78 episodes

The Women Mind the Water podcast engages artists in conversation about their work and explores their connection with the ocean and how it influences their art.

Women Mind the Water Women Mind the Water

    • Arts
    • 5.0 • 4 Ratings

The Women Mind the Water podcast engages artists in conversation about their work and explores their connection with the ocean and how it influences their art.

    Seth Glier

    Seth Glier

    Musical artist Seth Glier is the latest guest on the Wo(men) Mind the Water
    Artivist Series podcast. Seth gets inspiration from the natural world and
    says the ocean brings him comfort and often provides a narrative for his
    music. His music reminds us that we have the ability to positively
    influence the world. Seth has worked as a producer, music director, and
    studio musician. He has collaborated with such renown musical artists as
    Tom Rush, Nick Carter, and Cyndi Lauper. Seth has been nominated for a
    Grammy and is a five-time Independent Music Award winner. He characterizes
    music as an empathy machine and feels incredibly lucky to be part of it.

    Manuela Zoninsein

    Manuela Zoninsein

    Manuela Zoninsein began as a journalist in China. While there, she
    witnessed a shift from reusable to single-use water bottles. The
    Brazilian-American’s love for beaches in Rio de Janeiro and her studies at
    MIT-Sloan Executive MBA program, led her to start Kadeya, a company that
    aims to replace single-use plastic bottles with an innovative vending
    machine that reduces plastic consumption.

    Sophie Guarasci

    Sophie Guarasci

    Sophie Guarasci worked in the world of fashion and finance before becoming
    a licensed veterinary tech. She works at the Marine Mammal Center, the
    nation’s foremost marine mammal hospital located just north of San
    Francisco. Sophie oversees the clinical and surgical treatment and
    husbandry of seals, sea lions, and sea otters. It’s her dream job, even
    though there are times she has to make difficult decisions about the
    treatment of severely ill animals. Sophie believes that people wherever
    they live should care about these marine animals as they tell us much about
    what is going on out there in their home the ocean, which is tied to human
    health. And for her, every time the Center is able to release an animal
    back into the ocean, Sophie feels hope that she is making a difference.

    Angela Abshier

    Angela Abshier

    Angela grew up in Wyoming and originally went college to be study
    journalism but pivoted to law when she heard about Napster and the
    potential it had for dispossessing musical artists from their artistic
    property. Angela believes that when a system is broken and you have an idea
    of how to fix it or change it or make it better, it’s worth it to step in
    and make it happen. After she was introduced to sailing and she saw the
    massive super yachts with their huge sails, her creative mind took hold.
    She learned that some of the material is extraordinary and yet it had a
    limited life span. She wanted to make a positive difference with the
    decommissioned sails that otherwise ended up as landfill. Angela has
    invested her own human capital and worked with architects and others to
    find ways to use the sails for humanitarian purposes. One of the first
    projects for Sail to Shelter is installing sails in Maui to answer a number
    of different issues. Maui suffered a devastating fire in August 2023,

    Suzette Bousema

    Suzette Bousema

    Suzette Bousema is an emerging Netherlands-based visual artist. Suzette
    collaborates with environmental scientists to explore present day
    ecological crises and engages audiences by using a variety of techniques
    including photography and glass blowing to help understand abstract
    concepts. On the podcast we discuss her efforts to photograph ancient polar
    ice cores , to create her own climate archive with glass bubbles, and how
    to personally cope with big ecological issues.

    Merle Liivand

    Merle Liivand

    Merle Liivand is an aquapreneur, plastic pollution reduction advocate,
    Guinness World Record holder and mermaid. The Estonian-born swimmer holds
    several Guinness World Records her latest was achieved on April 15, 2023,
    in a little over 14 hours. Merle swam 50 kilometers using a monofin, a
    record setting swim for the longest distance swum using a monofin. It's a
    feat because she swam the distance without using her arms by undulating her
    lower body up and down mermaid-style.

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