasts. Production Ryan Scott Film [https://www.ryanscottfilm.com/] Music Malin Lewis  [https://www.instagram.com/malinlewismusic/]

12. Dez. 2025 - 36 min
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Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

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