Omslagafbeelding van de show Art Virgins : From Clueless to Collectors

Art Virgins : From Clueless to Collectors

Podcast door Zahra & Sami

Engels

Technologie en Wetenschap

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Over Art Virgins : From Clueless to Collectors

🎹 Art Virgins: From Clueless to Collectors 🎹 Ever walked into a museum and felt totally lost? Or thought art collecting was only for millionaires? We get it—because that was us. Two friends, complete beginners, decided to start collecting art with zero knowledge (unless you count knowing that Da Vinci painted the Mona Lisa). Each week on Art Virgins, we share our step-by-step journey into the art world—learning, laughing, and exploring over coffee. Together, we’ll uncover how to actually enjoy art, understand different movements, and build a collection no matter your budget. We explore the questions every beginner has but is too shy to ask, like: How do you enjoy a museum without feeling overwhelmed? Do you need to be rich to start an art collection? How does context change the way we experience a piece of art? How do artists redefine movements—and how does personal style and courage shape an artist’s legacy? What’s the difference between surrealism, pop art, abstract art, and contemporary art? Can street art be both business and authentic expression? How do you prepare for an exhibition so you actually enjoy it? Along the way we share beginner-friendly breakdowns of movements, stories of famous and contemporary artists, visits to exhibitions, museums, and street art shows, plus tips on how to start your own collection—no matter your budget. Art Virgins is for you if you’ve ever felt: Intimidated by galleries and art jargon. Curious about art but unsure where to start. Overwhelmed by centuries of art history. Like you don’t “belong” in museums. Or simply eager to impress your friends, partner, or colleagues with real art knowledge. Whether you want to enjoy museums without feeling lost, start an affordable collection, or simply sound smart about art at dinner parties—Art Virgins will take you there. 👉 Subscribe now to begin your journey into the art world, one question (and one coffee) at a time.

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aflevering Episode 26: A Picasso in a Drug Bust & JR's Pont Neuf Cavern artwork

Episode 26: A Picasso in a Drug Bust & JR's Pont Neuf Cavern

To make the most out of your listening experience, follow along with the episode's Wingman post on our Instagram: @artvirgins Show Notes: In this episode, Zahra opens with a headline that sounds like clickbait: a Picasso recovered during a drug raid in Paris. It's not clickbait. That discovery pulls her into a world of art heists she never knew existed — including one of the biggest in French history, a thief the art world nicknamed Spider-Man, and over 1,000 Picasso works that have simply vanished. Meanwhile, Sami finally delivers the JR episode. It started with a lithograph in Toulon that he misidentified. Behind it was one of the most compelling careers in street art — from a Paris banlieue kid who found a camera in the Metro, to the most ambitious project of his life: turning Paris's oldest bridge into a walkthrough cave. Sami saw it from the river. It closed June 28th. He never made it inside. Highlights: * A Picasso worth up to $20 million found in a drug raid — two weeks ago * Why Picasso is the most stolen artist in history * The 2010 MusĂ©e d'Art Moderne heist: five masterworks, no alarms, one very opportunistic thief * The "Spider-Man" of the art world and how a commissioned theft spiraled out of control * JR: from Paris suburbs to global street artist * How a camera found in the Metro changed everything * Face to Face (2007): Israeli and Palestinian portraits, side by side on the same wall * La Caverne du Pont Neuf: 120 metres, five senses, and a Daft Punk soundtrack * Why JR self-finances everything — and how to own one of his works * Context is everything: what Sami learned revisiting that Toulon lithograph * Video of The Cavern: https://youtu.be/RHRa9icEwes?si=r_Bw-QryoGCrPu0Q [https://youtu.be/RHRa9icEwes?si=r_Bw-QryoGCrPu0Q] Artists & Figures Mentioned: * Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Georges Braque, Amedeo Modigliani, Fernand LĂ©ger — 2010 heist * JR (Jean RenĂ©) — French street artist and photographeur * Christo and Jean-Claude — the artists who inspired La Caverne * Thomas Bangalter (Daft Punk) — electroacoustic soundscape for La Caverne

2 jul 2026 - 59 min
aflevering Episode 25: What World Cup Posters Tell Us About Art History artwork

