[Love Family 2: Harlem, NY]
Footage of the Love Family working outside and singing, followed by footage of singing and dancing by the Love Family and others in Harlem, New York.
Footage of the Love Family working outside and singing, followed by footage of singing and dancing by the Love Family and others in Harlem, New York.
Footage of the Love Family commune in Washington State, including interviews with its members, followed by musical performances from Dean and Dudley Evenson and collaborators.
Documentary on a communal gathering that takes place every year in rural Arizona.
Pleasant images of nature accompanied by the new age music of Dean and Dudley Evenson and Cyrille Verdeaux.
00:05 The interviewer speaks with people at Art 1980 (inaudible) while the camera films art and attendees. 01:06 An elderly woman speaks about the show and shares the advice that her brother – a commercial artist – gave her about purchasing paintings. 02:40 The interviewer speaks to a woman about the show and about her opinions on contemporary art. 05:26 Interviews outside the exhibit with a group serving lemonade. They’re wearing t-shirts that read “Artists Must Make a Stand.” The […]
A compilation of videos by Barbara Sykes, including the documentary Wah Hong: A Medicinal Herb Store, I Dream… of Dreaming…, and Call Her Amedia.
“The Pop Video Test” was a joint effort between Scott Jacobs and Tom Weinberg of the Chicago Editing Center, and the Video Group of the Bell and Howell Corporation. This cooperative effort between the independent video community and a corporate video distributor was intended to test the viability of the home video market. The videomakers assembled ten hours of video pieces meant as an alternative to available pre-recorded programming (ie Hollywood movies). Fifty VCR owners in the Chicago area agreed to examine and review the tapes. Test viewers then received the programming two hours at a time, in groupings labeled Video Art, Documentary, Entertainment, and Potpourri.
“The Pop Video Test” was a joint effort between Scott Jacobs and Tom Weinberg of the Chicago Editing Center, and the Video Group of the Bell and Howell Corporation. This cooperative effort between the independent video community and a corporate video distributor was intended to test the viability of the home video market. The videomakers assembled ten hours of video pieces meant as an alternative to available pre-recorded programming (ie Hollywood movies). Fifty VCR owners in the Chicago area agreed to examine and review the tapes. Test viewers then received the programming two hours at a time, in groupings labeled Video Art, Documentary, Entertainment, and Potpourri.