More
More
The purpose of this monthly event is to promote collaboration and community within Tisch alumni community. Writer members will have a place to present their dramatic script work and receive peer feedback.
Re-imagining A Safe Space, co-curated by Deborah Willis and Melissa Harris, will explore critical questions regarding the idea of a safe space. We hope to reach deeper and richer understanding of our needs as a public—and how those needs differ depending on demographics and who we are individually.
Meet reps from a variety of arts organizations who are recruiting interns for the spring semester!
With the help of an experienced immigration lawyer we will discuss when and how to disclose non-citizenship while on the job market, as well as the difference between a J1, an H1B, and the O visas. Light refreshments will be served.
On Friday, November 3rd, join us at the Starr Space Gallery in Bushwick, Brooklyn for the 8th annual No Quarter Exhibition. Each year we commission four new games from four artists -- our mission is to help nurture game design for public spaces and to support unique and bold voices in the game design community. The 2017 Exhibition will feature games by Auriea Harvey, Droqen, Pietro Righi Riva, and Kitty Horrorshow. No Quarter is always free and open to the public.
ITP will be hosting a Open House where prospective students can tour the department and ask questions about the program and admissions process.
Unified Field stops by ITP to discuss creative strategies for media communications programs.
Political Scientist Kevin Munger stops by ITP to discuss his research involving social media and the ethical considerations presented when tackling online harassment, political discussions, and promotions.
Novelist George Dawes Green, founder of the popular storytelling organization The Moth and presents an interactive storytelling event on the art of the raconteur.
Re-imagining A Safe Space, co-curated by Deborah Willis and Melissa Harris, will explore critical questions regarding the idea of a safe space. We hope to reach deeper and richer understanding of our needs as a public—and how those needs differ depending on demographics and who we are individually.
Re-imagining A Safe Space, co-curated by Deborah Willis and Melissa Harris, will explore critical questions regarding the idea of a safe space. We hope to reach deeper and richer understanding of our needs as a public—and how those needs differ depending on demographics and who we are individually.
The Association of Moving Image Archivists (AMIA) Student Chapter at New York University invites you to celebrate Home Movie Day on Sunday November 5, 2017!
Re-imagining A Safe Space, co-curated by Deborah Willis and Melissa Harris, will explore critical questions regarding the idea of a safe space. We hope to reach deeper and richer understanding of our needs as a public—and how those needs differ depending on demographics and who we are individually.
Named "nightlife’s reigning messiah" by BlackBook Magazine, Seva Granik has made a career of designing and producing immersive nightlife experiences for wide strata of audiences and clients.
Re-imagining A Safe Space, co-curated by Deborah Willis and Melissa Harris, will explore critical questions regarding the idea of a safe space. We hope to reach deeper and richer understanding of our needs as a public—and how those needs differ depending on demographics and who we are individually.
Join Karen Finley and Adrienne Truscott for a conversation on performance, politics, feminism, comedy, rape culture, and "#metoo" -- in anticipation of "Asking For It" at NYU Skirball.
Re-imagining A Safe Space, co-curated by Deborah Willis and Melissa Harris, will explore critical questions regarding the idea of a safe space. We hope to reach deeper and richer understanding of our needs as a public—and how those needs differ depending on demographics and who we are individually.
Tisch Special Programs film series event details highlighting student films from the Tisch summer Experimental Filmmakers Workshop in Paris.
Come for a pre-screening Red Carpet photo opp and a post-screening conversation with thought leading women exploring the evolution of female representation in arts and media over the past 30 years since Spike Lee's Original 1986 film, "She's Gotta Have It."
As new forms of digital sound emerge, our long-lost radio past has been revealed. How did we lose radio, what is being done to recover it, and what can its rediscovery add to media study in the 21st century?
Re-imagining A Safe Space, co-curated by Deborah Willis and Melissa Harris, will explore critical questions regarding the idea of a safe space. We hope to reach deeper and richer understanding of our needs as a public—and how those needs differ depending on demographics and who we are individually.
Founded in 1975, CAA represents many of the most successful professionals working in film, television, music, theatre, video games, sports, and digital content, and provides a range of strategic marketing and consulting services to corporate clients. Come learn about CAA's training program, work and internship opportunities.
