Not exact matches
The Chicago -
based documentary company has churned out dozens of fantastic docs in their 50 years, most with a specific eye toward
social justice.
The best
documentaries from the Edutopia.org video archives on the most pressing topics in education: project -
based learning, technology integration, math and science,
social and emotional learning, assessment, school - to - career, integrated studies, teacher development, and more.
NOW FROM EDUTOPIA The best
documentaries from The George Lucas Educational Foundation on the most pressing topics in education: project -
based learning, technology integration, math and science,
social and emotional learning, assessment, school - to - career, integrated studies, teacher development, community involvement, and schools that work.
NOW FROM EDUTOPIA The best
documentaries from The George Lucas Educational Foundation on the most pressing topics in education: project -
based learning, technology integration, math and science,
social and emotional learning, assessment, school - to - career, integrated studies, and teacher development.
NOW FROM EDUTOPIA The best
documentaries from The George Lucas Educational Foundation on the most pressing topics in education: project -
based learning, technology integration, math and science,
social and emotional learning, assessment, school - to - career, integrated studies, community involvement, and teacher development.
Pairs have been chosen for the dynamic interplay between the two selected works, and
based on similar or contrasting themes, formal motifs, or geographic interests, as well as topics endemic to photography's discretely defined history:
social documentary, performative, and formal modes will be explored within the expanded discourse of film and video.
Based on
documentary and photographic evidence of the time, it reconstructs the spatial, temporal,
social, and political contexts in which the works of art were created and exhibited, and the way in which they were interpreted and received by the public of the time.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27 Screening: Cao Fei's Haze and Fog and i.Mirror by China Tracy (aka: Cao Fei) Second Life
Documentary Film at the Museum of Modern Art As part of its «
Documentary Fortnight» series, MoMA is screening two films by Cao Fei, the Beijing -
based artist and filmmaker who tackles Chinese economic and
social issues.
Tanya Houghton is a
social documentary photographer and interdisciplinary practitioner
based in London.
Her photography -
based art features abstracted portraits set in distinctive Guyanese landscapes, and her
social documentary photography focuses on the diversity of Guyanese people, places, and cultural experiences.
Her
documentary -
based work examines the
social and cultural factors that shape an environment.
In November, the museum will show the brilliant LaToya Ruby Frazier, whose photographs of Braddock, Pennsylvania marry
social documentary to a deep intimacy, and a survey of the late Chicago -
based feminist painter Christina Ramberg.
Working in London in the 1970s and 1980s as a community -
based activist using photography and text as tools for
social change, Spence contested the formalist preoccupations of mainstream photographic practice and emphasized a return to
documentary.
Though
based in specific contexts — the home of a Cuban immigrant or the small - town landscape of the southeastern United States — her
documentary images allude to more general patterns of
social and economic exchange.
We welcome a wide range of photo - and image -
based approaches, including
documentary photography, conceptual photography, video art, video installation,
social practice, archival or aggregated projects, interactive and emerging media (including virtual and augmented reality), and information art (using photography and / or associated data).
Italian architect Ippolito Pestellini Laparelli, partner at OMA working on preservation, scenography and curation, is both leading OMA Urban Studies, as well as the team of creative mediators, which includes the Swiss contemporary art curator Mirjam Varadinis, who works in Kunsthaus Zurich and was co-curator of TRACK, a large scale city - wide international exhibition in the tradition of «Chambres d'amis» in Ghent, Belgium; Spanish architect, artist and scholar
based in New York and Madrid, Andrés Jaque, the founder of the Office of Political Innovation, working on the intersection of research, politics and design; and Dutch filmmaker and journalist Bregtje van der Haak, who has been directing international
documentaries and transmedia projects on long - term
social change with a special focus on urbanisation and technological culture.