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Street Food From Ghana (Southern Style) And A Food Photography Course

Students in Yara Clüver's food photography course arrange food, props and lighting in the cafe of Collins Living Learning Center at Indiana University.
Students in Yara Clüver's food photography course arrange food, props and lighting in the cafe of Collins Living Learning Center at Indiana University.

This week on our show we talk with Yara Clüver about her food photography course at Indiana University. And we explore a Southern take on Ghanaian street food with Samantha Adei Kotey.

In the age of Instagram, taking pictures of meals has become rather commonplace. In her food photography course, professor Yara Clüver complicates the role of both food and photography throughout history and in our current everyday lives.

I stopped in during one of the studio sessions with her class in the fall and later spoke with Yara Clüver in the studio.

Yara Clüver is the associate director at the Collins Living-Learning Center at Indiana University. She has a background in fine art photography and began developing her food photography course at the University of Gastronomic Sciences in Pollenzo, in Italy.

One of the readings for the class, which Yara talks about in the interview, is by Charles Barstow, from the Magazine The New Gastronome published through the University of Gastronomic Sciences in Pollenzo, where Yara has taught. The piece is called Eating the Image: reflections on food photos and fantasy.

Kayte Young discovered her passion for growing, cooking, foraging and preserving fresh food when she moved to Bloomington in 2007. With a background in construction, architecture, nutrition education and writing, she brings curiosity and a love of storytelling to a show about all things edible. Kayte raises bees, a small family and a yard full of food in Bloomington’s McDoel Gardens neighborhood.