Anchorage Museum
Chatter Marks
Chatter Marks is a podcast of the Anchorage Museum, dedicated to exploring Alaska’s identity through the creative and critical thinking of ideas—past, present and future. Featuring interviews with artists, presenters, staff and others associated with the Anchorage Museum and its mission.
Author
Anchorage Museum
Category
Podcast website
Latest episode
Jun 25, 2026
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Episodes
EP 012 Finding your passion and chasing it, with artist and muralist Rejoy Armamento 17.03.2021 52:19
Rejoy Armamento says that she’s always been interested in art, ever since she was a kid, but that it took her a while to reconnect with it in a serious way as an adult. As she got older, her attraction and affinity for it was stifled by feelings of ambivalence about whether being an artist was a realistic occupation. That was until she went to college in San Francisco, which she describes as a for...
EP 011 Indigenous traditions of healing and coming-of-age, with traditional healer Meda DeWitt 01.03.2021 1:00:59
When Meda DeWitt was in her early 20s, she began her journey as a traditional healer—she was pursuing a degree in nursing when she says that Spirit had other plans for her. She was having health events that couldn’t be explained by western medicine, so she sought and found answers in holistic medicine. She says that people have a tendency to think of traditional healing as antiquated or obsolete....
EP 010 The importance of diverse voices in media, with photojournalist and documentary photographer Ash Adams 22.02.2021 1:12:50
Ash Adams' work tends to focus on people and stories about humanity, and elevating the voices and experiences that have historically been underrepresented. In her work, this includes actively dismantling stereotypes by highlighting Indigenous voices and advocating for gender equity. She says that one role of photojournalism is to show what inequity feels like so that others may understand. And tha...
EP 009 The duality of storytelling: Balancing journalism and nuance, with photographer Jeroen Toirkens 29.01.2021 1:00:14
Jeroen Toirkens is a documentary photographer based out of The Hague in The Netherlands. He mainly works on long-term projects that can take years to complete. His most recent project, Borealis, took six years to complete. It’s a book that documents the Boreal Forest and the people who live in it. To accurately tell the story of the Boreal Forest—which is the largest land-based vegetation zone and...
EP 008 Women subverting Northern masculine myths with Anchorage Museum curator Francesca DuBrock 04.01.2021 1:01:37
Francesca DuBrock is the Chief Curator at the Anchorage Museum, and she recently finished putting the finishing touches on Extra Tough: Women of the North, an exhibit dedicated to exploring how women have shaped Alaska and the circumpolar north. The exhibit was a massive undertaking, it took over 9 months to complete and now occupies the entire third floor of the Museum, which is about 7,500 squar...
EP 007 Art as self-preservation: Responding to social oppression through creativity, with artist and educator Thomas Chung 21.12.2020 52:57
Thomas Chung says that he’s always been interested in art, even as a child, but that as he got older it became a means of self-preservation. His upbringing was marked by racism and homophobia, and art allowed him to express the emotions he didn’t consciously understand at the time. Those emotions, he would later realize, focused on cultural awareness and compassion, and would come to define much o...
EP 006 Collectivism and action in design with artist and architect Tiffany Shaw-Collinge 26.11.2020 35:48
Tiffany Shaw-Collinge is an artist, curator and architect based in Alberta, Canada. She says that place and climate contributes to her work in a way that can’t be understated. It’s as integral to her craft as much as it is to her identity. In Part 2 of this conversation, Tiffany talks about her preference for working in a collective—that the whole is always greater than the sum of its parts—and th...
EP 005 Indigenous identity and design in professional spaces with Métis artist and architect Tiffany Shaw-Collinge 21.11.2020 30:31
Tiffany Shaw-Collinge is an artist, curator and architect based in Alberta, Canada. She says that place and climate contributes to her work in a way that can’t be understated. It’s as integral to her craft as much as it is to her identity. Her lineage is Métis, a fact that became more and more part of her professional life after she realized how little indigenous voices and identity are covered. T...
EP 004 This is Dena’ina ełnena: Understanding histories, land and language with Anchorage Museum curator Aaron Leggett 31.10.2020 46:49
Aaron Leggett is the president of the Native Village of Eklutna. He is also the Senior Curator or Alaska History and Indigenous Culture at the Anchorage Museum. In both of those responsibilities, he’s been a champion and an educator of the Alaskan identity. He’s found that critical thinking is key to understanding how Alaska’s history can help us navigate the present and the future. In this conve...
EP 003 Recording stories of life at the poles with photographer and writer Acacia Johnson 20.10.2020 28:40
Acacia Johnson is a photographer focused on human relationships to the environment. She spent most of her twenties traveling around Scandinavia and the polar regions, working on ships. Today, she has over 50 expeditions to the Arctic and Antarctica. In Part 2 of this conversation, Acacia talks about creating a record of stories, of people and place. About how, through photography, she has the opp...
EP 002 A conversation with writer and photographer Acacia Johnson, at home in Alaska and at the northernmost and southernmost tips of the world 30.09.2020 23:20
Acacia Johnson is a photographer focused on human relationships to the environment. She spent most of her twenties traveling around Scandinavia and the polar regions, working on ships. Today, she has over 50 expeditions to the Arctic and Antarctica. In part one of this conversation, she talks about subverting the stereotype of what it means to be an explorer. And that means reframing the image of...
EP 001 Design with purpose: A conversation with graphic designer Sebastian Garber 21.09.2020 27:27
Sebastian Garber is the Senior Designer at the Anchorage Museum and he is currently working on designing a typeface that includes Alaska Native languages. It will be a typeface stripped of geographic references and it will encompass all the necessary diacritic. Diacritics are accent marks that indicate pronunciation. And when finished, it will become the official font of the Anchorage Museum.
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