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In this episode of The Truth In This Art, artist Santos Shelton returns!
Who is Santos Shelton: Bay Area–based artist and storyteller. Santos blends science fiction and fantasy with vibrant color and dynamic texture, using his work to explore vulnerability, healing, and lived experience through a lens shaped by being biracial—Black and Mexican.
In our conversation, Santos talks about using art to translate personal and societal trauma into visual stories, and how making the work can be a way to express what’s hard to say out loud. He reflects on a deeply personal solo show shaped by difficult experiences at home and how those experiences can linger, influencing identity and self-perception. We also discuss his upcoming mini solo show at Gallery Ergo in Seattle, where he’s focusing on death and grief after years of family loss—and how cultural context shapes the way he approaches that theme.
Catch Santos’s previous episode here.
Follow Santos on Instagram at @santosart and follow the gallery at @gallery.ergo for updates on the March 13 opening.
As a first, I have an extended version of this conversation if you want to check it out:
The Truth In This Art is supported by William G. Baker, Jr. Memorial Fund, the Maryland State Arts Council's Creativity Grant and Mayor's Individual Artist Award - Creative Baltimore Fund (Baltimore).
Host: Rob Lee
Music: Original music by Daniel Alexis Music with additional music from Chipzard and TeTresSeis.
Production:
Photos:
Support the podcast
By Rob Lee4.8
161161 ratings
In this episode of The Truth In This Art, artist Santos Shelton returns!
Who is Santos Shelton: Bay Area–based artist and storyteller. Santos blends science fiction and fantasy with vibrant color and dynamic texture, using his work to explore vulnerability, healing, and lived experience through a lens shaped by being biracial—Black and Mexican.
In our conversation, Santos talks about using art to translate personal and societal trauma into visual stories, and how making the work can be a way to express what’s hard to say out loud. He reflects on a deeply personal solo show shaped by difficult experiences at home and how those experiences can linger, influencing identity and self-perception. We also discuss his upcoming mini solo show at Gallery Ergo in Seattle, where he’s focusing on death and grief after years of family loss—and how cultural context shapes the way he approaches that theme.
Catch Santos’s previous episode here.
Follow Santos on Instagram at @santosart and follow the gallery at @gallery.ergo for updates on the March 13 opening.
As a first, I have an extended version of this conversation if you want to check it out:
The Truth In This Art is supported by William G. Baker, Jr. Memorial Fund, the Maryland State Arts Council's Creativity Grant and Mayor's Individual Artist Award - Creative Baltimore Fund (Baltimore).
Host: Rob Lee
Music: Original music by Daniel Alexis Music with additional music from Chipzard and TeTresSeis.
Production:
Photos:
Support the podcast