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Riot Woman with Artist Aurora Lady

55m · Riot Woman · 02 Aug 23:17

Aurora Lady is a Los Angeles-based artist and visionary who is not only a bad ass feminist illustrator, stylist, glitter make up artist, and fashion designer, but one of my creative guides. She is a constant source of inspiration and someone I can trust to hear me out and give feedback on my wildest ideas and biggest, boldest, scariest, hairiest plans. She’s always there to push me towards creative follow through, which is such an essential person to have in your life. She’s been a supporter of this podcast from the first moment I imagined it and its also the creator of the Riot Woman logo!

One of Aurora and my first significant hangs was at a local copy shop in Pasadena where we copied, collated, and stapled our zines together to get ready for the 2014 LA Zine Fest. Hanging out with her I felt the same kind of energy I felt when my friends and I stayed up all night getting our zines ready for the Portland Zine Symposium in the summer of 2001 and 2002, but tempered with the perspective that comes with having lived a bit more.

Fitting to our friendship-origin story, in this conversation we talk about zines as educational building blocks for feminism, discovering punk when we lived in rural places, forging feminist community via Live Journal and how that’s different than Instagram today, making friends in LA (or anywhere) as an adult, and how we “signaled” our feminism and relationship to Riot Grrrl as teenagers and twenty-somethings through fashion, as well as the radical influence of Courtney Love.

We also process the resurgent trend of all things 90s and discuss the trap and difficulty of chasing nostalgia. Finally Aurora shares her advice about how to develop your art and what you’re about as an artist (and it has nothing to do with Instagram).

You can find Aurora on Instagram at @auroralady, browse her awesome t-shirt and one-of-a-kind wearable art in her Blue Shop of Death, and sign up for her fantastic weekly newsletter where she shares all kinds of insights into her process as an artist and cool projects she’s working on.

This episode features the song “Half Lie” by Taleen Kali.

The episode Riot Woman with Artist Aurora Lady from the podcast Riot Woman has a duration of 55:54. It was first published 02 Aug 23:17. The cover art and the content belong to their respective owners.

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In this conversation Amy is really frank and vulnerable about what she’s learned as an organizer and feminist, especially about confronting racism within feminism as a white woman, so i hope that you’ll listen carefully.

Throughout this episode, Amy and I make reference to many different books. We’re both writers and avid readers and books have shaped both of our lives. Here are the books we talk about and books relevant to our conversation topics:

Girls to the Front: The True Story of the Riot Grrrl Revolution by Sara Marcus

Your Art Will Save Your Life by Beth Pickens

Bluets and The Argonauts by Maggie Nelson

The works of Kathy Acker

Good and Mad by Rebecca Traistor

Eloquent Rage by Brittney Cooper

White Fragility by Robin DiAngelo

The experiences Amy shares around organizing highlight a really important factor of building movements and creating social change: So much change actually comes from the small actions and risks we take every day, the ideas we try, and the relationships we build. These may not coalesce into social movements that get written about in the media or talking about on NPR, but they can make a tangible difference in peoples’ lives and have a lasting impact that does on for years. As such, I hope that this episode also serves as a reminder to keep going, especially in these times that are extremely tough.

You can find Amy on Instagram at @amytiger and her music on Bandcamp, as well as via the Don Giovanni Records website.

This episode features the song “Half Lie” by Taleen Kali. Riot Woman artwork and logo by Aurora Lady.

Riot Woman with Artist Aurora Lady

Aurora Lady is a Los Angeles-based artist and visionary who is not only a bad ass feminist illustrator, stylist, glitter make up artist, and fashion designer, but one of my creative guides. She is a constant source of inspiration and someone I can trust to hear me out and give feedback on my wildest ideas and biggest, boldest, scariest, hairiest plans. She’s always there to push me towards creative follow through, which is such an essential person to have in your life. She’s been a supporter of this podcast from the first moment I imagined it and its also the creator of the Riot Woman logo!

