March News
Evening Seminars, Grants & More  
 

ORGANIZING/FILMMAKING/ARCHIVING
FILMS FROM THE THIRD WORLD NEWSREEL ARCHIVES
SYMPOSIUM AT NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2016 

Rarely seen and recently preserved 16mm films made by Newsreel and Third World Newsreel, along with panels of the filmmakers and activists will be presented by Third World Newsreel and the NYU Moving Image Archive Program (MIAP) in the Cinema Studies Department.
  
    
Morning Program: Workshop 
Archiving and Preserving Film/Media Collections, 10am to 12pm 
Location: MIAP Lab, 665 Broadway, 6th Floor, Room 643 
Learn how to get started organizing your old and obsolete film and media collections so that you and others can use them. Topics covered will include: how best to inventory your collection; preparing for preservation; pros and cons of preservation file formats for films and media; making video preservation masters and archival film scans; and storing and managing your preserved works. Free but limited to 20 participants due to space constraints.
Speakers: XFR Collective and AMIA @ NYU.
Click here for more information and to register.
 
Afternoon Program: Films & Panels 
Location: New York University Michelson Theater, 721 Broadway, 6th Floor  
 
Women's Movement Program, 12:30pm to 2:30pm 
Films: Janie's Janie (1971) and Make-Out (1970)
A rarely seen documentary following a woman who breaks from abuse to become an organizer, preceded by a short drama about what women really think during a hook-up.

Panelists:
Cynthia Mellon, Activist
Peter Barton, Newsreel Filmmakers
 
Stephanie Palewski, Newsreel Filmmaker
Deborah Shaffer, Newsreel Filmmaker


Janie's Janie and Make Out were preserved thanks to the generous support of New York Women in Film and Television's Women's Film Preservation Fund, original members of the Newsreel collective, the late Richard Brick and Cineric.  
 
Mass Incarceration and State Violence Program, 3:00pm to 5:00pm  
Film: Teach Our Children (1972, NEW PRINT)
The rarely seen Third World Newsreel documentary on the 1971 Attica prison uprising that questions the conditions that led to the uprising, and the actions of authorities that resulted in 31 deaths by the National Guard. 

Panelists:
Kassandra Frederique, Drug Policy Alliance
David Rothenberg, Fortune Society

Christine Choy, Third World Newsreel Filmmaker  
Susan Robeson, Third World Newsreel Filmmaker

Teach Our Children was preserved thanks to the efforts of UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, MIAP alumna Pamela Jean Smith and Cinemalab.

Fighting Gentrification Program, 5:15pm to 7:15pm  
Film: Break and Enter (Rompiendo Puertas) (1970, PRESERVATION PREMIERE) 
A Newsreel documentary on the struggle of a mostly women-led community group fighting for their homes as urban renewal hit the Upper West Side.

Panelists:

Esperanza Martell, El Comité, human rights peace educator and organizer
Shahana Hanif, CAAAV NYCHA Organizing Project
Wai Yee Poon, CAAAV Chinatown Tenants Union 
Peter Barton, Newsreel filmmaker

Carol Foresta, Newsreel filmmaker

Break and Enter was preserved thanks to the generous support of the National Film Preservation Foundation and Colorlab. In addition, the film was preserved thanks to the efforts of MIAP alumnus Daniel Finn and the following members of the Activists Archivists group: Kelly Haydon, Marie Lascu, Lindy Leong, Yvonne Ng, Dan Erdman, Rufus de Rham and Howard Besser.

Reception, 7:15pm to 8pm  
 
Organizing/Filmmaking/Archiving: Films from the Third World Newsreel Archives is one of a series of events celebrating TWN's commitment to preserving its historic films as the organization approaches its 50th anniversary in 2018. The symposium is also part of Spring Festival: Creating the Future, a special event of the Tisch 50th Anniversary Celebration.

Since 2004, TWN and MIAP students, alumni and faculty have partnered on numerous projects in support of TWN's preservation efforts. MIAP is a program of the Department of Cinema Studies in the Tisch School of the Arts. 
 

Generous support provided by the NYU Department of Cinema Studies, the Tisch School of the Arts and Dean Allyson Green, New York Women in Film and Television, with special thanks to Jeff Richardson and the Cinema Studies technical staff, and Mona Jimenez and MIAP. Cosponsored by the NYU Institute of African American Affairs and the Asian/Pacific/American Institute at NYU, the XFR Collective and AMIA @ NYU. TWN is supported in part by the New York State Council on the Arts, the NYC Department of Cultural Affairs, the Peace Development Fund and individual donors. 

  MORE TWN EVENING SEMINARS
Wed, March 9, 6:30pm  
Producers Unlimited 
Presented at The City College of New York and co-sponsored with the Documentary Forum at CCNY, the Black Documentary Collective and PGA East. Stay tuned for more details.  

Wed, March 23, 6:30pm  
Screening & Talk: CAN
Presented at The City College of NY and co-sponsored with the Documentary Forum at CCNY and PGA East.  Stay tuned for more details.  

Thursday, March 31st,  6:30pm  
Screening & Talk: BaddDDD Sonia Sanchez 
Presented at The City College of NY and co-sponsored with the Documentary Forum at CCNY, the Black Studies Program at CCNY, Poetry Studies, and the Black Documentary Collective.  Stay tuned for more details.  

NYWIFT Workshops and Events
 
Women Make Movies Workshops
 
DCTV Workshops

Union Docs Workshops & Seminars 
Maysles Documentary Center Education Program
More Info

Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts Classes

GRANTS & MORE

New York Media Arts Map List of Funding Opportunities

NAMAC Creative Leadership Lab
Deadline: March 31

Deadline: Open

Jerome Foundation
Deadline: Open

Deadline: Open
 
Third World Newsreel Youth Media Internship 
TWN is looking for interns as part of its Youth Media Internship Program. The organization trains college and high school students in three areas of the media industry: digital video post production, film acquisitions, and film distribution & marketing. Please submit your resume to twn@twn.org or distribution@twn.org.


TWN is supported in part by the New York State Council on the Arts, the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, the National Film Preservation Foundation and the Peace Development Fund, as well as individual donors.

Third World Newsreel (TWN) is an alternative media arts organization that fosters the creation, appreciation and dissemination of independent film and video by and about people of color and social justice issues.

212-947-9277 | twn@twn.org | www.twn.org
 
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