March 10, 2022
Part (2)
March 10, 2022
Part (2)
Every Monday & Friday An hour with Kamal Fatah 9 PM- 10 PM
Tuesday 3/11/25 Part (2)
Mariya Palanjian's interview with Arielle Marom
Arielle Marom is a Los Angeles native Sculptor and non-binary woman in the material science realm. Arielle presents philosophy accessible to broad and niche audiences beautifully. Arielle is passionate about sculpture, material consciousness, and bringing niche thought to broad audiences enjoyably.
I want to find out if you would want to interview Arielle for a story on Art-making Standards. Please see below the link Arielle has on Kind Futurism in Press doing a special segment on her models available in the catalog also below.
Arielle looks at different philosophies behind the spirit of making art and brings to audiences the crux of what’s important in our day-to-day and special respective spaces. She’s quite the expert.
Arielle is a sculptor from Los Angeles who has been in the practice for more than ten years. She started in a garage and found herself in Italy working with stone.
“I feel as though writing the courageous portions of my life are thanks to the likes of Nico, Susan Sontag, King Princess and many others talking about Camp, seriousness, and now, my own, Anti-Campness.” ‘There is no blue-print’ to feeling success within your community or as an individual “though an architect may disagree,” she says cheekily.
Tuesday 3/11/25 Part (1)
Mariya Palanjian's interview with Arielle Marom
Arielle Marom is a Los Angeles native Sculptor and non-binary woman in the material science realm. Arielle presents philosophy accessible to broad and niche audiences beautifully. Arielle is passionate about sculpture, material consciousness, and bringing niche thought to broad audiences enjoyably.
I want to find out if you would want to interview Arielle for a story on Art-making Standards. Please see below the link Arielle has on Kind Futurism in Press doing a special segment on her models available in the catalog also below.
Arielle looks at different philosophies behind the spirit of making art and brings to audiences the crux of what’s important in our day-to-day and special respective spaces. She’s quite the expert.
Arielle is a sculptor from Los Angeles who has been in the practice for more than ten years. She started in a garage and found herself in Italy working with stone.
“I feel as though writing the courageous portions of my life are thanks to the likes of Nico, Susan Sontag, King Princess and many others talking about Camp, seriousness, and now, my own, Anti-Campness.” ‘There is no blue-print’ to feeling success within your community or as an individual “though an architect may disagree,” she says cheekily.