4 results for your search
Westbeth Home of the Arts
produced by George Cominskie, Per Henriksen and Jesper Bundgaard, Out of Sync (New York, NY: Filmakers Library, 2011), 30 mins
The first and largest federally funded artists’ colony in the United States, Westbeth became home to a generation of artists grateful for cheap rent and a place to live and work. Since 1970 the west Greenwich Village site has provided a home to artists who range from emerging to well-established and represent a...
Sample
produced by George Cominskie, Per Henriksen and Jesper Bundgaard, Out of Sync (New York, NY: Filmakers Library, 2011), 30 mins
Description
The first and largest federally funded artists’ colony in the United States, Westbeth became home to a generation of artists grateful for cheap rent and a place to live and work. Since 1970 the west Greenwich Village site has provided a home to artists who range from emerging to well-established and represent a wide variety of disciplines.
Inhabitants are painters, writers, photographers, filmmakers, poets, sculptors, dancers, choreographers,...
The first and largest federally funded artists’ colony in the United States, Westbeth became home to a generation of artists grateful for cheap rent and a place to live and work. Since 1970 the west Greenwich Village site has provided a home to artists who range from emerging to well-established and represent a wide variety of disciplines.
Inhabitants are painters, writers, photographers, filmmakers, poets, sculptors, dancers, choreographers, musicians, and composers, and have included luminaries like Diane Arbus, Merce Cunningham, Joseph Chaikin, Nam June Paik, and Nadine Gordimer.
Opened through funding provided by the National Endowment for the Arts and the J.M. Kaplan Foundation, Westbeth was originally reconfigured from five abandoned industrial buildings by the renowned architect Richard Meiers, and was recently designated as a New York City landmark. This film provides a window into the array of creative inhabitants who live, work, and age there, and chronicles the evolution of the neighborhood from crime-ridden to coveted.
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Field of Study
Art & Architecture
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
George Cominskie, Per Henriksen, Jesper Bundgaard, Out of Sync
Date Published / Released
2011
Publisher
Filmakers Library
Topic / Theme
Cities, Art & Architecture
Copyright Message
Copyright © 2011. Used by permission of Filmakers Library
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Ballad of Greenwich Village
written by Karen L. Kramer, fl. 1978; directed by Karen L. Kramer, fl. 1978; produced by Karen L. Kramer, fl. 1978 (New York, NY: Filmakers Library, 2007), 1 hour 11 mins
The artists, rebels, and bohemians who came to New York's Greenwich Village over many decades changed the face of American culture through their art and politics. This film portrays the important political and social movements that began in the Village: the first interracial jazz club, the earliest Socialist newsp...
Sample
written by Karen L. Kramer, fl. 1978; directed by Karen L. Kramer, fl. 1978; produced by Karen L. Kramer, fl. 1978 (New York, NY: Filmakers Library, 2007), 1 hour 11 mins
Description
The artists, rebels, and bohemians who came to New York's Greenwich Village over many decades changed the face of American culture through their art and politics. This film portrays the important political and social movements that began in the Village: the first interracial jazz club, the earliest Socialist newspapers from before World War I, the Stonewall Rebellion which sparked the Gay Liberation movement and many others. This unique film incl...
The artists, rebels, and bohemians who came to New York's Greenwich Village over many decades changed the face of American culture through their art and politics. This film portrays the important political and social movements that began in the Village: the first interracial jazz club, the earliest Socialist newspapers from before World War I, the Stonewall Rebellion which sparked the Gay Liberation movement and many others. This unique film includes anecdotes from many famous writers, musicians and performers who got their start in the Village. Actor/ director Tim Robbins speaks about growing up in the Village and attending early protest rallies. Allen Ginsberg shows us the coffee house where he first read poetry. Playwright Edward Albee remembers how his controversial plays found a home here. Also appearing in the film are film director Woody Allen, poet Maya Angelou, author Norman Mailer, folk singers Peter, Paul & Mary, Judy Collins, Richie Havens and jazz drummer Roy Haynes -- as well as local Village painters, activists, club owners and drag queens. The Ballad of Greenwich Village interweaves past and present, with 16mm footage, archival photographs, Hollywood movies, cartoons, informative interviews and scenes of contemporary village life. Accompanied by a lively soundtrack that ranges from ragtime to bebop to folk music, the film celebrates what was America's first bohemia. A valuable addition for film collections in American literature and theatre, and urban studies. College Adult
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Field of Study
Art & Architecture
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
Karen L. Kramer, fl. 1978
Author / Creator
Karen L. Kramer, fl. 1978
Date Published / Released
2007
Publisher
Filmakers Library
Person Discussed
Jack Kerouac, 1922-1969, Mary Allin Travers, 1936-2009, Allen Ginsberg, 1926-1997, Tom Paxton, 1937-, Woody Allen, 1935-
Topic / Theme
Long Civil Rights Movement, United States, The Arts, History, Art & Architecture, 21st Century in World History (2001– )
Copyright Message
Copyright © 2005. Used by permission of Filmakers Library. All rights reserved.
