Friday, April 21, 2006

Robert Sengstacke, Civil Rights Photographer


Brought to you by Raoul Deal and Nicolas Lampert:

Robert Sengstacke, Monday, April 24th
2:00pm - 3:15pm
ACL 120


Robert Senstacke’s photographs over the past fifty years have received national as well as international recognition and acclaim. He was the head photographer and photo editor at the Chicago Defender, one of the most important and influential African American papers in the country. During the Civil Rights Movement, Sengstacke documented the movement in the South and in Chicago. The New York Times in 1987 during a review of his work defined him as "one of the most significant photographers of the Civil Rights generation."

His photographs of the late Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. have been featured in numerous exhibitions and books. Stanford University's History Department selected 100 of Sengstacke's photos that were used to chronicle the life and times of the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Other Sengstacke works have been exhibited at the Smithsonian Institution, the DuSable Museum of African-American History, the Museum of Science of Industry, Spellman College, the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) Circle Campus the University of Illinois Urbana campus, and the University of Minnesota.

Other works have appeared at the renowned Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. The Schomburg Center, now part of the New York City Public Library system is a repository of 50 of Sengstacke's King photographs. Sengstacke is also noted as the first African-American photographer from Chicago to have a major exhibition to appear in Chicago's Loop at the main branch of the Chicago Public Library in 1969.

Sengstacke's work as a photographer has led him to travel the world over. His development as a photographic artist would forever be changed by his experience. The rich cultural influences of ancient societies of Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Israel and Jamaica would add a world-perspective and insight that further hone his craft. Outside of his work at the Chicago Defender, Sengstacke was Muhammad Speaks first non-Moslem staff photographer. He has also been an artist-in-residence at Fisk University and the General Manager and the Publisher of the Memphis Tri-State Defender.

Thursday, April 20, 2006

Randall Szott: Speculative Cartography and the Praxis of MySpace

Digital Arts and Culture
Colloquium
Thursday April 27, 2006
Merrill Hall 131
3:30 pm

How MySpace, Blogger, Amazon, Ebay, Google Maps, and del.icio.us are driving cultural production and inspiring new forms of resistance.

Randal Szott is the founder of LeisureArts: an infra-institutional practice engaged with various forms of ephemeral, convivial, and quotidian cultural production; and the director of placekraft: an interdisciplinary research module devoted to generating and studying: tactical urbanism, speculative cartography, ephemeral/vernacular architecture, and itinerant practices.

Projects produced by these units take the form of curatorial endeavors, lectures, reading groups, performances, interventions, written reports, web authoring, and more. They have a shared interest in making their activities public in varied contexts: institutional, anti-institutional, and non-institutional.

Concept Trucking, Szott's recent project, is an on-line exhibition platform that engages the social networking site MySpace.

SPONSORED BY DAC AND THE
SCHOOL OF VISUAL ART
GRADUATE STUDIES
LAYTON FUND

Monday, April 17, 2006

Constant Capture




21-22 April 2006 - Hefter Conference Center
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee


Organized by Lane Hall, Jon McKenzie and Patrice Petro, "Constant Capture: Visibility, Civil Liberties, and Global Security" will investigate the role of visual media and imaging technologies in two interrelated areas: the policies and practices of global security and the struggle for civil liberties around the world.

Friday, April 14, 2006

Fair Use Free Speech Contest



Fair Use Free Speech
A University Film and Video Association Film Contest $1000 Prize
Deadline, May 6, 2006
Download the flyer and get the entry form.

News:
Fair Use Free Speech :
April 12, 2006 - 10:12 AM
Deadline: May 1

CRITERIA:
- Work must be 5 minutes or less
- Work must be a documentary in any genre, including but not limited to essay, satire, parody, historical, musical, and personal
- It must employ fair use in quoting copyrighted material
PRIZES:
- $1,000 faculty only plus one year membership to UFVA
- $1,000 best co-production between faculty and student(s), plus one year membership to UFVA
- $500 second prize co-production plus one year membership to UFVA
- Winners will be screened at the UFVA Conference in August, 2006 and showcased on the Center for Social Media’s website.
2006 UFVA Conference :
November 28, 2005 - 10:22 AM
August 1-5, 2006
Chapman University

Thursday, April 13, 2006

Projecting Off The Wall -- CALL for ART


From the New Media Caucus

In Conjunction with the 4th IEEE International Workshop on “Projector-Camera Systems “ (ProCams 2006)

Co-sponsored by ITP/Interactive Telecommunications Program, Tisch School of the Arts, New York University

Recently there has been an explosion of interest in systems that combine digital light projection with cameras and interaction. Projecting off the Wall is a unique art event that will bring together artists, scientists, and the public for a showing of projector-camera art installations and demos, and is sponsored by the Workshop on Projector-Camera Systems. Previous ProCams events have been held in Nice, France (2003) and San Diego (2005), however this is the inaugural ProCams Art Event.

The ProCams workshop involves the worlds leading researchers in projection and interactive display technologies and has had increasing participation from the art community. With Projecting off the Wall, the conference organizers hope to foster connections between art and science that focus on the art as much (or more) than the technology.

We are specifically looking for artworks that include both projectors and cameras as integral elements of a unique viewer experience. This includes work that:

* incorporates computer vision, object tracking and recognition

* utilizes and/or addresses passively sensed environments

* uses active and non-traditional projection techniques

* involves projection onto custom screens, surfaces and objects

* deals with the aesthetics of projected light and digital projection

* engages issues of ubiquitous camera surveillance

* includes real-time projected display of live camera input

* combines multiple projections in innovative ways

* uses projectors and cameras to create immersive and interactive experiences

In addition, outstanding pieces that explore the themes of interactive experiences and immersive displays will be considered.

The show will take place on June 18th at Tisch School of the Arts, 721 Broadway.

Visit www.procams2006.org/artExhibit.html to submit a proposal. Limited funds are available to offset travel and shipping costs.

Submission deadline: May 15, 2006

Exhibition dates: June 18

ProCams

ITP Department, Tisch School of the Arts