FT Arts  show

FT Arts

Summary: Each week the arts podcast brings you interviews and studio discussions on the latest arts stories and cultural trends, with contributions from the FT’s roster of critics and commentators. You can find more arts news and reviews from the Financial Times on our website and listen to more episodes of FT Arts on iTunes, Stitcher, Audioboom or Soundcloud.

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Podcasts:

 New opera: does it exist? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:11:22

n the opening of Alexander Raskatov's A Dog's Heart at the Coliseum in London, Jan Dalley, FT arts editor, asks Andrew Clark, the paper's chief classical music critic, and Nicholas Payne, former director of The Royal Opera, the English National Opera and Opera North, whether "new opera" is a contradiction in terms.

 Pop stars of a certain age | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:11:11

The music scene is currently awash with aging rockers and pop groups re-united. Take That, complete with Robbie Williams, will tour next year; space rockers Hawkwind, formed in 1969, tour the UK next month; while Lemmy, born 1945, is currently taking the stage with Motorhead. Whatever happened to “hope I die before I get old”? Aren’t they old enough to know better? Neville Hawcock, deputy arts editor, talks to Peter Aspden, the FT’s arts writer, and Richard Clayton, who regularly reviews pop for the paper.

 Chekhov on the small screen | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:11:30

How best to celebrate Chekhov's 150th anniversary? Sky Arts 2 have chosen to mark the occasion with "Chekhov: comedy shorts", four one-act plays transposed to the small screen, with a cast of well-known comedians including Johny Vegas and Steve Coogan. But do they make good television? Neville Hawcock, the FT's deputy arts editor, talks to the paper's theatre critic, Sarah Hemming, and television columnist, John Lloyd, about the venture.

 Contemporary British art and the cult of celebrity | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:10:58

It's been a big week for contemporary British art. First the opening of the British Art Show 7 in Nottingham, then the second instalment of Newspeak at the Saatchi Gallery in London. To round it off, on Sunday Channel 4 will show “Modern Times”, the fifth in its series The Genius of Britain, this time presented by Janet Street-Porter. Peter Aspden, FT arts writer, and John Lloyd, FT television columnist, discuss art and the cult of celebrity: Charles Saatchi, Damien Hirst and the inimitable Janet Street-Porter. FT art critic Jackie Wullschlager reports on the British Art Show. Does it really represent the art of the nation? Produced by Griselda Murray Brown

 Jan Dalley and Peter Aspden discuss A History of the World in 100 Objects | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:09:30

With the announcement of the final object, FT arts editor Jan Dalley talks to Peter Apsden about the significance of the BBC Radio 4 series 'A History of the World in 100 Objects' presented by Neil MacGregor, director of the British Museum.

 Simon Schama on beasts and beastliness in contemporary art | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:49:52

From formaldehyde sheep to giant horses, Simon Schama traces contemporary animal attractions to past great works

 Shadow Catchers at the V&A | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:10:59

Shadow Catchers, the latest exhibition at London’s Victoria & Albert Museum, is a showcase for ‘camera-less’ photography – where images are captured directly on photographic paper without the use of a camera. Deputy arts editor Neville Hawcock and Francis Hodgson, the FT’s photography critic, discuss the ideas behind the exhibition, and the works of the five contemporary artists on show, with the show’s curator, Martin Barnes.

 Has Mad Men lost its mojo? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:18:30

“The cultural bore of the autumn is the lover of Mad Men.” So wrote FT arts writer Peter Aspden in his weekly culture column, provoking a storm of reader responses – some grateful, others outraged. As it enters a fourth series, has Mad Men made the fatal mistake of falling in love with itself? Is the series losing its sense of time and place, and are the characters becoming stale? We look at Mad Men's plot, historical significance and, crucially, its impact on fashion – the skinny ties, hourglass figures, and excessive drink consumption. Has it influenced our own sense of style? In this week’s arts podcast, FT columnists Peter Aspden, John Lloyd and Nicola Copping are in the studio with arts editor Jan Dalley. Produced by Rob Minto and Griselda Murray Brown

 Jan Dalley interviews Sir Nicholas Serota | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:10:54

Arbus in Aberdeen, Long in Lakeland - Tate director Sir Nicholas Serota talks to FT arts editor Jan Dalley about next year’s Artist Rooms programme of touring exhibitions. In its past two years, the scheme has drawn tens of thousands of visitors in towns throughout the UK to shows by Beuys, Ruscha, Woodman, Hirst and others – but how easily can the model be replicated elsewhere? Jan Dalley interviews Sir Nicholas Serota in his office at Tate.

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