Documentary Video Storytelling

Documentary Video Storytelling

Oct 16. On campus at the Digital Media Center.

Funded by a grant from the CSU Entertainment Industry Initiative, the Art Department is hosting a series of guest workshops around the theme of storytelling in the digital arts. The Documentary Video Storytelling workshop will be led by Sheila Ganz, and will consist of five-hours of hands-on instruction in which CSU students develop an idea in a digital medium.

 

motherSHEILA GANZ, MA, is writer, producer, director, camera and editor for the 57 minute documentary On Life’s Terms: Mothers in Recovery.  She wrote a 22 page study guide to accompany the film.  Ganz is a recipient of the Certificate of Honor from the City and County of San Francisco Board of Supervisors, and Certificate of Recognition, California Legislature Assembly 27th Assembly District, 2014.  Her first film is the 57 minute documentary Unlocking the Heart of Adoption in 2003.  Ganz wrote a workbook with a discussion guide and three hour curriculum on the issues of loss and identity for the film.  Ganz received the Congressional Coalition on Adoption Institute’s Angels in Adoption Award, 2006.  From 2005-2007, she was an instructor at Film Arts Foundation and has guest lectured on filmmaking at City College of San Francisco and Academy of Art University.  Ganz has appeared on television and radio talk shows.  From 1984-1989, Ganz wrote two full-length stage plays, Pretend It Didn’t Happen about her experience as a birthmother and Leaving Joe about domestic violence.  Ganz has an MA, Interdisciplinary Arts and BA, Sculpture, San Francisco State University

This series of workshops will conclude with a public exhibition of student work in the CSU Stanislaus’ Building Imagination Center, and select students will travel to the CSU Media Arts Festival. The 2015 CSU Media Arts Festival will be held on Saturday, November 7, 2015 at CSU Los Angeles! This 25thAnniversary of the MAF will feature a full day of interaction with media faculty and media and entertainment industry professionals, screenings, and an awards ceremony.

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Rachel Clarke: Amalgamated Spaces

Rachel Clarke: Amalgamated Spaces

October 8, 2015 to November 21, 2015
Reception Thursday October 8, 2015 at 5:30 pm with Artist Talk at 6:00 pm
*The gallery will be closed on November 11, 2015 in observance of Veteran’s Day

Rachel Clarke (born Shropshire, UK) is an artist, writer, curator and educator living in Sacramento, CA. Clarke is Professor of New Media Art in the Art Department at California State University, Sacramento.

Rachel Clarke; Terra IncognitaHer work – intertwining themes of nature, culture, and technology – has been shown in galleries, museums, new media art festivals and film screenings nationally and internationally. She has recently shown at the Ars Electronica Festival in Linz Austria; Aggregate Space in Oakland, CA; WORK Detroit, MI; and Currents International Festival of New Media in Santa Fe, NM.

Commissions include Crocker Mosaic, a new media participatory artwork created in collaboration with composer Stephen Blumberg for the opening of Sacramento’s Crocker Art Museum extension in October 2010. Working in collaboration with Sacramento Metropolitan Art Commission she was artist and co-curator for an NEA funded augmented reality public art project, Broadway Augmented located in the Broadway Corridor in Sacramento, that launched in fall 2014.

 

Modeling Strong Characters in a 3D Digital Environment

Modeling Strong Characters in a 3D Digital Environment

Oct 16. On campus at the Digital Media Center.

Funded by a grant from the CSU Entertainment Industry Initiative, the CSU Stanislaus Art Department is hosting a series of guest workshops for CSU Art Majors around the theme of storytelling in the digital arts. The Modeling Strong Characters in a 3D Digital Environment workshop will be led by Gerardo Orioli, and will consist of five-hours of hands-on instruction in which CSU students develop an idea in a 3D digital environment.

 

g-orioliGerardo Orioli was born in Montevideo, Uruguay. He is currently Creative Director at Southern Hemisphere. He previously worked at Lucasfilm Animation and was Modeling Supervisor and Animation Director of The Tuneables, at Music Intelligence. Before that he was Modeling Supervisor for Nickelodeon’s Back at the Barnyard. He studied at the Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts in Connecticut.

