Immaterial: 5,000 Years of Art, One Material at a Time
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Immaterial: 5,000 Years of Art, One Material at a Time
Stories of the materials used in making art are often as thought-provoking and illuminating as the objects themselves. From The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Immaterial examines the materials of art and what they can reveal about history and humanity. Each episode looks at a single material: paper, cl...
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19 EpisodenTime: Keeping Digital Art Alive
How do art conservators save video art from obsolescence?
If a painting on canvas rips or a marble sculpture shatters to pieces, art conservator...
Wood: The Most Musical Tree in the World
How did one tree become a world-famous tonewood for guitars?
Deep in the forests of Belize, a wood importer from Florida discovered a rare tree...
Trash: The Archaeology of Rubbish
An archaeologist and an artist walk into a dump…
For most of us, we throw our garbage to the curb, and it disappears from our lives. But to som...
Chia: Beyond Superfoods and Infomercials
What can the tiny chia seed reveal about the history of oil painting?
For centuries, one of the most prized mediums of art at museums like the M...
Blankets and Quilts: Threads of Identity
What happens when our most intimate possessions end up in art museums?
Blankets comfort and keep us warm. They accompany us through our lives. T...
Space, Part 2: Behind the Scenes at The Met
What is hidden in the 'empty' spaces of an art museum?
The Met is more than a museum of art. It is a city unto itself: population 2,000, with a...
Space, Part 1: Giving Form to a Feeling
How does an artist give presence to absence?
Bronze, wood, paint, and stone—classic materials for art making. But what if you're trying and stru...
Stone: Making and Breaking Legacies
What happens when the unbreakable breaks?
Throughout art museums around the world, you’ll find ancient stone statues of rulers and marble monume...
Introducing: Immaterial Season 2
What is hiding in the material choices of artists and makers?
Immaterial, The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s marquee podcast, is back with eight m...
Bonus Episode: Tarot
Grab a cup of tea and join us for a bonus episode on tarot. We learn about the cards from their patrician origins to the present day, when tarot is be...
Metals, Part Two
In the second part of our alchemical journey, we meet what ancient philosophers called the “noble” metals: mercury, silver, and gold. How did a ninete...
Metals, Part One
Philosophers and scientists have tried for millennia to crack the code of alchemy: the art of turning lead into gold. But alchemy goes much deeper tha...
Linen
Take a spin through The Met and you’ll find thousands of items made from linen. From a 3,500 year old sheet from Ancient Egypt, to a Giorgio Armani su...
Jade
Deep in the riverbeds of Aotearoa New Zealand’s South Island, you’ll find a stone that’s as hard as steel and as green as the first breath of the eart...
Shells
It all begins with a sea creature—a snail called a conch—and the mathematically perfect spiral it transforms into a home, which we humans then put to...
Clay
In seventeenth-century Europe, some of the wealthiest women in the world were doing something strange with the ceramic jars in their curiosity cabinet...
Concrete
Concrete is full of contradictions. First it’s dust, then liquid, then hard as stone. It’s both rough and smooth, it’s modern and ancient, it can pres...
Paper
Valentines, comic books, cigarette cards and more—all of these objects can be meaningful, but what does it mean to house them in a museum? Paper holds...
Introducing: Immaterial
Introducing Immaterial, a brand new podcast from The Met. Hosted by poet Camille T. Dungy, Immaterial examines the materials of art and what they can...