One of Aurora and my first significant hangs was at a local copy shop in Pasadena where we copied, collated, and stapled our zines together to get ready for the 2014 LA Zine Fest. Hanging out with her I felt the same kind of energy I felt when my friends and I stayed up all night getting our zines ready for the Portland Zine Symposium in the summer of 2001 and 2002, but tempered with the perspective that comes with having lived a bit more.

Fitting to our friendship-origin story, in this conversation we talk about zines as educational building blocks for feminism, discovering punk when we lived in rural places, forging feminist community via Live Journal and how that’s different than Instagram today, making friends in LA (or anywhere) as an adult, and how we “signaled” our feminism and relationship to Riot Grrrl as teenagers and twenty-somethings through fashion, as well as the radical influence of Courtney Love.

We also process the resurgent trend of all things 90s and discuss the trap and difficulty of chasing nostalgia. Finally Aurora shares her advice about how to develop your art and what you’re about as an artist (and it has nothing to do with Instagram).

You can find Aurora on Instagram at @auroralady, browse her awesome t-shirt and one-of-a-kind wearable art in her Blue Shop of Death, and sign up for her fantastic weekly newsletter where she shares all kinds of insights into her process as an artist and cool projects she’s working on.

This episode features the song “Half Lie” by Taleen Kali.

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Corinna and I met in Portland, Oregon in 2000, where we moved from rural areas on opposite sides of the country when we were at the end of our teens. We were drawn to the opportunity to take part in radical activism, punk feminism, and live on the cheap—trust me, it was a different time in Portland back then!

We were part of a very dysfunctional radical feminist art collective and it taught us both a lot about how feminists and radicals can hurt as much as support each other. Since then we’ve grown as both people and as feminists since that time and having this conversation was a powerful reminder about the possibility of healing and forgiveness.

On this podcast we discuss how Corinna found Riot Grrrl and zines at the advent of the internet while the punk community in her home town was actively unsafe due to misogyny, racism, and abuse, and how she later discovered plant medicine while living in a Portland punk house.

We also explore how her intersectional understanding of feminism expanded and evolved and how it informs her practice of witchcraft. We also discuss the ongoing challenge of understanding a concept intellectually and activism applying it to your life, the necessity of mitigating the harm of privilege as white people and how to embrace that journey, resisting cultural appropriation and working to decolonize witch craft and plant medicine, and critiquing life under capitalism while building a sustainable business.

Corinna is a powerful witch, writer, and healer and I loved being able to discuss all of this with her! You can find Corinna on Instagram at @riseupgoodwitch, support her and access her awesome monthly zines on Patreon, and visit her website and witch shop for her herbal tinctures and other magical products. For more wisdom on decolonizing magic practices and insight into all things witchy, check out her Rise Up! Good Witch podcast.

This episode features the song “Half Lie” by Taleen Kali. Riot Woman artwork and logo by Aurora Lady. Listen and subscribe on iTunes, Spotify, or Stitcher.

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We talk about the importance of embracing the “do it yourself” spirit of punk and moving from being a consumer to a creator. James’ determination to create a world for himself when he doesn’t fit in is the kind of spirit I love about punk and it comes through in his creative projects and as well as to his approach to parenting. Talking with James is to get excited about punk, and punk values, again and to see how those values can continue to inform your work, even as you move beyond and through punk.

This episode also includes my thoughts on the Bikini Kill reunion show I recently attended in New York City. I reflect on how for me the most important elements punk contributed to my life are community, relationships with friends, and the importance of DIY and social justice-oriented values.

This episode features the song “Half Lie” by Taleen Kali. Riot Woman artwork and logo by Aurora Lady. Listen and subscribe on iTunes, Spotify, or Stitcher.

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This episode features the song “Half Lie” by Taleen Kali. Riot Woman artwork and logo by Aurora Lady. Listen and subscribe on iTunes, Spotify, or Stitcher.

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