Thursday, April 30, 2009
World Savvy
World Savvy is a global education nonprofit serving youth and educators through three core programs in three offices nationwide. Our mission is to educate and engage youth in community and world affairs, to prepare them to learn, work and live as responsible global citizens in the 21st century.
Read about their Media and Arts Programs
World Savvy New York City
May 18-31, 2009
Global Youth Media and Arts Festival at NYU's Commons Gallery. All participating youth will showcase their creative projects at a professional gallery exhibition and performance. Private reception on May 28, 6-8:00pm. Opening celebration on May 29, 6-8:00pm!
IN S.F.: WORLD SAVVY MEDIA & ARTS FESTIVAL
Global education nonprofit World Savvy hosted a May Global Youth Media & Arts Program Festival in San Francisco, Calif., with 500 students from 20 Bay Area public schools. worldsavvy.org/san-francisco/
**I found out about these programs from Art in the Public Interest API News.
I suggest subscribing to their email list. **
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
End the University as We Know It
Interesting Op-Ed in the Monday, April 27 NY Times
by Mark C. Taylor, Professor at Columbia
Letters to the Editor in the Sunday, May 3 Times
great discussion and critique
Sunday, April 26, 2009
MY community art programs
Thursday, April 23, 2009
Contrast Project with Palestinian Youth
The Contrast Project works with youth in using digital photography and video as tools for expression and advocacy. The project started in the summer of 2006 with photography trainings with two youth groups in the Bethlehem area of the Palestinian Territories.
Literacy Through Photography @ Duke University
Literacy Through Photography Exhibitions
(don't miss the podcasts at bottom of page)
Literacy Through Photography BLOG
Click on 'Projects' link to see more of Center for Documentary Studies Work
From ICP Community Programs Facutly Member: Ben Lenzner
SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2009 @ 7 PM
@ UnionDocs
322 Union Ave, Williamsburg, Brooklyn
L train to Lorimer/ G to Metropolitan/ J, M, Z to Hewes
$5 suggested donation/ $15 donation u get postcard print/ $25 donation u get 8x10 print
proceeds go to cameras/supplies/materials from summer 2009 program
On Sunday, May 10, 2009 @ 7 pm in a Benefit Evening for The Van Gujjar Community Photo Project, for the first time ever, I will be sharing the work in progress that commenced last spring in the plains and up in the mountains of northern India. There, with the beautiful energy of the Van Gujjar Community of northern India, I began a wonderful project distributing cameras throughout the Van Gujjar community. Some of those cameras found themselves in the hands of photographers exploring the settlement colony of Gindikhatta and other cameras clicked and recorded lives and moments throughout the forests of the Shivalik Mountains, the first bump in the Himalayas and the winter residence for the many families who continue to live and migrate throughout the forests of northern India.
The Van Gujjars are an indigenous, forest dwelling, nomadic, buffalo herding community residing in northern India. In January 2008, the Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act was passed in the Indian Parliament. The first comprehensive indigenous rights law ever approved in India, this legislation gives indigenous groups the power to legally lay claim to their traditional homelands. Navigating to secure their forest rights, complicated by their multi-state migration and their minority status as Muslims, the Van Gujjar community is divided as to whether they should cease their migration and relocate to government built settlement colonies or pursue a claim to their ancestral homelands. Inspired by this indigenous struggle, Ben Lenzner traveled to India in the spring of 2008. Ben spent three months researching, photographing and documenting, as well as implementing a photography project with the Van Gujjar community. He distributed 60 cameras to men, women and children throughout the forests and in the Gindikhatta Settlement Colony. These new photography students explored places, people, situations and moments that were important to them. This project is critical. Please come out to support this project and learn a little more about tribal rights in India. These images share an intimate view into the diversity of Islam and the complexities of the struggles of one indigenous community. As globalization brings wealth to unknown pockets of the earth, cultures and traditions shift and disappear as rapidly as the Himalayan glaciers around them.
Please join us for an evening of photographs (exhibition, slideshow & presentation), discussion, Q & A, music, mingling & fresh air in the backyard.
for more info & to rsvp please email ben@benlenzner.com or info@uniondocs.org
more info
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Potential Opportunity - Robert Mapplethorpe House
Maybe one of you would be interested in contacting the woman below. She reached out to us last week. Sorry we all missed the reception!