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The Last Wright: Frank Lloyd Wright and the Rebirth of an American City
directed by Lucille Carra (New York, NY: Filmakers Library, 2009), 51 mins
By 1908, Frank Lloyd Wright was considered the most innovative architect in Chicago. He traveled to Mason City, Iowa, to design a unique business block- a bank and an adjoining hotel, facing a park. Soon, scandal and tragedy would ruin his career, but the Park Inn would remain, one of his last Prairie style struct...
Sample
directed by Lucille Carra (New York, NY: Filmakers Library, 2009), 51 mins
Description
By 1908, Frank Lloyd Wright was considered the most innovative architect in Chicago. He traveled to Mason City, Iowa, to design a unique business block- a bank and an adjoining hotel, facing a park. Soon, scandal and tragedy would ruin his career, but the Park Inn would remain, one of his last Prairie style structures. This unique film traces the life, death, and possible rebirth of a Midwest downtown through the prism of the Park Inn.From 1926 t...
By 1908, Frank Lloyd Wright was considered the most innovative architect in Chicago. He traveled to Mason City, Iowa, to design a unique business block- a bank and an adjoining hotel, facing a park. Soon, scandal and tragedy would ruin his career, but the Park Inn would remain, one of his last Prairie style structures. This unique film traces the life, death, and possible rebirth of a Midwest downtown through the prism of the Park Inn.From 1926 to the present, the Park Inn witnessed alterations and downgrading, while Mason City dealt with an economic downturn in the 1960s and a decaying reputation in the 1970s. While the city struggled to fund renovations of the Frank Lloyd Wright hotel in the 1990s in an effort at heritage tourism, it also attempted an economic revival with a $20 million tribute to the musical comedy "The Music Man," which was set there. As a last resort, the city decided to place the Park Inn on Ebay. Which vision of Mason City will prevail? Through a blend of rare archival footage, period music and a comparative look at stunning Wright masterpieces in the Midwest and Japan, The Last Wright raises issues of the sustainability of landmark structures and offers a provocative, ironic tapestry of a century in an American city. College Adult
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Field of Study
Art & Architecture
Content Type
Documentary
Author / Creator
Lucille Carra
Date Published / Released
2009
Publisher
Filmakers Library
Person Discussed
Frank Lloyd Wright, 1867-1959
Topic / Theme
Buildings, Art & Architecture
Copyright Message
Copyright © 2009. Used by permission of Filmakers Library. All rights reserved.
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The Twin Towers: A History
directed by Kaye Wise Whitehead; produced by Kaye Wise Whitehead (New York, NY: Filmakers Library, 2002), 50 mins
The Twin Towers have attained mythic status in the 21st century. The effect of their destruction and the tragic loss of life is engraved on the American consciousness. Here is a fascinating history of the buildings that set the character of lower Manhattan and symbolized not only the power of New York City but Ame...
Sample
directed by Kaye Wise Whitehead; produced by Kaye Wise Whitehead (New York, NY: Filmakers Library, 2002), 50 mins
Description
The Twin Towers have attained mythic status in the 21st century. The effect of their destruction and the tragic loss of life is engraved on the American consciousness. Here is a fascinating history of the buildings that set the character of lower Manhattan and symbolized not only the power of New York City but American culture and financial dominance. The Twin Towers takes the viewer on an architectural journey that explores the design, construct...
The Twin Towers have attained mythic status in the 21st century. The effect of their destruction and the tragic loss of life is engraved on the American consciousness. Here is a fascinating history of the buildings that set the character of lower Manhattan and symbolized not only the power of New York City but American culture and financial dominance. The Twin Towers takes the viewer on an architectural journey that explores the design, construction and ultimate destruction of the 110-story buildings. Through interviews with architects, cultural historians, engineers and construction workers, a rich and absorbing story emerges. It was David and Nelson Rockefeller who initially envisioned the development of lower Manhattan as the center for international trade. There is a certain irony in that they thought global trade would promote world peace. Japanese architect Minoru Yamasaki was chosen to design the World Trade Center, and despite some negative response toward the "spaghetti boxes," most believed these two major buildings would usher in the 21st Century. The film describes the technical problems that were overcome, including the challenge to the ironworkers. It also recounts the daredevil stunts that the buildings attracted. Paul Goldberger, renowned architecture critic, and others contemplate the future of the site. High School College Adult
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Field of Study
Art & Architecture
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
Kaye Wise Whitehead
Author / Creator
Kaye Wise Whitehead
Date Published / Released
2002
Publisher
Filmakers Library
Topic / Theme
Buildings, History curriculums, Art & Architecture
Copyright Message
Copyright © 2002. Used by permission of Filmakers Library. All rights reserved.
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