Skip to main content
Bread & Salt Podcast

Bread & Salt Podcast

By Bread & Salt

Welcome to the Bread & Salt Podcast On View- hosted in English by Thomas DeMello
Available on
Apple Podcasts Logo
Google Podcasts Logo
Pocket Casts Logo
RadioPublic Logo
Spotify Logo
Currently playing episode

Yasmine Kasem

Bread & Salt Podcast Sep 03, 2022

00:00
53:12
Mathieu Gregoire
May 27, 202301:02:08
Marisol Rendón

Marisol Rendón

Artist Marisol Rendón in conversation with Bread & Salt Curator Thomas DeMello

Jan 17, 202359:51
Yasmine Kasem

Yasmine Kasem

Artist Yasmine Kasem in conversation with Bread & Salt Curator Thomas DeMello

Sep 03, 202253:12
Joe Yorty & Joe Cantrell

Joe Yorty & Joe Cantrell

A Conversation with Joe Yorty and Joe Cantrell with Bread & Salt Curator Thomas DeMello about the Exhibition "I ate and I ate and nothing happened" 

On View in the Bread & Salt Main Gallery through June 19, 2022

Jun 14, 202243:39
Neil Kendricks

Neil Kendricks

Neil Kendricks is a filmmaker, artist, photographer, writer, educator Kendricks earned a Master’s degree in Television, Film and New Media from San Diego State University in 2006. His award-winning short films like 2002’s Loop have screened at numerous international film festivals including the Palm Springs International Festival of Short Films, the Comic-Con International Independent Film Festival, the 2002 Havana Film Festival, and a special short-film screening at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival’s American Pavilion.

Kendricks’ photography has also been exhibited at the San Diego Museum of Art, the African-American Museum of Fine Arts, London’s Royal College of Art, and many other venues. His first solo photography exhibition, Bruised Eye Candy was shown at San Diego’s now-defunct Spacecraft gallery in February 2008. Kendricks also produced, production designed and storyboarded media theorist Jordan Crandall’s film, Heatseeking, which was shown at inSITE 2000 and exhibited in the Whitney Museum of American Art’s BitStream exhibition, the first digital-arts exhibition shown at a major American art museum.


Jun 19, 202101:28:15
Tatiana Ortiz-Rubio
May 22, 202152:49
Marcos Ramírez ERRE

Marcos Ramírez ERRE

Marcos Ramírez ERRE in Conversation with Bread & Salt Curator Thomas DeMello

About the Artist (from the MASS MoCA Website)
Marcos Ramírez, known as ERRE (a nod to the rolled ‘r’ of Spanish), was born in Tijuana in 1961. He studied at the Universidad Autónoma de Baja California, graduating with a law degree, and later worked in the construction industry for many years to support his visual art practice. He has been the subject of a number of solo exhibitions at institutions including the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, CA (2016), Museum of Latin American Art, Long Beach, CA (2014), MACLA/Movimiento de Arte y Cultura Latino Americana, San Jose, CA (2012), Museo de Arte Carrillo Gil, Mexico City (2010), and Centro Cultural Tijuana, Mexico (1996); he has also participated in group exhibitions at the Oceanside Museum of Art, Oceanside, CA (2017-18); Today Art Museum, Beijing (2016-17); SITE Santa Fe Biennial (2014); the California Biennial, Orange County Museum of Art, Newport Beach, CA (2008); Moscow Biennale (2007); The São Paulo/Valencia Bienal Valencia, Spain ( 2007); Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid (2005); Havana Biennial, Havana, Cuba (2000); the Whitney Biennial, New York, NY (2000); and the InSite 1997 and 2000 editions in the San Diego / Tijuana border region.

you can View his Current Exhibition through June 2021 At MASS MoCA 

For Episodes in Spanish Hosted by Griselda Rosas Subscribe to the Pan y Sal Podcast


Apr 19, 202154:02
Angie Jennings

Angie Jennings

Conversation with Artist Angie Jennings and Bread & Salt Curator Thomas DeMello

Angie is our Bread & Salt Artist in Residence February-April 2021

Angie Jennings
1984 born in Bloomington, Indiana, United States angelajennings.net

Education
2016 MFA, Visual Arts, University of California San Diego, San Diego, CA
2011 Post Baccalaureate Certificate, Fine Art, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA 2006 BS, Art Education, South Dakota State University, Brookings, SD

