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Episode 83: Sick Voice
This week’s prompts: Teal, Leg, 1960
Lauren is flying solo again and opens with a few updates from the past couple of weeks of guest episodes, a quick peek into the strange and wonderful conversations that happen at academic faculty parties, and a heartfelt shout-out to listener Dan for a timely and encouraging email. There’s also a little housekeeping about Patreon, reviews, and how much the show appreciates its listeners sticking with them during this busy stretch.
From there, Lauren dives into the life and work of Wilfredo Lam, one of the most fascinating — and often overlooked — artists of the 20th century.
Born in Cuba to a Chinese immigrant father and an Afro-Cuban mother, Lam described himself as “a mulatto of many worlds.” His art reflects that hybrid identity, blending Afro-Caribbean spirituality, Chinese visual traditions, and European modernism into something entirely his own.
Lauren traces Lam’s path from studying art in Havana and Madrid to joining the surrealist circles of Paris, where Picasso, Matisse, and André Breton became part of his artistic orbit. Despite those connections, Lam remained somewhat outside the traditional modernist canon — in part because his work centered Afro-Cuban culture and identity in ways that European audiences often overlooked.
The episode focuses on Lam’s most famous painting, The Jungle (1942–43) — a dense, eerie landscape of hybrid human-animal-plant figures emerging from sugarcane. Beneath its surreal imagery lies a powerful commentary on colonialism, tourism, and the exploitation of Afro-Cuban labor in Cuba’s sugar industry.
PLUS:
🎨 Lam’s friendships with Picasso and the Paris surrealists
🌿 Hybrid figures inspired by Santería and Afro-Caribbean spirituality
🌍 How tourism and colonial economics shaped Cuban culture
🖼️ Why The Jungle remains a modernist masterpiece hiding in plain sight
Join us on Patreon to support the show and its creators:
www.patreon.com/curatedbychance
Next week’s prompts: 458, Salmon, Sleep
Check Out Lauren’s Substack:
👉 https://ltlikesthis.substack.com/
Follow the show and its creators on Instagram:
🎧 The Show – @curatedbychance
🎨 Lauren – @paisleylo
🎬 Neal – @nealefischer
📧 E-mail us: [email protected]
Hear Neal each week on Triviality Podcast – Subscribe now!
Listen to Lauren on Miss Information Podcast – Subscribe now!
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By Neal E. Fischer and Lauren Tagliaferro4.6
1717 ratings
Episode 83: Sick Voice
This week’s prompts: Teal, Leg, 1960
Lauren is flying solo again and opens with a few updates from the past couple of weeks of guest episodes, a quick peek into the strange and wonderful conversations that happen at academic faculty parties, and a heartfelt shout-out to listener Dan for a timely and encouraging email. There’s also a little housekeeping about Patreon, reviews, and how much the show appreciates its listeners sticking with them during this busy stretch.
From there, Lauren dives into the life and work of Wilfredo Lam, one of the most fascinating — and often overlooked — artists of the 20th century.
Born in Cuba to a Chinese immigrant father and an Afro-Cuban mother, Lam described himself as “a mulatto of many worlds.” His art reflects that hybrid identity, blending Afro-Caribbean spirituality, Chinese visual traditions, and European modernism into something entirely his own.
Lauren traces Lam’s path from studying art in Havana and Madrid to joining the surrealist circles of Paris, where Picasso, Matisse, and André Breton became part of his artistic orbit. Despite those connections, Lam remained somewhat outside the traditional modernist canon — in part because his work centered Afro-Cuban culture and identity in ways that European audiences often overlooked.
The episode focuses on Lam’s most famous painting, The Jungle (1942–43) — a dense, eerie landscape of hybrid human-animal-plant figures emerging from sugarcane. Beneath its surreal imagery lies a powerful commentary on colonialism, tourism, and the exploitation of Afro-Cuban labor in Cuba’s sugar industry.
PLUS:
🎨 Lam’s friendships with Picasso and the Paris surrealists
🌿 Hybrid figures inspired by Santería and Afro-Caribbean spirituality
🌍 How tourism and colonial economics shaped Cuban culture
🖼️ Why The Jungle remains a modernist masterpiece hiding in plain sight
Join us on Patreon to support the show and its creators:
www.patreon.com/curatedbychance
Next week’s prompts: 458, Salmon, Sleep
Check Out Lauren’s Substack:
👉 https://ltlikesthis.substack.com/
Follow the show and its creators on Instagram:
🎧 The Show – @curatedbychance
🎨 Lauren – @paisleylo
🎬 Neal – @nealefischer
📧 E-mail us: [email protected]
Hear Neal each week on Triviality Podcast – Subscribe now!
Listen to Lauren on Miss Information Podcast – Subscribe now!
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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