-
Heather Jones and Jeffrey Cortland Jones of Dayton are a couple with two kids and two thriving art careers. This is how they make it work.
-
-
Sculptors and twin brothers Kyle and Kelly Phelps learned their craft in art school and at the auto factory.
-
Aka Pereyma was a master of the Ukrainian folk tradition of painting elaborate designs on eggs. Christina Pereyma, Aka's daughter, is a textile artist living in Troy.
-
Artists Molly Jo Burke and Nate Gorgen have two kids, a dog, and a collaborative art practice they call "Byproduct Studios."
-
Artist Leesa Haapapuro is working at the Rosewood Arts Center to share ancient illuminated manuscript techniques with community artists.
-
This season focuses on artists who regularly work together as collaborators, or alternately, who have creative partners in their families who influence or participate in making art.
-
Artists experiment with all kinds of materials like metal, glass, and wood. So how about soil, living things, or whole ecosystems? Cincinnati curator Sue Spaid has been at the forefront of the Eco-Art movement for over 20 years. Producer Susan Byrnes meets with her in Cincinnati’s Madisonville neighborhood to learn more about the art form.
-
The Dayton Art Institute has a new work on display by Columbus artist Don Coulter. From a distance it looks like a painting. Step closer and you’ll find that what you’re seeing is something different. Producer Susan Byrnes visits Coulter in his home studio to see his unusual process in action.
-
Discover how artist and Wave Pool co-founder, Calcagno Cullen, connects art and community in Cincinnati's Camp Washington neighborhood.