Anthony Graham on Angie Jennings, HereIn Journal, 2020, https://www.hereinjournal.org/anthony-graham-on-angie-jennings-featured
Young, Gifted and Black, the Lumpkin-Boccuzzi Family Collection of Contemporary Art, ARTBOOK D.A.P., Spring 2020
Angie Jennings at Abode Gallery, Contemporary Art Review Los Angeles, 2018,https://contemporaryartreview.la/angie-jennings-at-abode-gallery/

Apr 10, 202137:10
Carlos Castro

Carlos Castro

Conversation with Artist Carlos Castro And Bread & Salt Curator Thomas DeMello 

Carlos Castro Arias was born in Bogota, Colombia and Currently Lives and Teaches in San Diego,CA.

His solo exhibitions include The Pain We Create, LA Galeria, Bogota (2019); The Language of Dead Things, Espacio el Dorado, Bogota (2017), Stagnant Heritage, MUZAC, Monteria (2015), Old News of the Present, 21st Projects, New York (2014); and Accidental Beauty, Museo Santa Clara, Bogota (2013). Notable group exhibitions include Doble Filo, Coral Gables Museum, Miami (2019); Comfortably Numb, Another Space, New York (2018); Open Art Biennale, Sweden (2017); Liquid Sensibilities, Cisneros Foundation Grants and Commissions, USA (2016); Space To Dream, Auckland Art Gallery, New Zealand (2016); X Mercosur Biennale, Porto Alegre, Brazil (2015); and O que seria do mundo sem as coisas que não existem?, Frestas Trienal, Sorocaba, Brazil (2014), amongst others.

Castro earned a B.F.A. at Universidad Jorge Tadeo Lozano (2002) and an M.F.A. from the San Francisco Art Institute (2010). 


For episodes in Spanish subscribe to the Pan y Sal Podcast Hosted by Artist Griselda Rosas

Apr 06, 202136:54
 Alessandra Moctezuma
Mar 21, 202155:04
 Adriana Martínez
Mar 14, 202131:35
Avia Rose Ramm
Mar 06, 202101:02:24
Marianela de la Hoz

Marianela de la Hoz

Marianela de la Hoz b. 1956, México

2014 San Diego Art Prize Recipient

her work can be found in collections from Mexico,the USA,Canada, Japan, Dubai,Germany, among others

Fundación Cultural Bancomer, México
Instituto Tecnológico de Monterrey, México
Fundación Cultural Noval, Cuernavaca, Morelos, México San Diego Museum of Art, San Diego CA
Museum of Latin American Art, Long Beach CA

Artist Website

The Mexican Museum 

Bread & Salt Website

Pan y Sal Podcast


(from the Artists Website) My painting is intimate, like those lockets in which they used to keep the portrait of the loved one, a lock of hair, a love letter.

It recreates the internal world of the small drawers of our wardrobe in which we keep grieves and happiness, love and hate, sins, dreams, secrets, guilt and profound feelings that we take out once in a while like with do with a photo album with images of our history and reality. The intention of my work is to make the observer come closer to discover the fine details and once he or she is near he or she will remain captive, getting inside and enlightening the mechanisms of their conscience, giving him or her the opportunity to fix their eyes in those details we often leave unnoticed. The artworks talk about the binds, the closures, the double moral, the atavisms, the “must be”, the separation of body and soul, of body and head. I express violence through fantasy, black humor and sarcasm. I call it “White Violence”, i.e. small format paintings depicting characters nicely groomed, with combed hair and perfect teeth, with only a small drop of blood when necessary, all representing a scene in which extreme situations are performed.

The content of my work is based on reality and the paintings confront today’s troubled times. I am inspired by the blood ligatures among human beings, the same weaknesses, addictions and worries, the eternal combination of good and bad in each and everyone, the Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde within ourselves. I am always searching that bond located inside us, in our blood and in our conscience. Like a researcher I put under the microscope a drop of the blood of each theme, each painting, I analyze it without moral judgments, I only observe its composition, hence the small formats, the observer approaches the lens to peer into a miniature world, to introduce a key and enter armed with a magnifying glass, expecting to come close enough to hear a whisper, to feel a pinch, to discover a hidden secret, to crack a smile before a subtlety loaded with black humor.