This series of workshops will conclude with a public exhibition of student work in the CSU Stanislaus’ Building Imagination Center, and select students will travel to the CSU Media Arts Festival. The 2015 CSU Media Arts Festival will be held on Saturday, November 7, 2015 at CSU Los Angeles! This 25thAnniversary of the MAF will feature a full day of interaction with media faculty and media and entertainment industry professionals, screenings, and an awards ceremony.

 

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Creating 2D Characters with Digital Illustration

Creating 2D Characters with Digital Illustration

October 2, 2015. On campus at the Digital Media Center.

Funded by a grant from the CSU Entertainment Industry Initiative, the Art Department is hosting a series of guest workshops for CSU Art majors around the theme of storytelling in the digital arts.

The Creating 2D Characters with Digital Illustration workshop will be led by industry professional Christian Hali, and will consist of five-hours of hands-on instruction in which CSU students develop an idea in a digital medium.

haliChristian Hali an award-winning artist, art director, illustrator, and creative executive with ten years of production experience for MTV, Disney, Nickelodeon, and Daniel Ostroff Productions. As an UX Designer and Strategist in the Bay Area he has contributed to enterprise solutions for the hospitality, medical and legal services industries. Hali is a published illustrator with Simon & Schuster and Landoll Books, and his illustration is in the University California Santa Cruz library archives.

This series of workshops will conclude with a public exhibition of student work in the CSU Stanislaus’ Building Imagination Center, and select students will travel to the CSU Media Arts Festival. The 2015 CSU Media Arts Festival will be held on Saturday, November 7, 2015 at CSU Los Angeles! This 25th Anniversary of the MAF will feature a full day of interaction with media faculty and media and entertainment industry professionals, screenings, and an awards ceremony.

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Visions of Central Valley Culture: How Local Arts & Films Portray Valley Life

Visions of Central Valley Culture: How Local Arts & Films Portray Valley Life

CG3 Program coveranncmt 915Modesto Junior College has recently been awarded a “Humanities Initiatives Grant” from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) that is bringing together MJC faculty as well as regional scholars, artists and leadership from the University of California at Merced, the University of California at Berkeley, California State University Stanislaus, Fresno State University, The National Steinbeck Center, El Teatro Campesino, the State Theatre and the Modesto Junior College Foundation to study the culture of California’s Central Valley, to develop collegial networks for future scholarly work and to create thematic curricular modules for use in a wide-variety of post-secondary classrooms.

The grant for “The Search for Common Ground: Culture in California’s Central Valley” will provide two years of professional development for dozens of MJC faculty across divisions as well as fund interdisciplinary curricular development.   Most importantly, the subject of the grant is our Central Valley itself and the diverse cultural heritages in our community.  We believe that when faculty craft classes which reflect the cultural traditions of our own geography that students “see themselves” in their classes and are more engaged and successful; so this grant opportunity also has an important student success component in addition to the plethora of faculty professional development opportunities.

Topic 3: Visions of Central Valley Culture: How Local Arts & Films Portray Valley Life

Description: This discussion centers around the way cultural identity is represented and enhanced through works of art, film, and other expressions. Key Questions: Who has the authority to decide what constitutes a primary work of cultural production that aids in the formation of collective identity? What is the relationship between a need for community identity and the creation of traditions? How does the interaction of multiple ethnic population centers merge, create, and establish historic traditions? In identifying cultural representation in the performing arts, what preconceptions do we incorporate regarding performance space and modes of performance?

Events

LECTURE: September 9, 2015 from 3-5pm at Modesto Junior College, Performing and Media Arts Center (PAC), East Campus, Room 243

Lecture with Jessica Gomula-Kruzic, Professor of Video and Time-based Media at California State University, Stanislaus, works with local filmmakers to produce films about the Central Valley. She will discuss a creative place-making project known as the Building Imagination Center in the contemporary arts gallery, Art Space on Main, an extension of the CSU Art Gallery. Lecture with Jack Souza, Artistic Director, of the Prospect Theater Project, Modesto, received an M.A. in Modern Drama (Honors) from University College, Dublin. He will introduce ways that cultural identity is represented through works of art, film and other expressions, including the valley’s unique and diverse cultural make-up expressed through modes of cultural transmission which thrive outside orthodox Western forms of theater, music and dance.

SEMINAR: September 23rd, 2015 from 3-5pm Modesto Junior College, Performing and Media Arts Center (PAC), East Campus, Room 243

Seminar discussion with required and recommended readings including: “Creative Place-making” by Ann Markusen; A White Paper for The Mayors’ Institute on City Design; Edward Said’s Culture and Imperialism; Franz Fanon’s The Wretched of the Earth.

