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The 6th Annual Experimental Lecture organized by Cinema Studies and Undergraduate Film and Television. Each year, we invite one veteran experimental filmmaker to present his or her work. The lecture itself is a performance in which the artist explores his or her creative process.
For this workshop, data is our model on the plinth, and we'll explore ways of using traditional methods and materials as a starting point for creating data-driven visual systems.
In DISCOTROPIC | Alien Talk Show (2015) niv Acosta seizes on an elementary medium of transgender exposure—television and the confessional culture of the talk show—to explore the relationships between science fiction, disco, astrophysics, and the black American experience. In collaboration with performers Monstah Black, Justin Allen, André D. Singleton (aka Brohogany Opulence), Juliana Huxtable, and Ashley Brockington he tapes a talk show to revisit past futures and claim a fantastical site of possibility. DISCOTROPIC is episodical and has premiered earlier episodes as a part of New Museum’s Triennial ‘Surround Audience’ 2015 as well as in the Museum of Contemporary African Diasooran Art’s (MoCADA) Brooklyn Soul Festival ‘Black August’ 2015.
Learn how to identify and organize transferable skills and experience to highlight your qualifications.
Alumna Susan Ohmer (PhD ‘97) returns to Cinema Studies for “Teaching Disney,” co-presented with fellow Notre Dame film professor Donald Crafton (Friday, 5:00 PM). On Saturday (11:00 AM), current students Rochelle Miller and Jonathan Farbowitz give a report on their recent research into the history of Tisch School of the Arts, followed by a selection of alumni-led round table discussions.
A podcast can be more than a monologue or an interview; it can be a rich environment for using sound to tell your story. With Jim’s deep background in broadcasting, he will demonstrate the power of sound to illustrate and enrich a podcast.
Cyborg Futures, an interactive multimedia platform for Cyborg Labs
IPA, ITP and GSO Pecha Kucha
You're invited to the Washington Square campus for NYU Alumni and Parents Day on Saturday, October 24, 2015. Come celebrate your NYU memories with your friends, classmates, and fellow alumni.
Alumna Susan Ohmer (PhD ‘97) returns to Cinema Studies for “Teaching Disney,” co-presented with fellow Notre Dame film professor Donald Crafton (Friday, 5:00 PM). On Saturday (11:00 AM), current students Rochelle Miller and Jonathan Farbowitz give a report on their recent research into the history of Tisch School of the Arts, followed by a selection of alumni-led round table discussions.
Panelists: Mia Diehl ('88), Hank Willis Thomas ('98), Jessica Ingram ('98), Chris Mahoney ('88)
"In the Collection: Treasures from Photography & Imaging" addresses the ways in which the Department of Photography & Imaging has collected all forms of photography in an effort to capture the times depicted. The exhibition highlights some of its greatest treasures by some of the most profound photographer sand artists of our time. The exhibition is organized in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the founding of the School of the Arts at NYU. The exhibition also explores how the collecting of photography has transformed our teaching methods over the last thirty-three years.
MOMENTS CAPTURED is a mesmerizing story roughly based on the life and career of pioneering photographer Eadweard Muybridge during the late nineteenth-century San Francisco. Throughout the novel, Seidman takes liberties with the chronology of the famed photographer’s career, omitting or inventing characters in his circle in order to explore certain truths about human nature that the facts, alone, may not have revealed.