Art Happens: The Divine Mess of Art History

Art Happens: The Divine Mess of Art History

James William Moore
Country USA
Genres Society & Culture, Arts, Visual Arts
Language EN-US
Episodes 28
Latest 15.06.2026

Art Happens: The Divine Mess of Art History is a podcast hosted by artist and educator James William Moore. Each bite-sized episode explores the scandals, strokes of genius, and happy accidents that have shaped art history. The show is witty, insightful, and a little irreverent, offering art history served with sass, smarts, and a splash of chaos.

Episodes

  • Movement in about 10 Minutes: Blaue Reiter (Blue Rider) 15.06.2026 13m
    What happens when a group of artists decides that reality is overrated? In this episode of Art Happens: The Divine Mess of Art History, James William Moore dives into Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider), the short-lived but enormously influential German Expressionist movement that helped change the course of modern art. From the vibrant visions of Wassily Kandinsky and Franz Marc to ideas about spirituality, symbolism, color theory, and what Kandinsky called “inner necessity,” this movement cha...
  • Masterpiece Moment: Migrant Mother - The Face of the Great Depression 08.06.2026 12m
    Masterpiece Moment: Migrant Mother Dorothea Lange’s Migrant Mother became one of the defining images of the Great Depression — a photograph of poverty, endurance, and uneasy compassion. But behind the symbol was Florence Owens Thompson, a real woman whose life was far more complex than the image America came to know. In this episode, we look at how one photograph shaped public memory, what it reveals about documentary photography, and what happens when a person becomes an icon. Send us a ...
  • Artist Spotlight: Lee Miller 01.06.2026 12m
    Before she became one of the most important war photographers of the twentieth century, Lee Miller was known as a model, a fashion icon, and a muse within the Surrealist circle. But that version of her story barely scratches the surface. In this episode of Art Happens: The Divine Mess of Art History, James William Moore follows Miller’s remarkable transformation from Vogue cover model to groundbreaking photographer, tracing her journey through Surrealism, the London Blitz, the liberation of D...
  • Artist Spotlight: Hilma af Klint 11.05.2026 11m
    Hilma af Klint may be one of the most important artists modern art history almost erased. Long before Kandinsky, Mondrian, or the official arrival of abstraction, af Klint was painting massive works filled with spirals, symbols, radiant color, cosmic diagrams, and mysterious systems that blended science, spirituality, philosophy, and the unseen world. And then she did something almost unbelievable: she packed much of the work away, convinced the future would understand it better than her own ...
  • Masterpiece Moment: Guernica 04.05.2026 14m
    There are paintings you admire. And then there are paintings that refuse to let you look away. In this Masterpiece Moment, James William Moore dives into Guernica by Pablo Picasso—a work that doesn’t document war so much as detonate it across the surface of the canvas. Created in response to the 1937 bombing of the town of Guernica during the Spanish Civil War, this monumental painting rejects tidy storytelling in favor of fracture, distortion, and emotional truth. There are no heroes here. N...
  • Movement in about 10 Minutes: Minimalism (audio) 27.04.2026 12m
    In this episode of Art Happens: The Divine Mess of Art History, James William Moore steps into the pristine white room of Minimalism and asks the question so many viewers have thought: Wait… this is art? From boxes, slabs, and fluorescent lights to the radical quiet of Agnes Martin, this episode unpacks how Minimalism stripped art down to form, repetition, material, and space—and in doing so, shifted the focus from the object alone to the viewer’s encounter with it. Along the way, James explo...
  • Behind the Brush: Michelangelo vs The Ceiling Part 2 (audio) 20.04.2026 12m
    In Part Two of Behind the Brush: Michelangelo vs. the Ceiling, James William Moore looks past the glory of the Sistine Chapel ceiling and into the grind that made it possible. This episode explores the power of Pope Julius II, the politics of patronage, the physical misery of fresco painting, and the psychological pressure of making something monumental under scrutiny. The result is a masterpiece that does not feel effortless, but wrestled into being. Beneath the beauty is strain, ambition, d...
  • Behind the Brush: Michelangelo vs The Ceiling Part 1 (audio) 13.04.2026 10m
    Before the Sistine Chapel ceiling became a legend, it was a gamble. In Part One of Behind the Brush: Michelangelo vs. the Ceiling, James William Moore looks up into the artistry, ambition, and sheer audacity of one of the most famous ceilings in the world. This episode explores Michelangelo the sculptor, the brutal demands of fresco, the visual genius of the ceiling as a total system, and why The Creation of Adam still holds so much power. Less polished myth, more divine mess—this is the Sist...
  • Artist Spotlight: Lee Krasner - More than Pollock's Wife 06.04.2026 17m
    They called Lee Krasner a wife, a footnote, a supporting character in someone else’s masterpiece. But this episode of Art Happens: The Divine Mess of Art History tells a different story. James William Moore takes a closer look at Krasner as a force in her own right—an artist of discipline, reinvention, ambition, and power who helped shape modern American art while fighting against the lazy captions history tried to pin on her. From her early training and place in the New York art world to her...
  • Art History Mystery: Gustav Klimt's The Golden Lady 30.03.2026 15m