Episode 25: What World Cup Posters Tell Us About Art History

To make the most out of your listening experience, follow along with the episode's Wingman post on our Instagram: @artvirgins Show Notes: The World Cup kicks off tomorrow in Mexico City — and Sami has been waiting four years for this. Sticker collections, Netflix documentaries, 4am alarm plans. Full obsession mode. But this is Art Virgins, so naturally, it's also about art. It started with a blog in his inbox listing every World Cup poster from 1930 to 2026. A year ago, he would have scrolled through it and moved on. This time, he couldn't stop. He recognized Art Deco in the first poster. Then Futurism. Then a name that stopped him cold. World Cup posters don't just decorate events — they wear the art movements of their decade. Every style choice tells you something about the world at the time it was made. So Sami walks through 22 posters: a goalkeeper shaped by fascism, flags stitched together in the aftermath of World War II, Joan Miro commissioned as Spain emerged from the Franco era, Annie Leibovitz making history as the first photographer ever hired for an official poster, and three artists from three countries co-designing a single image over WhatsApp. Then comes his new obsession: 48 unofficial posters by design studio Mucho — one per qualified nation, built on one mission. Football posters your partner would actually let you hang in the living room. He runs his three F's on the collection: Forget it, Fling it, Frame it. And he wants to sell a kidney to buy all of them. Highlights: * How a blog in Sami's inbox changed the way he sees World Cup posters * Why style is never neutral — every poster choice reflects its political moment * 1930 Uruguay — Art Deco at its purest, can sell for up to $20,000 at auction * 1934 Italy — Futurism, Mussolini's propaganda machine, and why the poster feels aggressive * 1938 France — the last before World War II interrupted everything for 12 years * 1950 Brazil — Internationalism, flags layered on a single sock, a world learning to cooperate again * 1958 Sweden — Minimalist silhouette, the first poster Sami genuinely loves * 1978 Argentina — Pointillism style hiding a military dictatorship's PR campaign * 1982 Spain — Joan Miro, Tapies, Chilida; each city got its own poster as Spain reinvented itself after Franco * 1986 Mexico — Annie Leibovitz, the only photographer ever commissioned for an official poster * 1990 Italy — Alberto Burri's Post-Modernism, the Colosseum distorted into a stadium * 1994 USA — Peter Max, cosmic pop art, psychedelic colors * 1998 France — a student from Beaux-Arts Montpellier won an open competition * 2002 Japan/Korea — two calligraphers, two days, one poster * 2018 Russia — Igor Gurovich, Lev Yashin, and the visual language of Russian Constructivism * 2026 USA/Canada/Mexico — Carson Ting, Minerva JM, and Hank Willis Thomas co-design one poster over WhatsApp; 16 city posters including a lobster goalkeeper for Boston and an astronaut for Houston * Mucho's "Art of Sport" collection: 48 unofficial posters, one per nation, $125 each at plotnetprints.com * Sami's three F's applied: Forget it (New Zealand), Fling it (South Korea), Frame it (Sweden's IKEA poster) Artists & Designers Mentioned: * Guillermo Laborde — 1930 Uruguay poster * Gino Boccasile — leading propaganda poster artist of Fascist Italy, 1934 * Joan Miró — 1982 Spain poster, surrealism giant * Antoni Tàpies, Eduardo Chillida, Sora — 1982 Spain city posters * Annie Leibovitz — 1986 Mexico poster, Rolling Stone and Vanity Fair photographer * Alberto Burri — 1990 Italy poster, Post-Modernism * Peter Max — 1994 USA poster, pop art and cosmic psychedelic style * Nathalie Le Gall — 1998 France poster, Beaux-Arts Montpellier student * Igor Gurovich — 2018 Russia poster, Constructivism * Lev Yashin — legendary Soviet goalkeeper depicted in 2018 poster * Carson Ting (Canada), Minerva GM (Mexico), Hank Willis Thomas (USA) — 2026 official poster * Mucho Design Studio — "Art of Sport" collection, 48 unofficial nation posters

10 jun 2026 - 57 min
aflevering Episode 24: Rectangles That Make You Cry: The Complete Abstract Expressionism Story artwork

Episode 24: Rectangles That Make You Cry: The Complete Abstract Expressionism Story

To make the most out of your listening experience, follow along with the episode's Wingman post on our Instagram: @artvirgins Show Notes: In this episode, Sami finally delivers the Abstract Expressionism story he's been promising. It started with Instagram showing him Mark Rothko's rectangles — red on orange, black on gray — and his honest first reaction: "I could do that." Then came a video about people crying in front of Rothko paintings, and Sami went down a three-week rabbit hole that changed everything. What he found wasn't just about rectangles or drip paintings. It was about a bankrupt American government paying artists during the Great Depression, World War II pushing Europe's greatest painters to New York, a Manhattan museum betting on broke bohemians from 8th Street, and the CIA quietly using abstract art as a Cold War weapon. This is how New York replaced Paris. This is how two artists — one who died in a car, one with a razor — created the century's most mocked and most valuable work. Sami breaks down what abstract and expressionism actually mean, walks through the movement's wild history, and ends with six practical tips for enjoying abstract art — including the most important question you should ask when standing in front of a painting that makes no sense. Highlights: * Why Sami hated abstract art and what Instagram did to change his mind * Mark Rothko's rectangles and the people who break down crying * What "abstract" means: opposite of figurative, no recognizable subject (Mondrian's grids, Malevich's black squares) * What "expressionism" means: painting how the artist feels, not what they see * Kandinsky as the first to drop the subject entirely (1910) * How WWII chased Europe's greatest painters across the Atlantic to the US * The Manhattan museum that bet everything on broke bohemians from 8th Street * The CIA's role: turning drip paintings and color fields into Cold War weapons * How New York stole the crown from Paris and became the art capital * Jackson Pollock's drip paintings and tragic death * Mark Rothko and why his paintings make people cry * The question everyone asks: "Could I actually paint that myself?" * Six tips for enjoying abstract art: give it time (5-10 minutes), adjust distance, let your eyes wander, mimic the gestures, ask what it's trying to make you feel (not what it is), and timestamp it (context matters) Artists Mentioned: * Mark Rothko — rectangles, color fields, tragic suicide * Jackson Pollock — drip paintings, tragic car death * Wassily Kandinsky — first to drop the subject entirely (1910) * Piet Mondrian — grids with primary colors * Kazimir Malevich — black squares on white canvas (1915)

