
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode, Carrie sits down with Berto Herrera, an American artist and former U.S. military member now based in Germany, who brings a unique perspective to exploring themes of identity, power, and technology through multidisciplinary work. Trained at Parsons and involved early in his career with Los Angeles's influential art collective Box Eight, he worked for a decade as an art director at Adidas before returning to fine art. His practice spans installations, photography, painting, and digital works, driven by philosophical reflections on humanity and addressing themes of consumerism, late-capitalism, corporatism, and cultural identity, with all of his work since his first exhibition in 2006 centered on dismantling and examining subtle cultural biases that shape societal dynamics.
From Carrie: "Berto Herrera's work might not be overtly political or totally autobiographical, but we talk about both those things in our interview. He's constantly trying to raise awareness around things that matter to him, but also that should matter to all of us. Issues around surveillance and racism and military force, these are big things, and he puts them in his work so vividly, but he does it under the veil of beauty."
Thanks for listening to this episode of the Seen podcast. Liked what you heard? Get early access to these episodes and a ton of other great art content by becoming a member of Seen at seen.art (https://seen.art).
Join our free newsletter and become an art insider: https://mailchi.mp/seen/waitlist
If you want to connect with us between episodes, follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/watchseenart).
By Carrie Scott5
77 ratings
In this episode, Carrie sits down with Berto Herrera, an American artist and former U.S. military member now based in Germany, who brings a unique perspective to exploring themes of identity, power, and technology through multidisciplinary work. Trained at Parsons and involved early in his career with Los Angeles's influential art collective Box Eight, he worked for a decade as an art director at Adidas before returning to fine art. His practice spans installations, photography, painting, and digital works, driven by philosophical reflections on humanity and addressing themes of consumerism, late-capitalism, corporatism, and cultural identity, with all of his work since his first exhibition in 2006 centered on dismantling and examining subtle cultural biases that shape societal dynamics.
From Carrie: "Berto Herrera's work might not be overtly political or totally autobiographical, but we talk about both those things in our interview. He's constantly trying to raise awareness around things that matter to him, but also that should matter to all of us. Issues around surveillance and racism and military force, these are big things, and he puts them in his work so vividly, but he does it under the veil of beauty."
Thanks for listening to this episode of the Seen podcast. Liked what you heard? Get early access to these episodes and a ton of other great art content by becoming a member of Seen at seen.art (https://seen.art).
Join our free newsletter and become an art insider: https://mailchi.mp/seen/waitlist
If you want to connect with us between episodes, follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/watchseenart).

14,338 Listeners

884 Listeners

103 Listeners

1,202 Listeners

214 Listeners

1,071 Listeners

428 Listeners

365 Listeners

141 Listeners

16,221 Listeners

766 Listeners

134 Listeners

41 Listeners

1,200 Listeners

12,732 Listeners