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Artalogue

Artalogue

By: Madison Beale
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Join Madison Beale, host of the Artalogue, and listen to interviews with leading art world professionals.

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Episodes
  • Wynne Neilly In Focus
    Jun 30 2026

    Today is the last day of Pride Month! To celebrate an excellent month of Pride programming on the Artalogue, host Madison Beale chats with photographer Wynne Neilly. Award-winning, Toronto based photographer Wynne Neilly talks about portrait photography as an act of care, and how his queer and trans identity shapes both what he photographs and how he builds trust with the people in front of the camera.

    Neilly traces his path from a high school darkroom to art school mentorship and a practice rooted in relational intimacy. We get into why self-portraiture can be more challenging than traditional portraiture, especially while navigating aging, and the uniquely confronting experience of turning your own gaze back on yourself. He also breaks down what it means to treat the camera as a real tool, not just a content machine, and how the shift from film culture to smartphones changed the craft, the job market, and the pressure to define “success.”

    We spend some time discussing Neilly's early project “Female to Male,” Neilly's long-running Polaroid and installation self-documentation project that captured early transition week by week, which then erupted online after it was picked up by a news outlet and pushed him into a public spotlight. He reflects on the double-edged sword of visibility, the way trans work can be flattened into spectacle and sidelined, and what it takes to reclaim your own narrative over a decade later.

    Then we go behind the scenes of the Elliot Page Time magazine cover: the surprising email, the pandemic-era intimacy of a tiny set, the stress of shooting film under pressure, and the rare gift of creative freedom in an editorial context. We also discuss what it means to work in Canada today, and how some artists can find it rather stifling. If you care about LGBTQ+ art, trans representation, photography, and making images with real meaning, this conversation will stay with you. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review saying what part of Neilly's story resonated most with you.


    HAPPY PRIDE!

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    38 mins
  • Janna Watson: Orientations of Painting
    Jun 22 2026

    Today on the Artalogue, one of my favourite Canadian painters, Janna Watson, chats with me about her art career, being Queer and taking inspiration from nature. Janna Watson is a Toronto-based abstract painter whose paintings use colour, drag marks, contrast, and negative space to reframe spirituality as something embodied, flexible, and alive. She also intentionally avoids borders, letting the edges stay vulnerable and infinite.

    We start with her earliest memories of art, shaped by two artist grandparents and a formative critique from her grandfather: “it needs to be wilder.” From there, Watson breaks down how intuition is built through repetition and risk, why “mistakes” often become the strongest moments in a painting, and how she sees herself in collaboration with her tools. We also talk about influences she returns to, what she chooses to collect at home, and how nature, especially the sky, becomes her favourite form of inspiration in abstraction because it changes constantly and belongs to all of us.

    Because this conversation lands during Pride month, Watson shares her experience as a Queer artist raised in a Pentecostal church, including the being outed, and how finding queer community in Toronto expanded her sense of self, God, and possibility. She explains what it means to “queer the painting process” through working on the floor, building compositions with multiple orientations. We close with career highlights, discuss sobriety, her new book “Layers of Self,” and practical advice for emerging painters who want a sustainable studio practice. We also have a really great discussion about complicating the Canadian canon!

    If this resonates, subscribe, share the episode with an artist friend, and leave a review so more people can find these stories of art, identity, and creative freedom.

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    28 mins
  • Jake Kimble: Life as Performance
    Jun 16 2026

    Happy Pride! It's episode 2 of the Artalogue's Pride Programming, speaking with 2SLGBTQ+ voices in Canada's art world. Today on the Artalogue, Madison Beale chats with Jake Kimble, a contemporary Dënesųłıné photographer based in Vancouver, who was recently highlighted by CBC Arts as an artist to watch! originally from Treaty 8 Territory in the North West Territories. Kimble's work moves between photography, performance, and material experimentation with a clear goal: make authenticity visible without sanding down its edges.

    Kimble shares their path from acting to a visual art practice shaped by breath, the body, and the idea that “life is a performance.” He shares how growing up across the Northwest Territories and other parts of Canada taught him to value freedom, privacy, and the specific places that hold memory, which now informs where he shoots the Canadian landscape in his practice. We talk about what changed through training as an artist when honest feedback pushed him away from edgy, disingenuous work that wasn't representative of their true self, and toward a self-portraiture practice that can make sense of sexuality, love, pain, and humour all at once. Kimble also explores what their two-spirit identity means to them in their life and art practice, and how breaking down normative ideas of gender have become central to their work.

    From there, we discuss some highlights in Kimble's over so far, such as the beaded tears that slowly obscure his face in It’s All So Incredibly Loud and the cheeky brilliance of printing photographs on paper towels for the Pick It Up Quick series. We also talk about the East and West coast art scenes from both the artist side and the gallery side, career highs, burnout, and the self-care practices that make long careers possible.

    If this conversation sparks something in you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review.

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    36 mins
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