Art history and aesthetics would be. How-to lectures not so much.It just depends on what you are interested in. I don’t specifically look for where a podcast is coming from. I just do searches for lecture series on Youtube on our Roku for things like printmaking, aesthetics, art history, or contemporary graphic arts.
Printmakers and graphic artists tend to exist in communities that share ideas that feed larger communities like Harvard or the Smithsonian. I’ve been out of the loop for a few decades, so I’ve been trying to catch up. We didn’t have podcasts or video lectures when I was in grad school.
I’m not sure if fine art printmaking or graphic arts would be your gig.
That's amazing, I'll keep that in mind lolBack when I had a desk job, I’d get ebooks and put them in Word and make them look like my work screen. Read a ton of books like that under the boss’s nose. Union life!
Absolutely! Go over to Project Gutenberg and snag the (free) text: then you can make your own document and make it look like whatever. I did this for years.That's amazing, I'll keep that in mind lol
I’ve been doing audiobooks for about twenty years (with a paper book thrown in now and again when time permits) and have enjoyed them a lot.
I did Kindle for a while, but read mostly on Mac Laptop, and iPad. Audiobooks on iPhone. Still too many unused credits on Audible, and now Chirp has come into the picture along with Apple's bookshop.<< Snipped bits out >>
Do you all use a Kindle or the like? How do you do your reading?