Interview with Michael Harlan Turkell on The Food Seen, Heritage Radio Network

Michael Harlan Turkell interviewed me for The Food Seen on Heritage Radio Network. We spend a fantastic hour talking about the art gallery, Wok the Dog, travel and all the culineary delights I discovered around the world as I progress w/ the long term documentary project of food markets around the world. Listen to the full interview here.

Michael Harlan Turkell, once an aspiring chef and now freelance photographer and a photo editor of Edible Brooklyn and Edible Manhattan magazines, captures the inner workings of kitchens and documents the lives of chefs in their restaurant world. On The Food Seen, he’ll further explore the amalgamation of food and art by talking to artists from a multitude of media. Guest will range from photographers, food stylists, interior architects for restaurants, industrial designers — all the players that make you want to eat with your eyes. Get ready to feast your ears!

Heritage Radio Network was started in March of 2009 by Patrick Martins and Heritage Foods USA. Built into two re-purposed shipping containers, the station is located in the back garden of Roberta’s Restaurant in Bushwick, Brooklyn. Our shows are broadcast live, and subsequently archived on our website where they can be downloaded as podcasts or RSS feeds.

The content on Heritage Radio Network is absolutely unique, no other broadcast medium is offering the range of subject matter, or the depth of interest in matters of vital importance to every day living.

Curated in T-Arte Tatin

T-arte Tatin is a curatorial project as well. One image from everyday from the emerging artists in contemporary photography. In collaboration with private galleries and public institutions we organize contemporary exhibitions and act in the field of communication to promote visual artists’ works.

I was honored to be included in T-arte Tatin’s curatorial project.

Interview for Coach Radio with Justin Lukasavige

Justin Lukasavige coaches people to do business better by using the power of their personal stories. Justin graduated from college with a degree in aviation and immediately became a commercial pilot. Knowing it wasn’t the story he wanted to live, he began coaching people to get out of debt. Justin travels the country as a speaker and trainer and hosts four online radio shows each week from his Coach Radio studio.

Justin interviewed me for Coach Radio. Listen to the interview here.

Girlfriendology – Girlfriends Make the Impossible Possible


A press stunt/ random shenanigans / a just because “I can” adventure with friend Sherry Otts on Girlfriendology. Read more about how we disrupted NYC Monday commune here.

Curated by The Art Muse

Rachel, an fabulous independent curator is the Art Muse. Images from “Fetal Position and Drool” was featured for Curated. See Curated here.

Charlie Grosso – A Teknomadic

Teknomadics is started by Steve Roberts, for digitally-enabled people, on the move, creating a global village. Technomadic is a word we use to describe the way we are beginning to think and behave as a species. Nearly two billion people are already living a lifestyle affected by the internet.

Some are traveling first class in fancy suits to their next board meeting, trying hard to pull themselves away from their constantly-bombarded smartphone. Some have fully equipped RV’s, and bounce around from place to place at leisure, while maintaining an optimal work schedule online. Some keep it simple with a thumb, a backpack, and a laptop.

Others of us are more stationary technomads, living in suburbia with a lightening-fast fiber optic internet connection. Some are still dialing up at internet cafes, or connecting via packet radio from a faraway island.  No matter how you get here, connecting via the internet puts you in touch with your human family.  Your social circle is no longer limited to your family, co-workers, and neighbors.  The internet allows us to become more aware of the breath in others on the opposite side of the world, in cultures completely foreign to us.

Karl Smerecnik interviewed me and we talked extensively about how I travel, what I take on the road with me and how to stay connected. Read the interview here.

Wok the Dog – Featured in Get Addicted To

Get Additcted To, is a fantastic  … DAILY MIX OF CREATIVE CULTURE is an digital inspirational review network from the worlds of snow and street culture, graphic design, web design, illustration, photography, fashion, film and art, as a consistent source of inspiration for all involved – briefly speaking INTERNATIONAL STYLES.

Peter Nitsch featured Wok the Dog in a thoughtful, in-depth spread in Get Addicted To. So honored to be featured again in Get Addicted To. A shot of mine, Sinatra House, Los Angeles was in Get Addicted To a few months back.

Flesh + Bone Listed in The New York Times

Florence Fabricant from The New York Times Dining sections lists Flesh + Bone.

 

6×6 — Featured in Lenscratch

Aline Smithson’s Lenscratch, listed as one of the top photography blogs by Wired Magazine features 6×6 during our opening week.

Alines says, “I am already exhausted just reading through what is about to happen in New York this fall. The tireless and outside-the-box new wave curators/gallerists/artists, Charlie Grosso and Kesha Bruce of Baang + Burne Contemporary have created a non-stop event of six weekly exhibitions, or 6×6 starting tonight, September 8th, and running through October 18th. Their guerilla style exhibition schedule is high-octane fuel for the art lover. In addition to the 6 planned exhibits, they are taping into the cultural veins of New York to mix blood with Interior design, décor, and architecture professionals, chefs, wine aficiandos, and other independent curators. It’s art on a rock concert scale and it’s going to get loud!” Read the rest of the article here.

Sinatra House – Featured in Get Addicted To


Get Additcted To, is a fantastic  … DAILY MIX OF CREATIVE CULTURE is an digital inspirational review network from the worlds of snow and street culture, graphic design, web design, illustration, photography, fashion, film and art, as a consistent source of inspiration for all involved – briefly speaking INTERNATIONAL STYLES.

So thrilled The Sinatra House, Los Angeles, is the feature selection. Yes, this was Frank Sinatra’s house once upon a time….

The Sinatra House Los Angeles photograph ($300) above was shot on Polarid T-55 (which it no longer available), a positive/negative film that is super sensitive to heat and scratched. Part of the emulsion often comes off when you pull the positive from the negatives which is what give you an interesting texture and element of unpredictability. Sinatra House is a limited edition archival print, 11×14 inch, in edition of 20