Friday, April 29, 2011

ATTN NYC/Chicago/Boston/World: Message From Iara Lee: Film Screening



FROM IARA LEE: dearest fb friends, THANK YOU for all the amazing bday greetings and your spiritual & physical presence at the NYC premiere. delighted that the 400 seat theater was packed. the lively q&A made us conclude that in the USA is where we need to work the hardest to provoke change, since so much of the bad stuff happening in the world is byproduct of terrible USA foreign policy. americans, lets resist and act-for-change!!!






Friday, April 29 · 8:00pm - 10:00pm  Gene Siskel Film Center 164 North State Street Chicago, Illinois 60601 (312) 846-2600 http://www.siskelfilmcenter.org/culturesofresistance


12:15pm Independent Film Festival of Boston at the Brattle Theater in Harvard Square http://brattlefilm.org/2011/04/30/cultures-of-resistance/












Peace,

Sue

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

REM: Collapse Into Now Film Project: Warner Brothers Records


Every Day Is Yours To Win, the latest film in R.E.M.’s Collapse Into Now Film Project, is currently streaming on YouTube’s homepage for 24 hours. The film features an introduction by Michael Stipe and co-director Jim McKay, who are the guest curators for the day.  Stipe and McKay are also sharing some of their all-time favorite YouTube clips, also featured on the homepage of YouTube.  Every Day Is Yours To Win was directed by McKay, Chris Moukarbel, and Valerie Veatch.



 


The Collapse Into Now Film Project is a selection of films accompanying each song on R.E.M.’s current album Collapse Into Now and directed by notable artists and filmmakers and personally curated by singer Michael Stipe. The list of directors includes Oscar-nominated actor James Franco, filmmaker, photographer, and conceptual artist Sam Taylor-Wood, and Oscar-nominated documentary filmmaker Albert Maysles.

 





 
Several films have already premiered online with more to be unveiled for viewing at broadcast and web outlets over the next several weeks, so please stay tuned to www.remhq.com for schedule and details.



For further information please contact:





 

Calling Artists/Film Makers/Animators: US Boat to Gaza

CALLING
ARTISTS/FILMMAKERS
TO CREATE
SHORT PROMOTIONAL VIDEOS


The U.S. Boat to Gaza - THE AUDACITY OF HOPE - is calling on artists, animators and filmmakers to encourage you to develop and submit a short 1-5 minute video about THE AUDACITY OF HOPE for mass distribution on Youtube and through our networks. Help us raise the profile of the U.S. Boat to Gaza in the coming months before we sail in June 2011 with the Freedom Flotilla II.

THE AUDACITY OF HOPE  is committed to carrying powerful voices from this country to the people of Gaza; those voices who are supporting this grassroots, human-rights mission which is working to help end the illegal U.S. supported Israeli naval blockade of Gaza. We need your creativity to increase our visibility throughout this country. 


The video project guidelines are as follows: 

1. The video piece should be no more than 5 minutes. (If you are inspired to make a longer film please go ahead but it would have to be considered for another type of distribution and use.)

2. The piece should raise the profile of the U.S. Boat to Gaza -
THE AUDACITY OF HOPE
  - and promote the name in order to build public awareness of this effort.

3. The piece cannot promote any affiliation to political parties, institutions or associations in the U.S. or in Gaza and the Occupied Territories.

4. The piece cannot promote or support the use of violence or anything that would undermine our commitment to nonviolence.

Please send your videos to us at videostogaza@gmail.com.  


Visit our website for more information about this project: www.ustogaza.org


Please share this message with others.



GET ON BOARD THE U.S. TO GAZA CAMPAIGN

VISIT
WWW.USTOGAZA.ORG

TO ENDORSE AND CONTRIBUTE

Thank you for your support.
 

logo

The Buffalo Infringement Festival: Submit, Endorse, Volunteer, Attend


The Buffalo Infringement Festival (BIF) is an 11-day long multi-genre arts festival in Buffalo, NY. 

It is free for all artists to participate, everyone is accepted and artists keep 100% of the profits from their projects and performances. The art that is typically Under the Radar is exemplified. 

