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Vick Mickunas interviews returning guest Ben Miller to talk about a book written by Dorothy James that he edited; Full of Hunger and Full of Bread. The World of Jura Soyfer 1912-1939.
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We'll see how artists can reach across time to create something new. We meet painter Zachary Armstrong, a self-taught artist whose best teachers are pictures from the past. Producer Susan Byrnes joins him in his East Dayton studio.
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We explore how things change over time, especially in the time of COVID. We join producer Susan Byrnes as she visits with artist Tess Cortes in Kettering.
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Join producer Susan Byrnes as she follows itinerant community artist, teacher and photographer Tim Wells in Darke County, Ohio.
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This story is about reinvention and making the time to begin again. Producer Susan Byrnes joins retired photographer Dennie Eagleson at her homestead in Yellow Springs as she explains how she’s taken up something new.
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Two groups in Dayton, OH collaborate for the first time helping Black artists bring their work to a larger portion of the public.
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The three-part docuseries tracks the rappers rise, starting as an up-and-coming producer in Chicago.
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Many of us tried something new during lockdown. Some learned to cook or to knit. Naysan McIlhargey is a potter from Yellow Springs whose art took a new direction during the pandemic.
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The role playing game Dungeons & Dragons has been enjoying a boom in popularity. The TV show Stranger Things has spawned a new generation of players. Expert players are live streaming online for thousands of fans. And here, in the Miami Valley, one local writer is putting together a Monster Manual he hopes will help save some real life animals from extinction.
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World War II changed all the men and women who served. And one was artist Ralston Crawford. There’s a new show at the Dayton Art Institute. Culture Couch reporter David Seitz visited the exhibit Air+Space+War and brings us Crawford’s story.
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A retrospective of the film work of Julia Reichert begins in Dayton this Sunday.
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A community conversation about racial bias was held at the Springfield Museum of Art on Saturday. The conversation was inspired by the gallery's current exhibit: BLACK LIFE as subject MATTER II.