Film

April 11, 2008

New York African Film Festival, April 9 –15, 2008

Ezra_thumbThis_is_my_africa_nana_thumbSlavetradepicwole_thumb

via the Film Society of Lincoln Center site:

the fifteenth New York African Film Festival
April 9 –15, 2008

We are honored to welcome Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka and veteran film director Charles Burnett to receptions during the festival.

The New York African Film Festival (NYAFF) celebrates its 15th anniversary with a lineup of 40 films from 22 countries throughout Africa and the African Diaspora, emphasizing history and storytelling, technology and the future. In a compelling array of features, shorts and documentaries, as well as experimental film and archival footage, the festival selects from treasured stories of the past, as well as contextualizes the present and future within the framework of history. The Festival is also showcasing works by a new wave of female African cineastes. Through eye witness accounting, social activism and pure fiction, Osvalde Lewat-Hallade, Ngozi Onwurah, Katy Léna Ndiaye, Zina Saro Wiwa and other female filmmakers challenge and question the taboo traditions of the Continent and the Black community at large.

“Cinema is such an important medium for Africans, as it functions to both preserve the oral tradition and to act as a vehicle to bring Africa’s voice to the world stage,” said Mahen Bonetti, founder and executive director of the AFF. “The rapid advances in the field of media technologies is presenting the people of Africa and the African Diaspora more opportunities than ever before to dictate the terms of their destiny and to tell their stories on their own terms.” [read more]

Click here for the schedule and film descriptions.

The festival continues at FIAF,   French Institute Alliance Francaise on May 6, 13, 20 & 27, and at BAMCinématek, May 23–26.

Pictured above (l-r):
Ezra
Director: Newton I. Aduaka, Release: 2007, Runtime: 110

This is My Africa screening with Fantôme Afrique
Zina Saro-Wiwa, African continent/Nigeria/UK, 2008; Runtime: 55

The African Slave Trades:Across the Indian Ocean
Director: Diane Seligsohn & Richard Rein, Country: USA, Release: 2007, Runtime: 26

January 14, 2008

Boomalli Aboriginal Artists Co-op Presents "Hand in Hand"

Shigeyuki_kihara_pic
above: Shigeyuki Kihara

Boomalli Aboriginal Artists Co-operative
presents artwork & performances from SistaGirl, Queenie, Takatapui, Fa'a Fafine, Gay, Lesbian and Transgender artists at both Boomalli situated in Leichhardt, and Performance Space @ carriageWorks in Eveleigh, Sidney, Australia.

Hand in Hand

Curated by Jenny Fraser & Shigeyuki Kihara
Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander, Maori, Samoan, Niuean and Fijian artists from Oz and beyond, celebrate Mardi Gras 2008.

Participating Artists:
Sionelagi Falemaka
Jenny Fraser
Dianne Jones
Shigeyuki Kihara
Gary Lee
Dan Taulapapa McMullin
Arone Raymond Meeks
Tracey Moffat
Clinton Nain
Moana Nepia
Rea
Jeffrey Samuels
Claudine Sartain
Darrell Sibosado
Salote Tawale
Niwhai Tupea
Adrian Wills

+++

Boomalli
55-59 Flood Street
Leichhardt, NSW 2040
AUSTRALIA

Postal Address:
PO Box 176, Westgate NSW 2048
tel: +61 (0)2 9560 2541
fax: +61 (0)2 9560 2566
Email: boomalli@gmail.com

Performance Space
245 Wilson Street
Eveleigh NSW 2015
AUSTRALIA

Phone  02 8571 9111
Fax      02 8571 9118

Administrator
Tallulah Kerr: admin@performancespace.com.au

Media & Communications
Rosie Dennis: media@performancespace.com.au

{The word Boomalli is taken from 3 Language/tribal groupings  Gamailerio,  Bundgulung and the Wiradjuri

Making a mark is not only about art it is about expressing a repressed voice within the history of Australia, exhibiting and promote Aboriginal art on our own terms.

It has only been within the last 30 years that Aboriginal art has been taken out of a sterile ethnographic museum context and recognized as an aestetic and cultural expression as unique as the landscape that it often depicts.

Boomalli is a resource centre for Aboriginal artists as well as the wider artistic community and continues to make a mark on art and culture in Australia today.}

October 31, 2007

American Indian Heritage Month @ MMA

From the Metropolitan Museum of Art Education Newsletter, November/December 2007:

Celebrate the opening of the New Gallery for the Art of Native North America on November 14 with these programs.

Gallery Talks
Details

Friday, November 16, 10:00 a.m.
Tuesday, November 27, 10:00 a.m.
Wednesday, December 12, 10:00 a.m.

New Gallery for the Art of Native North America
Edith Watts

Films
Details

Tuesday, November 20, 2:00 p.m.
The Crooked Beak of Heaven (1976), produced by David Attenborough (52 min.)
Bonnie J. Sacerdote Lecture Hall, Uris Center for Education

Thursday, November 29, 2:00 p.m.
In the Land of the Totem Poles (1999), directed by Michel Viotte (51 min.)
Bonnie J. Sacerdote Lecture Hall, Uris Center for Education

If you enjoyed receiving news about The Metropolitan Museum of Art, we invite you to sign up for our free email newsletters. See My Met Museum.

Feeds + Licenses

Blog powered by TypePad