Forsidebilde av showet Her Shrink Ray Eye Podcast

Her Shrink Ray Eye Podcast

Podkast av hershrinkrayeye

engelsk

Kultur og fritid

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Miniatures, art, and quiet rebellion. Exploring how miniatures shape perception, time, and meaning Hosted by Joan Biediger, Her Shrink Ray Eye explores miniature figure painting and scale modeling from a woman’s perspective, with thoughtful conversations about art, perception, meaning, and creative practice. Rather than stopping at technique, the show looks at how miniatures actually work. It considers how they shape attention, hold moments in time, carry emotion, and create meaning beyond what is immediately visible. Thoughtful, personal, and a little offbeat, new episodes every other Wednesday.

Alle episoder

21 Episoder

episode Before the Figure Resolves: Why Unfinished Bodies Feel Different cover

Before the Figure Resolves: Why Unfinished Bodies Feel Different

Why do unfinished figures feel different from unfinished objects? In this episode of Her Shrink Ray Eye, I look at the moment before a figure fully resolves. A jacket that still needs highlights or a base that needs more texture usually reads as unfinished work. But a blank face, an unpainted eye, separated hands, visible armature, or skin tones that have not come together yet can feel different because those areas belong to the parts of the figure we already read as human. This episode explores why the unfinished figure can feel uneasy at the bench, especially during the stage when the figure has moved past primer but the paint, sculpting, and assembly have not fully come together yet. I talk about faces, eyes, skin, separated limbs, armatures, and why incomplete bodies carry a different kind of attention than ordinary unfinished miniature parts. At its heart, this is a reflection on that vulnerable ugly stage of figure work, when paint, material, and human recognition begin to overlap before the figure has fully come together.

10. juni 2026 - 20 min
episode When the Viewer Becomes Part of the Scene cover

When the Viewer Becomes Part of the Scene

In this episode of Her Shrink Ray Eye, I’m looking at what happens when a viewer becomes part of the miniature, not as a literal figure inside the scene, but as someone physically and perceptually placed by it. A miniature may be finished on the bench, but as an experience, it is not quite complete until someone encounters it. The viewer arrives with a body, a height, a distance, and a position. They lean in, shift their angle, peer through an opening, or notice an empty place that seems to address them. I talk about viewer position, scale, haptic looking, peripersonal space, photography, display, and the difference between being shown a view and finding one. A photograph can preserve an image of a miniature, but the physical object asks something different of the viewer. It asks them to locate themselves in relation to the work. This episode is about encounter: how a miniature gives the viewer a place, how display shapes access, and how the scene can include us without ever needing to name us. The maker builds the conditions. The viewer completes the experience.

27. mai 2026 - 42 min
episode The Miniature as Controlled Illusion cover

The Miniature as Controlled Illusion

In this episode of Her Shrink Ray Eye, I look at miniatures as controlled illusions: not tricks or gimmicks but carefully arranged systems of visual cues. A miniature asks the viewer to trust what they see, what they infer, and what their mind completes. Scale, surface, light, placement, edges, and omission all shape whether that illusion holds or begins to weaken. Drawing on ideas from predictive processing, scene perception, amodal completion, scale perception, cue integration, Gestalt grouping, spatial cognition, geography, and E. H. Gombrich’s Art and Illusion, this episode explores why a small made object can become something the mind almost enters. It asks a practical bench question: What is this piece asking the viewer to trust, and where do the cues stop backing it up? A thoughtful look at miniature art, perception, cue conflict, and the strange balance between what is physically built and what the viewer completes.

13. mai 2026 - 33 min
episode The Bench Blindness Experiment: What Changes When You Step Back cover

The Bench Blindness Experiment: What Changes When You Step Back

This episode is a simple experiment you can do with your own work. At our workbench, we spend so much time looking at a piece that familiarity starts to take over. We know where everything is. We know what we intended. Over time, that can make it harder to see what the viewer will actually notice. In this episode, I guide you through a series of short tests: looking at your miniature up close, stepping back, viewing it through a phone, reducing detail, and checking what remains in memory. At each step, the question is the same: what changes? Not what you already know, but what shifts, what holds, and what disappears. Your miniature doesn’t exist as one fixed image. It changes with distance, attention, and context. And once you see that, you can start using it.

29. april 2026 - 28 min
episode Time Travel in Plastic: A Handheld Time Machine in Miniature Art cover

Time Travel in Plastic: A Handheld Time Machine in Miniature Art

In miniature art, we often focus on detail, realism, and storytelling. But there is another dimension that shapes how a piece is experienced: time. In this episode, I explore how miniatures can suggest not just a single moment, but a longer stretch of time. Some scenes feel fixed and complete. Others feel interrupted, as if something has just happened or is about to happen. That difference has less to do with complexity or narrative, and more to do with how time is embedded in the work. Drawing on observation and practice, I look at how time becomes visible through traces: wear, repetition, and unfinished actions. I also explore how historical miniatures move beyond accuracy when they begin to convey lived time rather than just correct information. At its best, a miniature becomes more than a representation. It becomes a fragment of time that the viewer can reconstruct and move through. In that sense, it becomes something like a small, handheld time machine not by moving, but by making time perceptible within a still space.

15. april 2026 - 29 min
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