Elisabeth Kohnke: The Perfect

Elisabeth Kohnke: The Perfect

August 24 to October 3, 2015
Reception Thursday September 10, 2015 at 5:30 pm with Artist Talk at 6:00 pm
*The gallery will be closed on September 7, 2015 in observance of Labor Day

The Perfect

Kohnke - The PerfectInspired by Jørgen Leth’s “The Perfect Human” and utilizing audio from the film, Kohnke extends and juxtaposes his critique on the human ideal into our daily environments.  For as much as we focus on ourselves and how we could improve or become more “perfect”, we also idealize what nature should look like by encouraging specific ecosystems and disposing of others.  Who ultimately benefits?  Are we flexible enough in our ideologies and efficiencies to allow for change and evolution around us?

The Anthropocene has taught us that humans and nature are not as separate as we thought.  Kohnke intends to explore our struggle in seeking perfection around us through scrutinizing cultural ideals and historical identity.

Elisabeth Kohnke is a visual artist working primarily in installation, video and photography.  Her interests reside in ecosystems, self-reflexivity, post-humanism and memory.  Kohnke received a BA from Mills College in electronic music and video.  Since the early 2000’s she has performed and collaborated with many bay area artists, dancers and filmmakers.  Starting in 2007, she managed the Experimental Media Arts program at Stanford University until she left in 2014 to pursue an MFA in New Genres at the San Francisco Art Institute.

Elisabeth was born in Monterey, California and currently lives and works in San Francisco, California.

Filling Her Shoes

Filling Her Shoes

The story of a woman’s struggle to fit into the confines of social mores and resist her inner temptations. A struggle which ultimately fails, causing a breakdown of the prescribed order.

Credits:
Produced and Directed by Jessica Gomula; Choreography by Nicole Zvarik; Music Composed by Sean Clute; Starring Hannah Pierce, Amanda Crawford, and Julie Rubriger; Filming by Ludlow Media; Production and Post-production Assistance by CSU Stanislaus ART 3622 Documentary Video students.

 

Modesto 2034: GLIMPSES OF THE FUTURE

Modesto 2034: GLIMPSES OF THE FUTURE

Journey to the future of Modesto, California with one of the players of a transmedia alternate reality game. This documentary of a choose-your-adventure style game leads our player throughout downtown Modesto, California, as he creates his own path through the story line, trying to find his estranged brother. Uncovering clues and reflecting upon what the future of the city could be, our player explores his own moral character as he exposes or protects his brother from the Enforcers.

This video is based upon a real location based choose-your-adventure style alternate reality game set in the year 2034. During gameplay, our player uncovers actual clues located throughout downtown. Each clue reveals the next section of the story, told through video, animations, phone messages, and event pamphlets.

Participants earn virtual rewards through location specific challenges. These challenges center around Modesto’s quality of life issues that could be addressed in the near future, such as the creation of green spaces, support for locally owned businesses, and easier access to the transportation center in downtown.

The game play session was coordinated with the 2014 Modesto International Architecture festival. You can play the game here: Modesto 2034: Augmented Reality Game. *Project link will work on smartphones, or Chrome.

Watch the movie – Modesto 2034: Glimpses of the Future.

Center for Human Services Community Film Fellowship Films

Center for Human Services Community Film Fellowship Films

Produced as a partnership between the Center for Human Services (CHS) and the students of ART 3622 Documentary Video at CSU Stanislaus.


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Modesto 2034: COMMUNITY

Modesto 2034: COMMUNITY

This video is based upon a real location based choose-your-adventure style alternate reality game set in the year 2034. During gameplay, our player reflects upon the nature of community and personal relationships, while uncovering clues located throughout downtown Modesto, California. Each clue reveals the next section of the story, told through video, animations, phone messages, and event pamphlets.

Participants earn virtual rewards through location specific challenges. These challenges center around Modesto’s quality of life issues that could be addressed in the near future, such as the creation of green spaces, support for locally owned businesses, and easier access to the transportation center in downtown.

The game play session was coordinated with the 2014 Modesto International Architecture festival. You can play the game here: Modesto 2034: Augmented Reality Game. *Project link will work on smartphones, or Chrome.