Posted on February 26, 2010, 8:30 am, by Christine N. Ziemba, under
Film/Video,
REDCAT.
Saturday (Feb. 27) marks the opening of the REDCAT International Children’s Film Festival in Los Angeles. Presented in partnership with Northwest Film Forum, the festival offers animated, live-action and classic films for all ages throughout its five-day run.
The opening day lineup focuses on short films from around the globe, including Nappy Heads by Sabrina Moella [...]
Posted on February 25, 2010, 8:30 am, by Christine N. Ziemba, under
Theater.
It was announced Feb. 23 that the stage play blu, Virginia Grise’s MFA thesis project at CalArts, was chosen by English playwright David Hare (The Vertical Hour, Amy’s View) as the 2010 winner of the Yale Drama Series competition. For her efforts, Grise will be awarded the David C. Horn Prize of $10,000, and blu [...]
Posted on February 24, 2010, 8:30 am, by Christine N. Ziemba, under
Art.
The MAK Center for Art and Architecture at the Schindler House in West Hollywood, Calif., has opened an ambitious urban project–How Many Billboards? Art In Stead–that features large-scale artwork by 21 commissioned artists on billboards throughout Los Angeles. There are several CalArts alumni, faculty and visiting artists involved in the project, which temporarily replaces ads [...]
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Allan Sekula,
Allen Ruppersberg,
Christina Fernandez,
James Welling,
Jennifer Bornstein,
Kenneth Anger,
Kerry Tribe,
Kimberli Meyer,
Kira Lynn Harris,
Kori Newkirk,
MAK Center,
Martha Rosler with Josh Neufeld,
Michael Asher,
Renée Green,
Susan Silton,
Yvonne Rainer No Comments |
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Posted on February 23, 2010, 8:30 am, by Christine N. Ziemba, under
Film/Video.
The film awards season continued this weekend in London with The British Academy of Film and Television Arts handing out its BAFTA awards. A number of CalArtians were again included in the international mix of nominees and winners. Kudos to the following alumni:
Chris Innis (Film/Video MFA 91) and her husband Bob Murawski won Best Editing [...]
You never know what to expect when walking through CalArts’ Main Gallery. Dance. Noontime concerts. Rehearsals.
But earlier in the semester, the walls were filled with artwork from the School of Film/Video’s Character Animation Program. The pieces were all part of an annual student-curated show, this year organized by BFA candidates Jeffrey Rowe and Carrie Hobson.
“There [...]
Posted on February 20, 2010, 8:30 am, by Christine N. Ziemba, under
Art.
Miss Scarlet in the Parlor is a little gallery and store located in LA’s Echo Park, owned by a CalArts alumna Eliza Frye (Film/Video 09), also a current MFA student in the School of Critical Studies. The gallery is hosting an artist reception tonight (Saturday, Feb. 20) for its new show Anatomically Correct.
Artists on [...]
Posted on February 19, 2010, 8:30 am, by Christine N. Ziemba, under
Critical Studies.
[Click on the poem above to read Douglas Kearney's 'The Black Automaton in Tag: Refugee.']
Douglas Kearney, a faculty member of CalArts’ School of Critical Studies, is one of those multi-hyphenate artists: poet-performer-librettist-educator. He’s known for creating poetry that should be both seen and experienced. His work is both visual and visceral–especially when he’s performing it.
The [...]
Posted on February 18, 2010, 8:30 am, by Guest Blogger, under
Institute.
Ed. note: February is Black History Month, and we’ve asked a few members of the CalArts community to reflect on what it means to them. Today’s guest columnist is Erinn Horton, an MFA candidate in voice at the The Herb Alpert School of Music at CalArts. She has has worked for nearly a year coordinating [...]
Posted on February 17, 2010, 8:30 am, by Christine N. Ziemba, under
Film/Video.
Much of Canadian filmmaker John Greyson’s work (Lilies, Uncut, Zero Patience) incorporates political themes and gay issues in ways that are provocative, yet funny. He often includes song and history in his films, using narrative, essay and documentary to elicit action–or at least to ignite audience curiosity–on particular subjects.
An artist-activist to the core, Greyson made [...]
Brent Hayes Edwards, a professor in the Department of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University, visits CalArts tonight to discuss his latest work and research in the lecture on “loft jazz”: The Alchemy of Tin: The Cultures of Jazz in Downtown New York in the 1970s. As an academic and historian, his areas of [...]