    When is a masterpiece more than a masterpiece? In this episode of Art Happens: The Divine Mess of Art History, James William Moore follows the glittering, complicated trail behind Gustav Klimt’s famous Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer I—often called Woman in Gold. What begins as a story of beauty, luxury, and Viennese modernism becomes something much deeper: a story of Nazi theft, museum power, historical memory, and the long fight for restitution. James unpacks how this dazzling portrait beca...
  • Movement in about 10 Minutes: The Harlem Renaissance 23.03.2026 7m
    In this episode of Art Happens: The Divine Mess of Art History, James William Moore dives into the Harlem Renaissance—one of the most powerful cultural movements in American history. More than a moment, it was a declaration: that modern Black culture belonged at the center of modern American life. From the Great Migration to the creative fire of Harlem’s streets, this episode explores how artists, writers, and musicians transformed visibility into power and redefined what modernity could look...
  • Masterpiece Moment: Hokusai's The Great Wave - The Print that Ate the World 16.03.2026 9m
    Hokusai’s Great Wave may be one of the most recognizable images in art history—but it didn’t begin as a rare treasure meant for palace walls. It began as a print: reproducible, portable, and built to circulate. In this episode of Art Happens: The Divine Mess of Art History, James William Moore dives into the image that became a global symbol, tracing how one dramatic woodblock print turned into an artistic phenomenon, a design icon, and one of the most successful visual “viruses” the world ha...
  • Movement in about 10 Minutes: DADA (audio) 09.03.2026 9m
    In this Movement in about 10 Minutes episode of Art Happens: The Divine Mess of Art History (presented by J-Squared Atelier), James William Moore dives headfirst into Dada—the “anti-art” movement that didn’t politely critique the world… it heckled it. Born out of the chaos of World War I, Dada looked at “rational” modern society—its progress, its logic, its grand speeches—and basically said: If this is what your system produces, why should we keep following its rules? Cue the noise poems, non...
  • Artist Spotlight: Caravaggio (audio) 02.03.2026 11m
    Rome, around 1600—alleyway Rome. Knife-in-the-boot Rome. A city where debts are loud, tempers are louder, and the shadows feel like they’ve got teeth. In this Artist Snapshot of Art Happens: The Divine Mess of Art History (presented by J-Squared Atelier), host James William Moore dives into the life and lighting of Caravaggio—the volatile genius who didn’t paint saints like polished icons… but like real people dragged straight out of the messy human world. We’ll break down the signature p...
  • Marcel Duchamp: The Fountain (audio) 23.02.2026 12m
    Imagine walking into a gallery in 1917 and seeing… a urinal. Not in a restroom. Not in a hardware store. In the sacred, echoing temple of “taste.” The label reads: The Fountain. The artist: R. Mutt. And suddenly the art world makes that same sound you make when you bite into something that should not be crunchy. In this episode of Art Happens: The Divine Mess of Art History (presented by J-Squared Atelier), host James William Moore dives into Marcel Duchamp’s Fountain—the artwork that didn’...
  • Frida Kahlo: The Two Fridas (audio) 16.02.2026 11m
    In this Masterpiece Moment, we step into the storm-lit space of Frida Kahlo’s The Two Fridas (1939)—a double self-portrait painted in the emotional aftermath of her divorce from Diego Rivera. Two nearly identical Fridas sit hand-in-hand beneath a heavy sky, dressed in opposing identities: European white lace on one side, Tehuana tradition on the other. Their hearts are exposed. A single vein connects them. And one of them is bleeding. This episode is an intimate, lyrical close-look at how Kah...
  • Movement in about 10 Minutes: Pop Art (audio) 09.02.2026 12m
    Pop Art is everywhere—on soup cans, comic panels, billboards, and celebrity faces. But this episode isn’t asking, “Is it beautiful?” It’s asking, “Who sold this to you… and why did you buy it?” In this episode of Art Happens: The Divine Mess of Art History, host James William Moore dives into the movement that dragged advertising, packaging, and fame onto the gallery wall—and made it impossible to unsee the machinery underneath. From Andy Warhol’s silkscreen assembly line of Campbell’s Soup a...
  • David Hockney: Pools, Polaroids, & iPads (audio) 02.02.2026 8m
    A splash is the fastest thing in the world—blink-and-it’s-gone. So how did David Hockney turn a half-second event into an entire philosophy of looking? In this episode of Art Happens: The Divine Mess of Art History, James dives into Hockney’s lifelong obsession with vision: not “How accurate is it?” but “How does seeing feel?” We start with “A Bigger Splash” (1967)—that calm modern pool interrupted by a frozen white explosion—now in Tate Britain. From there, we jump to Hockney’s 1980...
  • When Art Gets Political (audio) 26.01.2026 10m
    In this episode of Art Happens: The Divine Mess of Art History (presented by J-Squared Atelier), host James William Moore pulls back the curtain on the myth that art is “above politics.” Because history doesn’t back that up—when the world catches fire, artists don’t always whisper. Sometimes they make images so loud you can’t unsee them. In Behind the Brush: When Art Gets Political, we follow political art as witness, protest, and pressure—starting with Francisco Goya’s The Third of May 180...
  • The Arnolfini Portrait: Secrets in the Mirror 19.01.2026 10m
    A portrait that refuses to sit still. In this episode of Art Happens: The Divine Mess of Art History, host James William Moore opens the case file on Jan van Eyck’s Arnolfini Portrait (1434)—a painting where the real plot twist isn’t the couple… it’s the mirror. A convex glass “eye” on the back wall reflects two unexpected figures in the doorway, pulling us into the room and turning a simple portrait into a staged moment, a legal-looking document, and a psychological trap. We examine the ...

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