View allAll Photos Tagged StepAndRepeat
Avant Garden 2018, Step-and-Repeat, attendees have their picture taken on the "red carpet", in front of the sponsor wall. Photo by Alex Carroll for Walker Art Center, Minneapolis. September 8, 2018.
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Development, Annual Gala, Avant Garden, September 17, 2022. Step-and-Repeat. Photo by Alex Carroll Photography, courtesy Walker Art Center, Minneapolis.
Avant Garden 2018, Step-and-Repeat, attendees have their picture taken on the "red carpet", in front of the sponsor wall. Photo by Alex Carroll for Walker Art Center, Minneapolis. September 8, 2018.
dev2022ag0917_step-repeat_
Development, Annual Gala, Avant Garden, September 17, 2022. Step-and-Repeat. Photo by Alex Carroll Photography, courtesy Walker Art Center, Minneapolis.
dev2022ag0917_step-repeat_
Development, Annual Gala, Avant Garden, September 17, 2022. Step-and-Repeat. Photo by Alex Carroll Photography, courtesy Walker Art Center, Minneapolis.
dev2022ag0917_step-repeat_
Development, Annual Gala, Avant Garden, September 17, 2022. Step-and-Repeat. Photo by Alex Carroll Photography, courtesy Walker Art Center, Minneapolis.
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COAST SALISH TERRITORIES (Vancouver) – The Second Annual Vancouver Indigenous Media Arts Festival (VIMAF) will be showcasing the best of cutting-edge Indigitized artists and their works November 8-11 at a handful of venues on Coast Salish Territories. VIMAF brings together special guests from across Turtle Island, including Alanis Obomsawin, who will be presented with VIMAF’s Lifetime Achievement Award. She will be joined by directors and producers from Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Winnipeg and BC. Their works will be shown at the West Coast’s only Native media arts festival, including a variety of mediums such as short films, music videos, documentaries, video art, animation, feature length films, interactive media, video projection, and broadcasting.
Programming at the weekend festival will celebrate a number of trailblazing artists from around Turtle Island with Gala and Conference events, interactive installations, National Film Board (NFB) feature film premieres, and evening musical programs, all meshing traditional and contemporary experiences of Indigenous Peoples. A number of prominent featured installations and films will be making their west coast debut at VIMAF, including NFB/imagineNATIVE partnership De Nort, an online interactive journey and onsite installation from the Winnipeg/Montreal ITWĒ Collective exploring life and experiences on a northern Manitoba reserve and how through forced reservation traditional memories and knowledge are being replaced.
“Presenting web-based work alongside radio, television,and cinema really show the multi-platform storytelling strategies being used to tell our stories,” said Ronnie Harris, member, VIMAF Coordinating Committee. “Using digital tools is a popular strategies for Indigenous storytellers on the West Coast.”
NFB Film premieres include Director Alanis Obomsawin’s The People of the Kattawapiskak River, returning Residential School lens We Were Children, West Coast Smokin’Fish, Every Emotion Costs, and others. VIMAF and W2 Community Media Arts Society resident media artist, Bracken Hanuse Corlett (Wuikinuxv-Klahoose), will also be projecting, Wuulhu – To Fuse Together, a series of digital installations throughout Festival home venue, W2, for the weekend. Musical offerings fuse traditional sounds with cutting edge electronic-influenced sets provided by the East Coasts’ A Tribe Called Red who are playing at Fortune Sound Club, and locals Skookum Sound System, as well as DJ’s Annashay, Vancouver DMC Finalist DJ Krisp playing VIMAF’s Indigenous Afterdark: Around The Sun.
The 2012 Festival will be headquartered at W2, with other events taking place at SFU Woodward’s Cinema, National Film Board – Pacific Region, and Fortune Sound Club. “Anchoring the Festival in Vancouver’s original settlement is fitting,” says Harris, “we are using the Woodward’s media hub which is made up of W2, SFU and the NFB, to bring a focal point for understanding what is Indigenous culture today in the centre of the city.”
VIMAF is a media arts organization founded in 2011 to re-affirm the presence of Indigenous digital production in Coast Salish Territory. VIMAF holds space for Indigenous media artists to show their works in an environment that fosters cultural discourse, critical awareness and interactivity through the independent production, stimulation, examination and illumination of Indigenous socio-political histories and current realities.
VIMAF gratefully acknowledges the support of W2 Community Media Arts Society, First People’s Cultural Council, Hastings Crossing BIA, National Film Board – Interactive Studio, and a dozen Indigenous organizations.
** Photos by W2 chew who passed around my camera.
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Development, Annual Gala, Avant Garden, September 17, 2022. Step-and-Repeat. Photo by Alex Carroll Photography, courtesy Walker Art Center, Minneapolis.
This step and repeat for Safeway is a fabric backdrop with Expand Hardware. The white background means we had to also use a liner so the hardware doesn't show through.
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