[-empyre-] Fwd: Week 3 on -empyre: Dale Hudson, Gabriel Menotti, and Isak Berbik
Renate Ferro
rtf9 at cornell.edu
Fri Oct 18 07:54:36 EST 2013
Whoops! Please disregard the email I sent introducing Ken Feingold for
Week 3. I am very jet-lagged and provided you with the wrong line up.
This week on empyre is indeed Dale Hudson, Gabriel Menotti, and Isak
Berbik. My apologies to Ken and we will hear from him next week.
Tim and I have returned to the US after an intense and productive time at
the Busan Film Festival. It was wonderful to see Youngmin and Alex in real
time in both Busan and Seoul. The Asian perspective on convergence is one
that I feel we have only begun to flush out. Thank you Alex for teasing out
some of the cultural complications involving this fact. This was evident
for me not only at Busan's film festival but in meeting many of my former
students who despite a critical fine arts education at Cornell have
transitioned over to their home in Korea where most of them work in very
large commercial design firms. It appears to me that this spirit in
celebration of capitalism as opposed to a suspicion (that particularly
western academics and artists) stems from a desire and necessity for South
Korea to assert itself from its neighbor to the North, communist North
Korea. I am thinking though about how other parts of Asia may weigh in on
this.
Week three brings to us three guest moderators: Dale Hudson, Gabriel
Menotti and Ken Feingold. Dale now teaching in the United Arab Emerites
has been a guest on -empyre previously so many of you may know him. Dale
used to teach at our neighboring institution Ithaca College and we do miss
seeing him around town. Gabriel Menotti long-time empyreans will
recognize. Menotti was a part of a moderating team a few years ago. We
welcome him back as a guest and look forward to his contribution. We also
welcome Isak Berbik a friend that Tim and I met in Pesc, Hungary a couple
of years ago at a conference. We are so pleased that he has moved and is
teaching in our state of New York. Our guest's biographies are below:
Dale Hudson (UAE/USA) is a media theorist, critic, and curator. He teaches
film and new media studies at New York University Abu Dhabi (NYUAD),
curates online exhibitions for the Finger Lakes Environmental Film Festival
(FLEFF), and serves on the preselection committee for the Abu Dhabi Film
Festival (ADFF). His work appears in journals including Afterimage,
American Quarterly, Cinema Journal, French Cultural Studies, Journal of
Film and Video, Screen, and Studies in Documentary Film, as well as in
anthologies. His book-in-progress, “Blood, Bodies, and Borders,” analyzes
transnational and postcolonial vectors of U.S. history through the
political economies of film. He has also reviewed films, exhibitions, and
books for journals including Afterimage, African Studies Review, Jadaliyya,
and Scope.
Gabriel Menotti (Brazil, 1983) Gabriel Menotti is an independent curator
and lecturer in Multimedia at the Federal University of Espírito Santo
(UFES). He is the author of Através da Sala Escura (Intermeios, 2012), a
history of movie theatres from the perspective of VJing spaces. Menotti
holds a PhD in Media & Communications from Goldsmiths (University of
London), and another from the Catholic University from São Paulo. He has
published work in a number of research journals and books, as well as
contributed to international events such as the São Paulo Biennial,
Rencontres Internationales Paris/Berlin/Madrid and the Transmediale
Festival.
Isak Berbic (b.1983) is a photography, moving image and performance artist
from Sarajevo. As Yugoslavia dissolved and Bosnia was under attack, he and
his family became refugees, moving through Croatia, a refugee camp in
Denmark, eventually receiving asylum in the United States. Isak Berbic
studied Photography at the University of Illinois at Chicago. In Chicago,
he practiced art, worked in theater, and art directed a political community
magazine. From 2007-2012 he was based in the Middle East, Sharjah, United
Arab Emirates, where he taught at the University of Sharjah. In 2012 he
joined the faculty at Stony Brook University (SUNY), Art Department. His
research deals with social histories, politics, tragedy, memory, humor,
exile, and the limits of representation. His recent artworks investigate
the overlaps of documentary and fiction in relation to the visualization of
contested politics and contested histories. Isak Berbic is now living and
working in New York. http://www.isakberbic.com/**
--
Renate Ferro
Visiting Assistant Professor of Art,
(contracted since 2004)
Cornell University
Department of Art, Tjaden Hall Office: 306
Ithaca, NY 14853
Email: <rferro at cornell.edu <rtf9 at cornell.edu>>
URL: http://www.renateferro.net
http://www.privatesecretspubliclies.net
Lab: http://www.tinkerfactory.net
Managing Co-moderator of -empyre- soft skinned space
http://empyre.library.cornell.edu/
--
Renate Ferro
Visiting Assistant Professor of Art,
(contracted since 2004)
Cornell University
Department of Art, Tjaden Hall Office: 306
Ithaca, NY 14853
Email: <rferro at cornell.edu <rtf9 at cornell.edu>>
URL: http://www.renateferro.net
http://www.privatesecretspubliclies.net
Lab: http://www.tinkerfactory.net
Managing Co-moderator of -empyre- soft skinned space
http://empyre.library.cornell.edu/
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au/pipermail/empyre/attachments/20131017/5b30a6ca/attachment.htm>
More information about the empyre
mailing list