The Buffalo Infringement Festival is a non-profit-driven, non-hierarchical grassroots endeavor bringing together a broad range of eclectic, independent, experimental, and controversial art of all forms. Visual, performing, musical, and media arts are all welcome here. Taking place in multiple venues in and around Buffalo’s Allentown District, the festival is an annual eleven-day event running from the last weekend of July through the first weekend of August. 

 http://www.optative.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/2011_frontpage_logo1.png


Every summer, the streets of Buffalo come alive with scores of events by local and visiting theatre and dance companies, puppeteers, media artists, poets, comics, musicians, cabaret acts, digital designers, and miscellaneous insurrectionists. 

The annual Buffalo Infringement Festival provides artists and audiences of all backgrounds the chance to come together, take chances, push boundaries, and explore uncharted territory because exciting art can happen anywhere, anytime, without a blockbuster budget.

The Buffalo Infringement Festival is dedicated to the belief that art has a greater purpose than simply to entertain or simply to make a quick buck. Unfortunately, the modern-day arts world is increasingly degenerated by commercialism, elitism, and close-minded-ness. In this climate, the vast majority of art inevitably grows more and more toothless, perfunctory, and irrelevant. To counter this, we have undertaken the task of clawing out a small niche where artists are free – both ideologically and financially – to create as they wish. 


There are many festivals – nationally and internationally – that seek to promote “alternative art.” But, all too often, these endeavors are a victim of their own success. As they grow in popularity, they become part of the mainstream and, ultimately, suffer from the same commercialism and complacency that they set out to break free from in the first place.  

To ensure that the same fate does not befall our “infringement” festival, we commit to the following ground rules:

1) Artists Participate for Free!  There is no admission fee for artists and artists keep one hundred percent of the money that their project brings in at the door. The festival provides each project with a venue to perform in, three to five performance slots (sometimes more for outdoor events), and listings in our brochure and on our website. All other costs, issues, and needs are left for the artists to tackle of their own accord. 

2) No one is Rejected!  Anyone who gets in a Project Proposal before the submission deadline – as long their project is legal and physically do-able – will be accepted. No one is empowered to judge artists’ work as “worthy” or “un-worthy.” Everything is welcome. 

3) No one is in Charge!  The “infringement” festival is a non-hierarchical collective. There is no salaried staff. There is no official in a suit and tie telling people what to do. No one is making any money off of this (other than, hopefully, the artists). Instead, the festival is organized by a volunteer committee, which is open to anyone who wants in. All decisions are made democratically. 

4) Keep it Cheap!  The only thing our artists are NOT allowed to do is charge too much at the door. In order to foster a non-commercial atmosphere, the maximum admission fee that any “infringement” festival event can charge is $10.00 dollars per ticket. Many “infringement” events are offered on a “pay-what-you-can” basis or through some other alternative admission fee. Artists are strongly encouraged to take this approach. 

What We Will Use the Money For: The biggest thing we do with the money we raise is printing our massive schedule brochure. Each year, as the festival increases in size, so does our schedule. The schedule is the number one way that we help the artists advertise about their shows as it contains a small description of each project and the times/locations where it can be seen.  We get the schedule printed in our local free arts publication, Artvoice. 

They have a circulation of more than 60,000 papers each week. Last year we had to purchase 16 pages of the issue in order to fit our schedule and this year is expected to be even bigger.  We also use the money to print up other promotional materials (postcards, posters, etc.) 

We use these materials to solicit applications, raise awareness and promote the festival. Another thing we do with the money we raise is to create merchandise to sell (T-shirts, stickers, magnets, posters, etc.)  which helps us keep money flowing into our budget from year to year, helping to make the festival self-sustaining. 

We also use some of the money to rent sound equipment and to pay people who are qualified to run that equipment for some of the venues during the festival.  When we have money to pay for these rentals, this helps keep artists from having to contribute their profits to rent their own equipment and to pay sound techs, etc. 







(We have no poets! --> shameful!) 


You have 5 days left!


VOLUNTEERS NEEDED! FEELING COOPED UP? Wanting to do something cool? Then do this!


Keep it alive people, we all know our art is often all we have.


Peace,

Sue

THANK YOU FOR HELPING TO MAKE THE BUFFALO INFRINGEMENT FESTIVAL POSSIBLE FOR 2011 AND BEYOND!






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