In today’s world, media companies are diversifying their content and expanding their brand in unconventional ways. This talkback will dive into the various roles of each panelist, how their brands have changed with the times, what defines a trend in this industry, and what this means for the future of storytelling.
Join us live on Facebook to ask questions and hear more about the Integrated Media Arts Undergraduate program.
Re-imagining A Safe Space, co-curated by Deborah Willis and Melissa Harris, will explore critical questions regarding the idea of a safe space. We hope to reach deeper and richer understanding of our needs as a public—and how those needs differ depending on demographics and who we are individually.
Event details for the 2017 information session about the Tisch Commedia dell'Arte program with Jim Calder in Florence.
Kyle Greenberg will be holding an information session about the IMA program in Shanghai.
Catch up with ITP's SIRS, Ron Morrison and Pedro Oliveira, and hear about their current work!
Re-imagining A Safe Space, co-curated by Deborah Willis and Melissa Harris, will explore critical questions regarding the idea of a safe space. We hope to reach deeper and richer understanding of our needs as a public—and how those needs differ depending on demographics and who we are individually.
A day of screenings and conversation that brings together anthropologists, film scholars, and filmmakers whose work and practice are integral to thinking about ethnographic film in and of China today. Featuring screenings and discussions with filmmakers and scholars Ying Qian (Columbia), J.P. Sniadecki (Northwestern), Gu Tao, Zhen Zhang (NYU), and Angela Zito (NYU). Co-sponsored by NYU's Center for Religion and Media and the Asian Film and Media Initiative in the Department of Cinema Studies.
Re-imagining A Safe Space, co-curated by Deborah Willis and Melissa Harris, will explore critical questions regarding the idea of a safe space. We hope to reach deeper and richer understanding of our needs as a public—and how those needs differ depending on demographics and who we are individually.
Since 2006, film historian and archivist extraordinaire Rick Prelinger has presented twenty participatory urban-history events to enthusiastic audiences in San Francisco, Detroit, Los Angeles, Oakland, and at festivals throughout the world. For the first time, he is bringing his Lost Landscapes project to New York City. Lost Landscapes of New York (approx. 85 mins., HD video transferred from 35mm, 16mm and 8mm film) mixes home movies by New Yorkers, tourists, and semi-professional cinematographers with outtakes from feature films and background "process plates" picturing granular details of New York's cityscape.
Re-imagining A Safe Space, co-curated by Deborah Willis and Melissa Harris, will explore critical questions regarding the idea of a safe space. We hope to reach deeper and richer understanding of our needs as a public—and how those needs differ depending on demographics and who we are individually.
Re-imagining A Safe Space, co-curated by Deborah Willis and Melissa Harris, will explore critical questions regarding the idea of a safe space. We hope to reach deeper and richer understanding of our needs as a public—and how those needs differ depending on demographics and who we are individually.
Re-imagining A Safe Space, co-curated by Deborah Willis and Melissa Harris, will explore critical questions regarding the idea of a safe space. We hope to reach deeper and richer understanding of our needs as a public—and how those needs differ depending on demographics and who we are individually.
Hear the stories of Tisch alums who navigated the US Immigration Service to get an O-1. If you’re an international student or an alum on OPT, you can’t miss this panel. This presentation is co-hosted by the Milstein Law Group.
A film about prison from the places we least expect to find it. Post-screening discussion with filmmaker Brett Story and Angela Zito (NYU). Presented by the Center for Religion and Media in collaboration with the Department of Cinema Studies.
Our first ReMu alumni panel of the 2017-2018 school year, will welcome our guests back to campus to talk about how they’ve used their own form of creativity outside of ReMu walls to inspire change and break the mold.
Come out to see what the Pop-Up Window class has been working on this semester!
This Wednesday night at 8:00 PM, recording artist and Grammy Award nominee Ryan Leslie will be at ITP speaking about his experiences with tech entrepreneurship in the music industry.
Re-imagining A Safe Space, co-curated by Deborah Willis and Melissa Harris, will explore critical questions regarding the idea of a safe space. We hope to reach deeper and richer understanding of our needs as a public—and how those needs differ depending on demographics and who we are individually.