The contents, the formats, the technique, the texts (written thoughts), all conform a different work of art and invite the observer to approach, to get closer and closer, thinking perhaps that by being small they are harmless; and once he or she is close enough, he or she will be trapped in the spider web. Size is not what really maters in a work of art, the impact gets to the observer when he notices more often the minuscule details that are the reflex that builds little by little our own lives. Even though you will find in my work many references about my Mexican heritage the real essence of the themes I depict are inherent to the human beings nature, they become universal. My art could best be described as reality portraiture set in fantastic theatrical scenes, an intimate and sometimes terrifying mirror in which I look at myself and you look at yourself, perhaps finding some personal connection in that nearness.

Mar 01, 202157:13
Alida Cervantes
Feb 21, 202153:44
Hugo Crosthwaite

Hugo Crosthwaite

Born in Tijuana in 1971, Hugo Crosthwaite grew up in the coastal town of Rosarito, Baja California, 10 miles south of the international border. A graduate of San Diego State University in 1997 with a BA in Applied Arts and Sciences, Crosthwaite is a draftsman, often using pencil or charcoal, who focuses on the figure. He works in a linear fashion, allowing drawings to develop with great detail. All the work is created with improvisation; narratives developing as works are created.

Crosthwaite combines portraiture, comic book references, urban signage, commercial facades, and mythology in dense, layered compositions. Working primarily in black and white Crosthwaite brings characters from allegory and popular media to the stage of the human condition, interacting with the architecture of Tijuana and dreams of the border. The work reflects the character of frenetic urban settings, a border in flux. Fear, hope, pain and celebration are represented together as Crosthwaite elevates the ordinary person to heroic levels showing the trials they endure while surviving in contemporary society.

In 2019 Crosthwaite was awarded First Prize at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington DC for the fifth triennial Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition, American Portraiture Today. Crosthwaite's prize-winning stop-motion drawing animation, A Portrait of Berenice Sarmiento Chávez (2018), recounts a woman's journey from Tijuana, Mexico, to the United States in pursuit of the American dream.

Whereas stop-motion animations and public mural-making capture Crosthwaite's creation process, the artist's IN MEMORIAM series and other temporary, monumental murals highlight the deconstruction of his work. These are murals that have short lifespans—narratives, that once complete, are deconstructed slowly, piece by piece.

Temporary, monumental, site-specific works include: Column A and Column B: A Continual Narrative Performance (2018 on view through 2020) at Liberty Station, San Diego, California; IN MEMORIAM: Los Angeles (2017) at the Museum of Social Justice, Los Angeles; IN MEMORIAM: Cuenca (2016) at the Cuenca Bienal, Ecuador; Child's Tale (2015) at the San Diego State University Downtown Art Gallery; and Las Carpas (2013) at the Orange County Museum of Art.

rosthwaite's work has been included in numerous collective exhibitions throughout the United States and Mexico. Most recently: American Portraiture Today (2019) National Portrait Gallery, 20 Diálogos de Pintores Contemporáneos (2018) El Museo de Arte de Querétaro, IN MEMORIAM: Cuenca (2016) Cuenca Bienal de Ecuador, The House on Mango Street (2015) National Museum of Mexican Art in Chicago, 2013 California-Pacific Triennial at the Orange County Museum of Art, and Morbid Curiosity - The Richard Harris Collection (2012) at the Chicago Cultural Center.


please follow Hugo on Instagram 

check out his website

listen to his episode in Spanish with Griselda Rosas on the Pan y Sal Podcast

Feb 14, 202146:35
Irma Sofia Poeter

Irma Sofia Poeter

Conversation with Irma Sofia Poeter and Bread & Salt Curator Thomas DeMello. She is a Mexican-American artist who has lived on both sides of the San Diego-Tijuana border. Born in Arcadia, California, in 1963, She currently works and lives in Tecate, Mexico.

She recently had a 25 year retrospective at the Tijuana Cultural Center (known by its Spanish acronym, (CECUT) along with a Exhibition at the Front Gallery in San Ysidro. you can read more about the show from the LA Times

for episodes in Spanish including a Conversation with Irma please subscribe to the Pan y Sal Podcast hosted by Griselda Rosas

Feb 06, 202150:11