Categories
Media Projects

Gordon Parks and the power of photography

What Became of Harlem’s Fontenelle Family? – NYTimes lens blog

Gordon Parks’s Harlem Family Revisited
By JOHN EDWIN MASON and JESSE NEWMAN

In March 1968, Gordon Parks published a portrait of an African-American child with disheveled clothes in Life magazine. His lips were swollen and cracked from eating plaster, in a futile attempt to ward off hunger. His eyes were plaintive and haunting.

Richard Fontenelle was too young to understand, but he and his family became the faces of urban poverty for millions of Americans. The photo essay Mr. Parks produced — “A Harlem Family,” which is now on exhibit at the Studio Museum in Harlem — changed Mr. Fontenelle’s life, and the lives of every member of his family, forever. It sparked in him a desire to succeed, and a lifelong friendship with Mr. Parks. read more 

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You can view the original layout in the online version of LIFE magazine, March 8, 1968. It is quite powerful to see the original context in the magazine with the layout, other articles, other photographs, and advertising.

Categories
Resources

How to be an Ally

Another great post from SPARK  a Movement– grassroots mobilizing around the clear and present danger that sexualization poses to girls and young women. They work directly with girls 13-22 to train them to be media activists and leaders in the fight against sexualization. 

How to be an Ally: A Guide for Teachers & Other Adults | SPARK a Movement.

by Alice Wilder

Once upon a time, my friends and I had to deal with a male teacher who liked to tell girls what to do with their bodies. One of my friends got a “talking to” about her dress, even though she was within the dress code, because–and this is a direct quote–“teenage boys have thoughts.” Another time, the whole class had to listen to a speech from him on the importance of girls “protecting” their virginity. And here’s what happened: when I walked past his class every day, I felt pangs of fear in my chest. Actually going to class felt like going into battle. read more

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 More great posts on their blog

Categories
Future Imagemakers

Meet our 2013 Future Imagemakers

We are happy to welcome our new group of Future Imagemakers. They come from High Schools all over the city: Urban Assembly for Applied Math and Science, La Guardia, Brooklyn High School of the Arts, New Design, Urban Academy, High School of Media and Communication, Lab, Hunter, Robert L Stevenson, North Shore, and Baruch.  Check out their Tumblr.

FI2013photo

 

Categories
Education

Class Plays a Greater Role in Success

Important must read article in the New York Times.

Poor Students Struggle as Class Plays a Greater Role in Success 

Categories
Education

Art as inspiration to Academic Success

 

Chuck Close Uses Art to Inspire Students to Academic Success - NYTimes.com

Chuck Close Uses Art to Inspire Students to Academic Success – NYTimes.com.

Let’s hope this program catches on.

Categories
Education

Rockaways Teen Documents Life Post-Sandy

Rockaways Teen Documents Life Post-Sandy for School

See Images and Video by Brandon McClain ITHS CISCO Academy and edited by Jazmin Johnson ITHS Video Production Academy on Information Technology High School

Categories
Future Imagemakers

APPLY FOR OUR 2013 Workshops

Applications are online for our Spring 2013 workshops. DEADLINE Monday NOVEMBER 19, 2012.

Fifteen to twenty young artists will be selected to participate in this free program which is held either on Saturdays or two afternoons during the week from 4-6 from February to May. Applicants, in their freshmen, sophomore, and junior year, from the five boroughs of New York City as well as from Westchester County, Long Island, New Jersey and Connecticut and Philadelphia are encouraged to apply.

APPLY NOW

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View the galleries from our 2012 program
to learn more about us.

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Email future.imagemakers@nyu.edu
if you have questions.

Future Imagemakers is part of the Tisch Future Artist Program.  To sign up to receive important announcements about the Spring 2013 Workshops, please do so HERE!

 

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Categories
Resources

Visual Culture and the Struggle for Civil Rights

Inspring project and great resource

For All the World to See : Visual Culture and the Struggle for Civil Rights.

Through a host of media—including photographs, television and film, magazines, newspapers, posters, books, and pamphlets—the project explores the historic role of visual culture in shaping, influencing, and transforming the fight for racial equality and justice in the United States from the late-1940s to the mid-1970s.

visit site 

Categories
Media Projects

Radio Diaries » Teenage Diaries

Radio Diaries » Teenage Diaries

Since 1996, the Teenage Diaries series has given tape recorders to young people around the country. They conduct interviews, keep audio journals, and record the sounds of daily life — usually collecting more than 30 hours of raw tape over the course of a year, edited into documentaries airing on NPR’s All Things Considered. Whether it’s the story of Amanda, a gay teen trying to understand her sexuality, or the story of Juan, who crossed the Rio Grande with his family illegally, these stories offer insight into the mysterious life of teenagers.

listen to stories

Categories
Media Projects

How’s Your News?

How’s Your News? is a documentary news series which features reporters with various disabilities. The project began over ten years ago in a video class at a summer camp for people with disabilities.

Trailer for “How’s Your News?” Series from How’s Your News?

I learned about this wonderful project from a story on This American Life.

Link to all their videos on vimeo.