slide

slide

Prof. Shanti Thakur’s film screening

Shanti Thakur’s “Red Tulips, A Story About Forgetting” will be screening at the Los Angeles International Short Film Festival, September 6-13th.

The film will also be screening at the Mill Valley Film Festival in San Francisco, October 4 -14th.

Red Tulips, 2012, S-16mm film finished on HDCAM SR
In a magical world where memory lasts only a few hours, everyday, James
learns how recognize his wife and daughter. Liberated from the filters of memory,
this is about discovering trust and human connection in the present moment.

Prof. Tami Gold and IMA student David Pavlosky’s screening

PASSIONATE POLITICS: The Life and Work of Charlotte Bunch will screen at the FRAMELINE 36 FILM FESTIVAL in San Francisco, CA, on June 15th at 11:30AM at the Castro Theatre.
To purchase tickets for PASSIONATE POLITICS go to:
http://ticketing.frameline.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=2494&fid=49

Description:
PASSIONATE POLITICS: The Life and Work of Charlotte Bunch tells the story of Charlotte’s life, from idealistic young civil rights organizer to lesbian activist, to internationally-recognized leader of a campaign to put women’s rights, front and center, on the global human rights agenda. Charlotte has been both a product and creator of her times: every chapter in her life is a chapter in the story of modern feminist activism, from its roots in the 1960’s struggles for social justice to international campaigns against gender-based violence today.

A Joyce Warshow Film
Produced & Directed by Tami Gold
Co-Produced by David Pavlosky
Edited by Sonia Gonzalez-Martinez
Executive Producer Dorothy Sander
AndersonGOLD Films Production
www.andersongoldfilms.com
Read More

IMA alumna Alice Arnold’s Electric Signs

ELECTRIC SIGNS is a feature documentary that started several years ago in Hong Kong on a Fulbright Fellowship (Filmmaking), and has since expanded to include many more cities, such as Los Angeles, New York, Las Vegas, Tokyo and Prague. In all of these cities new screen based sign systems are putting TV-style advertising into the public domain. These electronic signs are re-shaping urban environments and re-defining areas of public space by intensifying the commercialization of the public sphere. In addition to the explosion of screens in public spaces, screens are ubiquitous in workspaces and in our daily life activities. These seamless, illuminated electronic surfaces are becoming the devices through which we frame our experiences. ELECTRIC SIGNS explores this new screen culture as it unfolds in the global city.