- Katie
________________________
I am currently a senior in the BFA photo department at SVA. I have been volunteering at the Robert Mapplethorpe House, a division of Beth Israel hospital, for the last 6 months and have started a photography program there. I have been asked to continue the program but I will be leaving the city after graduation. Joshua Shapiro suggested that I contact you to see if you had any ideas for the program or any students who might be interested. The current art therapist at the Mapplethorpe House is actually a graduate of your department.
The work of the residents will be displayed in the SVA student center and I would love if you could stop by and see it. I am attaching an invitation with all the details.
Best,
Joanna Murray
(410) 302-2798
Monday, April 20, 2009
Katie Kline's tips
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Drawing Resource
Drawing Center
In considering the students website, I think that the Mirain Goodman Gallery's website has a clear way of displaying multiple artists.
Marian Goodman Gallery
Thanks!
Angelica
Kids with Cameras again?
Simon
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Palestinian Children in Lebanon
NYU Files 2.0
I highly recommend going to the HELP section, FAQs etc, to see everyone it can do. For example, once in files, click on the globe for uploading which will load a java applet which will let you drag and drop.
Photo galleries I like
Check this Out
I just learned about this Rhizome project from Jennifer in my Screen Culture class - read her post
I'd like to purchase pixels for our coco site as a way to advertise our site and contribute to Rhizome, which is a great new media organization. If you are not familiar with them, you should be!
Monday, April 13, 2009
ArtWork Collaborations
Dread Scott: Or Does It Explode?
“...Or Does it Explode?” is a collaborative artwork with Dread Scott and Philadelphia youth. The project is commissioned and coordinated by the ArtWorks! program of the Philadelphia Mural Arts Program. ...Or Does it Explode will be an outdoor public artwork that consists of 12 human scale full body photographic portraits of the teenagers in illuminated lightboxes. The boxes are supplemented by an audio component of the youths speaking about their hopes and dreams. [more]
Pawel Althamer and children from Kassel, Frühling
Twelve years after his participation in documenta X, Kunsthalle Fridericianum presents the new exhibition project Frühling (Spring) by Pawel Althamer (Warsaw, 1967). For Frühling the artist invited several hundred children from Kassel to occupy over 1.000 square metres of the Fridericianum, the historically charged, world-famous exhibition site, which had been a library and a parliament building in the past. Althamer's main aim is to enliven and transform the museum with the help of the children's youthful, bold, and above all "unbound creativity". The children are the project managers, the main actors, while Althamer plays the role of their guest and assistant. [more]
Project Row Houses, Houston, Texas
Founded by artist Rick Lowe in 1993, Project Row Houses believes that art—and the community it creates—can be the foundation for revitalizing depressed inner-city neighborhoods [more]
Explore both the art and community sections
SPARC
Social and Public Art Resource Center, Los Angles, CA
view murals and/or public art projects
SPARC was founded by artist Judy Baca in 1976, and she continues as the artistic director
Suzanne Lacy, an internationally known artist whose work includes installations, video, and large-scale performances on social themes and urban issues.
Public Art as Social Intervention
Project out of Concordia University, Montreal, Canada
I found site map easier way to navigiate through site
Wendy Ewald is also an interesting artist to look at in this context
LINKS: Wendy Ewald, Institute of International Studies, UC Berkeley (only up to 1998)
Wendy Ewald, Blackbird
Columbia College community programs
Columbia College photo galleries
Columbia College artist index
Visual Progression
www.visualprogression.org
OVP - the Organization for Visual Progression
Picturing Hope
picturinghope.org
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
CARD and PARTY
We will make a 5x7 card so we can list the info and all student and teacher names on back. We will use the entire back of card for text. Any we mail out we can put in an envelope and also make a little press release.
For Monday, we will need a list of all students - please work on that. We decided to use group photos for front if I remember correctly. Let us also talk about making prints and plan for party.
volunteer for preparing the front photo?
PARTY - MAY 11, 5:30-7:00 with remarks at 6:00 room 815
(or 6-7:30 with remarks on 6:30)