Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Watershed: Art, Activism, and Community Engagement


Watershed: Art, Activism, and Community Engagement
January 28 - February 25
Opening Reception, Friday, January 28th, 5-8pm
Artist Talk: Betsy Damon, February 3rd, 7pm
Guest Presenters: Every Thursday in February at 7pm

From Lane Hall:
The Union Art Gallery is having it's first show of the semester, Watershed: Art, Activism, and Community Engagement which opens the first Friday of school, January 28th, at 5 pm. I hope you can make it to the opening. I have a number of collaborative pieces in the exhibition: an intervention at Sweetwater Organics filmed this last summer (Hall/Moline), a projection of micro/macro water life (Moline/Strickler/Hall) and an 18 x 20 foot chalkboard piece, titled "Basin" where I developed my ongoing graphical notation responses into a large flow diagram of water related issues, from privatization to invasive species: a new collaboration (Hall/Deal/Lampert) that I am really excited about. The show also includes a terrific installation by Visual Art prof Colleen Ludwig, and an elegantly functional aquaponic unit developed by Sweetwater, as well as a rich variety of documented educational and artistic public interventions.


From Colleen Ludwig about her project in the show:
Shiver is an immersive, interactive environment. The title refers to the chill or slight tickle felt on the skin if activated by light touch or closeness. Upon entering the artwork, visitors initiate trickling flows of water. These cling to, and seek paths along, the walls’ minor topographies. A sensor matrix tracks the direction and speed of people’s movement in the room. The information is used to move the curvy, crawling water rivulets along the wall’s surface. The reaction of the water flows gently bring visitors into a conversation with the artwork, encouraging them to move slowly and change perspectives in order to cause the room to react.
Shiver is supported by a Research Growth Initiative Grant and a fellowship from the Center for 21st Century Studies UWM.


About Watershed Exhibition:
Water is the most critical resource on earth. It has traditionally been held in the public commons, but is now being privatized by multinational corporations at a frightening pace. Water has become big business and the struggle over who controls water -- corporations or communities -- will likely define many of the social justice movements, political decisions, and wars of the 21st Century. Watershed: Art, Activism, and Community Engagement, organized by Nicolas Lampert and Raoul Deal, addresses the shifting ecological and political dimensions of water in Milwaukee and the Great Lakes Basin, and relates them to similar issues around the world.

Watershed features installations by Sweet Water Organics, Colleen Ludwig, Lane Hall and Lisa Moline, Raoul Deal, and Nicolas Lampert; Prints by students at the Bruce Guadalupe Middle School and the Walnut Way Conservation Corp in Milwaukee; Films by Laura Klein that document public intervention projects by Nance Klehm, Jesse Graves, Sarah Lewison, Amy Mall and Sherwin Ovid, Tiffany Holmes, Maria Cristina Tavera and Xavier Tavera, Katie Martin Meurer, Jenny Plevin and Al Westbrook, Ximena Sosa and Cristian Muñoz, Deal, and Lampert.

Watershed also features a series of Thursday night presentations in February by Milwaukee-based artists, scientists, and community activists, and a presentation by the Brooklyn-based environmental artist Betsy Damon.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

"Out of Respect" Documentary Film Premiere



"Out of Respect" Documentary Film Premiere
February 24, 2011
Milwaukee Art Museum
Lubar Auditorium

Tickets range from VIP to free. Order here. http://www.creamcityfoundation.org/out-of-respect-film-premiere.html

In the Fall of 2009, Reel Life Films and J-Doc, a documentary film-making class at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, began production on a feature-length documentary about Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender homeless young adults in the Milwaukee area. The film, Out of Respect, captures the social resistance and family-neglect that several homeless young adults face, as well as their strength to overcome constant adversity.

From Tess Gallun
Documentary Producer
Journalism & Mass Communication
University of WI-Milwaukee


Hi all,

After a year and a half of production... generous assistance from our department and J-doc students... my documentary feature on LGBT homeless youth is complete.

For more info on youth, here's link to a website created with support from Cream City Foundation: www.outofrespect.org

Kind regards,
Tess

Reel Life Films
reellifefilms[at]wi.rr.com

LIGHT SPILL: A moving image installation- opening reception



LIGHT SPILL by Sandra Gibson + Luis Recoder - Exhibition Opening

Time
Thursday, January 27 · 5:00pm - 7:00pm
Location UW-Milwaukee Art History Gallery
3203 N Downer Ave Mitchell Hall 154,

A moving image installation

Curated by Elena Gorfinkel

Exhibition runs January 27th - February 10, 2011

Gallery Hours: Mon-Thurs 10-4

Artists Statement:
In our installation work, we use projected light to articulate space and time. Film projectors and celluloid are the material base of our constructions in light and shadow, the elemental properties of cinema. These things are deeply imbued with a history of viewership in the dark of the theater. To remove it from darkness is to flood this history and cast a certain illumination upon it. A certain exposure. Light spills in the shifting of film from its native darkness in enclosed chambers (camera obscura) to the uncanny openness and defamiliarized illumination of installation. We are exploring the shift, elaborating the displacement, recasting the light mechanics of a peculiar estrangement of the medium. The art of cinema, yes. But more timely: the becoming cinema of art. That is the coming attraction for us. - Sandra Gibson + Luis Recoder

About the artists:

Sandra Gibson and Luis Recoder have exhibited their solo and collaborative performances and installations at the Whitney Museum of American Art (NY), P.S.1 MoMA (NY), The Kitchen (NY), Diapason Gallery (NY), Redcat (LA), Devin Borden Hiram Butler Gallery (Houston), Ballroom Marfa (Marfa), Robischon Gallery (Denver), ICA (London), Barbican Art Gallery (London), Peter Kilchmann Gallery (Zurich), Viennale (Vienna), KW (Berlin), Hartware Medien Kunst Verein (Dortmund), TENT. (Rotterdam), Palais des Beaux-Arts (Brussels), La Casa Encendida (Madrid), Museu do Chiado (Portugal), RIXC (Latvia), Image Forum (Tokyo). Their work is in the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art (NY), Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia (Madrid), Museum of Contemporary Cinema Foundation (Paris), as well as numerous private collections. Gibson and Recoder are based in New York City.

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=181785061844688

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Media Law in the Digital Age

If you meet the prereqs, I would substitute this as a DAC conceptual analysis elective.

From Professor David Pritchard
Department of Journalism and Mass Communication
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee


JOURNALISM AND MASS COMMUNICATION 661
Seminar: Media Law in the Digital Age
Spring 2011
5:00 PM-7:40 PM Mondays 01/24-05/12 MER 347

JMC 661 is designed to help you develop those skills in the context of the fast-evolving world of digital media law and policy. The course is a rigorous one, but if you accept the challenge you will gain a richer understanding of issues that are central not only to the future of the media industries but also to citizenship in the 21st Century.

REQUIRED READING

The readings for JMC 661 are very recent; most were published in the past few months. Required are a book (Keith B. Darrell, Issues in Internet Law, 2011), which you can obtain from http://www.issuesininternetlaw.com/, and a packet of legal materials and periodical articles available by January 18 at Clark Graphics.