Nov 17, 2013

Early Registration is open for the 9th Orphan Film Symposium

Extraordinarily pleased to announce:

Early Registration is open for the 9th Orphan Film Symposium. The event takes place at EYE in Amsterdam, but organization and registration is handled, per usual, via NYU Cinema Studies.

Simply click here, which will take you to http://cinema.tisch.nyu.edu/object/orphanfilm.html.

Program updates coming regularly to this blog +  www.nyu.edu/orphafilm.



Here's the AMIA Conference edition of the Orphans 9 postcard, front and back.

 Extra credit if you can identify the work depicted in the photo within the image.
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Nov 13, 2013

Poster from Filmharmonia Duo's "Orlacs Hände" screening at Cornell U.

 
From Friend of the Show, DJ, Theremin artist, keyboardist, accompanist, showman, silent film expert, Musica Curiosa curator, touring musician, Rutgers U. lecturer . . . 

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Dennis James <muscur@gmail.com

In case you missed the poster from this U.S. debut Filmharmonia Duo screening:

DENNIS JAMES | ORGANIST | 
DIRECTOR of SILENT FILM CONCERTS & FILMHARMONIA
LECTURER, 
MASON GROSS SCHOOL OF ARTS, RUTGERS UNIVERSITY
* * * * *
CONTACT:  CRYSTAL CITY MUSIC  |  PO BOX 786  |  CORNING, NY  14830 
PHONE  607-359-2622 (Toll Free- 855-326-4012)  |  

Wikipedia bio:




Oct 24, 2013

Oct. 27 = World Day for AV Heritage at Brooklyn Historical Society

Here's the program for Sunday's SURVEILLANCE, a World Day for Audiovisual Heritage event at the Brooklyn Historical Society (and its new theater!)

See also http://wdavh.tumblr.com


******************************************************************************
Introduction by Julia Kim (NYU MIAP) and Jacob Nadal (Brooklyn Historical Society)


LES GIRLS (1980) 8 min. Directed by Beryl Sokoloff
Presenters: Crista Grauer with Rebecca Fraimow (Dance Heritage Coalition)

MAIN STREET, USA (1960) 15 min.
aka Small Town, aka Small Town Surveillance, aka Main Street, aka Small Town Espionage
National Archives and Records Administration
Presenter: Rachel Moskowitz, the Winthrop Group

[Archival material from Tibetan Envoy Mission] (1979-80) 12 min.
Presenter: Tenzin Phuntsog, Director, Tibet Film Archive

JOE DiMAGGIO 1, 2, 3 (1991) 11 min.
Directed by Ann McGuire; Courtesy of Video Data Bank
Introduced by Dan Streible

[Patrol Car Video] (2011) 12 min.
Presenter: Snowden Becker (UCLA Moving Image Archive Studies, Program Manager)

LIBYA, BLOODY VENGEANCE IN SIRTE (2012) 6 min.
Presenter:  Nicole Martin, Multimedia Archivist and Systems Manager, Human Rights Watch

COMINGS AND GOINGS (1979/2009) 10 min. excerpt
Presenter: artist Peter d'Agostino (Temple University)

Oct 15, 2013

Let There Be Light: A Celebration of Moving Image Preservation


in honor of Robert Sklar 

Bob Sklar (2010)                                                                                John Huston (1946)

Let There Be Light: 

A Celebration of Moving Image Preservation

1:00 pm, Saturday, October 19, 2013

Michelson Theater, 721 Broadway, 6th floor
Department of Cinema Studies, Tisch School of the Arts


RSVP:  cinemastudiesevents@gmail.com


1:00 pm  Welcome, Mary Schmidt Campbell, Dean, Tisch School of the Arts


Announcement of the Sklar Scholarships: Richard Allen, Chair, NYU Cinema Studies

Remarks on Robert Sklar and Let There Be Light:  Dr. Adrienne Harris

MIAP at 10: Howard Besser, Director

“The Preservation and Digital Restoration of Let There Be Light 
Criss Kovac (National Archives and Records Administration)

2:00 pm screening: Let There Be Light (John Huston, 1946) 58 min.

(followed by coffee break)

4:00-6:00 pm Reflections on Let There Be Light



chair: Chris Straayer 

“Introducing Huston and his Wartime Work" 

Dana Polan (NYU Cinema Studies)

“Undesirable: Rehabilitating Soldiers in the Post-World War II Moment”

Hannah Zeavin (NYU Department of Media, Culture, and Communication)



“Paralysis and Logorrhea, Observation and Reenactment: Let There Be Light and Its Orphaned Opposite(s)”

Noah Tsika (Queens College CUNY)

“Play It Again”

Jonathan Kahana (UC Santa Cruz, Center for Documentary Arts and Research)




 

Oct 13, 2013

Orphans Midwest Proofs

 

Left: A/V Geeks 16 mil projection (IU Art Museum reception).       Right:  Mona Jimenez talks ETC. 

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
"Orphans Midwest" was a hit! 


Proof here.


 
 Cinema Studies | MIAP

thanks the coalition at

Indiana University 


Cinema  |  Libraries  |  Film Archive  |  Media School 

for a stimulating symposium on Materiality and the Moving Image.


* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *



COMING SOON from IU Cinema: 

Orphans Midwest:  The DCP!



Sep 29, 2013

Orphans Midwest: "A hit!" raves the Bloomington Herald-Telephone

The morning after, iis difficult to articulate the insights, serendipities, and pleasures. But safe to say "Orphans Midwest" -- our film symposium devoted to Materialtu and the Moving Image -- was a big success.


More news about that in the near future.  

For now: a couple of photos.  

***********

Mona Jimenez (NYU MIAP) touches the podium screen that previews her slides documenting early video synthesizers and other instruments.  

Andy Uhrich (Indiana U) gave an amazing presentation highlighted by his compilation reel of 16mm films from The Film Group (prints from Chicago Film Archives). Mind-blowing alternation between some of the Film Group's TV ads (for Blue Cross, Aunt Jemima, Kentucky Fried Chicken) and its documentary work from the same period (Cicero March, The Murder of Fred Hampton -- !).  "We need each other" as both insurance company slogan and political rhetoric. 

Eric Schaefer puts the rediscovery of a print of The Orgy at Lil's Place (William Mishkin Motion Pictures, 1963) into historical-industrial context of sexploitation. 






Sep 26, 2013

"Placing Orphan Films" opening morning snapshots

Video streaming of Placing Orphan Films.  



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