Sentences with phrase «screen culture»

Rail: There is a very ham - handed way that some people, to oppose the threat of screen culture and Internet image culture, are making overly material gooey paintings.
Her practice, research, and teaching centre on screen cultures, with a focus on feminism, performance practice and aesthetic theory.
His works range broadly between digital media, installation, painting and sculpture, and focus on the issues from film, anime and photography to digital screen culture and data subject matter.
She explores how such strategies have travelled through film history and continue to operate in contemporary screen culture.
Senses of Cinema has filled a huge vacuum in Australian screen culture by providing a space for intelligent, well - informed, opinionated film criticism... -LRB-...) I like its breadth of focus, the diversity of opinion, and the fact that on the net one can run essays of some depth.
Senses is an innovative, online film journal that has set the standard for professional, high quality analysis and debate on international film and screen culture since we launched almost 20 years ago.
The Screen Queensland collaboration and the role it plays in fostering talent and production activity is taken very seriously by Fisher, who states, «For the local industry, we develop future film professionals through screen culture and screen education, (including) dedicated screenings, career forums and workshops for high - school students.
Guyton's black paintings, more than any other series admirably documents the unavoidable failures of the mechanical process and his «paintings speak to an everyday screen culture of scanners and scroll bars, layered windows that slip in and out of view, thresholds of information that only reveal themselves when the jpeg loses focus, the printer falters, or the X gets a jagged edge.
The exhibition includes a selection of new «blur» paintings by Elrod representing a painterly space that the artist refers to as screen - space — a shallow, compressed kind of space that alludes to the screen and our visual relationship to personal screen culture i.e. smartphones, TVs, and computer screens.
Sara Eliassen's project The Feedback Loop explores how screen culture and the moving images we surround ourselves with affect our thoughts, gazes and movements.
In addition to their curated short film screenings, CINEMQ would throw badass parties and publish weekly articles on queer screen culture.
Aymar Jean Christian, assistant professor of communications studies, and Miriam Petty, associate professor of screen cultures in the department of radio / television / film, screen clips of recent critically acclaimed cable and TV shows such as «Insecure» and «Queen Sugar,» and they discuss how the shows fit into strategies of major film and TV brands.
I have managed to see just under 500 — a shameful amount, really — but with this new project I aim to see some of the more glaring omissions and, with the help of my home city's screen culture, do so on the big screen where they belong.
While queer representation in mainstream television is increasing, queer teens remain in a marginal space in screen culture.
From the recording of the death of Sadaam Hussein that was (and still is) widely accessible online1 to the urban legend surrounding the death of a stunt man in Ben - Hur (William Wyler, 1959), screen culture is riddled with visual material for those of a more ghoulish inclination.
If you grew up in the 1980s, and you were a connoisseur of small - screen culture, then you remember Jason Bateman as the preppy, freckled and precociously winsome Derek Taylor, the comic foil to Ricky Schroder's tow - headed teenage heartthrob on the NBC sitcom Silver Spoons.
This lecture examines Munch's influence on New York artists — including Jasper Johns — in the 1970s and «80s while also considering the ways in which he continues to haunt canvases, prints, and screen culture.
In the same way, slowly but surely, Solyanka State Gallery is transforming itself from a universal gallery space into a museum project wholly devoted to screen culture.
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