7 mei 2026 - 1 h 9 min
aflevering Episode 23: NFTs — The Hype, The Crash & What They Actually Are artwork

Episode 23: NFTs — The Hype, The Crash & What They Actually Are

To make the most out of your listening experience, follow along with the episode's Wingman post on our Instagram: @artvirgins Show Notes: In this episode, Zahra tackles something that made her feel genuinely stupid years ago — NFTs. During COVID, everyone became a cryptocurrency expert overnight. Workshops everywhere. Acronyms flying. And Zahra, reading "non-fungible token" for the first time, thought it was a fungus company developing biological weapons or psychedelic drugs for medical research. Years later, she's ready to admit she had no idea what was happening — and this time, she's doing the research properly. From Beeple's $69 million JPEG sold at Christie's to the metaverse hype to her own NFT purchases (gold on the Loggy platform), Zahra breaks down what NFTs actually are, why the market exploded in 2021, and why it crashed so spectacularly afterward. Meanwhile, Sami teases next week's episode on Abstract Expressionism — the movement he never thought he'd care about until Instagram showed him Mark Rothko's rectangles and he thought "I could do that." Spoiler: he couldn't. And the story behind why is wild. Highlights: * Why Zahra thought NFTs were fungus during COVID * The 2021 hype: when everyone became a crypto expert * What "non-fungible token" actually means (blockchain, unique digital assets, metadata) * Beeple's $69 million Christie's sale — the moment NFTs hit mainstream * The metaverse connection and why digital ownership mattered * Zahra's own NFT purchases: gold on Loggy platform * The crash: why the NFT market collapsed * Current state: dead or just dormant? * NFTs vs traditional art: same rules apply (artist credibility, scarcity, demand) * Sami's teaser: Abstract Expressionism, Mark Rothko, Jackson Pollock, the CIA, and why people cry looking at color fields

22 apr 2026 - 57 min
aflevering Episode 22 : What Happens When You Frame Art the Right Way artwork

Episode 22 : What Happens When You Frame Art the Right Way

To make the most out of your listening experience, follow along with the episode's Wingman post on our Instagram: @artvirgins. Show Notes: In this episode, Sami's Marcus Cederberg C-print from Episode 20 needs framing. Zahra's Cuban painting from August has been waiting for the same treatment. They both assumed framing was simple — pick a frame, done. Then they met Thierry, a professional framer in Lyon, and discovered they'd been thinking about it completely wrong. Between learning why off-the-shelf frames slowly destroy your investment and watching Thierry reject every aesthetic choice they suggested, Sami and Zahra get schooled in the art of framing. The rules: the artwork comes first (forget your sofa), match the frame to the art's personality (not your house), don't compete with the color palette, and trust the expert when they say no. But first — the backstory. How did Zahra's Cuban painting even make it to Lyon? The answer involves Trinidad, a sketchy kiosk, rum at 9 AM, and Sami bargaining while genuinely hungover. Sometimes the best art purchases happen when you're too sick to overthink. Highlights: * Why Sami and Zahra finally got their artwork professionally framed * The Cuban painting backstory: Trinidad, sugarcane rum, and bargaining while nauseous * Meeting Thierry the framer in Lyon — and realizing they knew nothing * The first rule: the artwork comes first (not your house, not your sofa, not your aesthetic) * Match the frame to the artwork's personality, not your decor * Don't compete with the art's color palette * Why off-the-shelf frames slowly kill your investment * Materials breakdown: natural wood (up 22% in 2024), metal/aluminum, floating frames (70% of galleries use them) * The main purpose of framing: protection — not aesthetics * Acid damage: how standard backing destroys paper over time * UV rays and glass options: from 45% to 99% UV protection * Why Thierry kept saying "no" to their suggestions (and why they're glad he did)

8 apr 2026 - 1 h 2 min
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