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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. Actor members will have an opportunity to work on new works in their early stages of development with the possibility of productions outside of NYU once completed. All participating Tisch alumni will be able to foster connections with fellow alumni from various Tisch departments. Each meeting features four writers presenting fifteen minutes of their work. This is followed by fifteen minutes of 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.
There are many resources that support a career and a life in the arts. Come check out the fair and learn about organizations that provide assistance such as grants, project funding, production support, rehearsal space, professional networks, and more.
Screening of the 1924 film L'Inhumaine by Marcel L'Herbier, followed by commentary from historian and instructor Samuel Albert. Part of the film series Lights, Camera, Deco! A Cinematic Celebration of Art Deco's International Influence. Co-sponsored by the Department of Cinema Studies and the Center for Applied Liberal Arts.
Students in the Big Screens class explore the unique format of the IAC screen through a wide range of projects from video and animation to massive multi-player games and screen-based performance art.
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.
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.
Google Design stops by ITP to answer questions about their design philosophy and to talk about their UX Internship.
Zachary Lieberman and Molmol Kuo stop by ITP to discuss this ongoing research.
The NYU Aging Incubator presents a conversation between NYU Tisch Faculty members, Richard Schechner and Barbara Browning for a discussion and Q&A that breaks down stereotypes of what it means to age.
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.
Pete Francis Heimbold is a singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist. He is most widely-known as one of the three founding members of the band Dispatch.
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.
Join us at ITP's Winter Show on December 17th and 18th.
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 us at ITP's Winter Show on December 17th and 18th.
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.