Screening

Screening and Discussion: Youth Creativity in 16mm

P·P·O·W Gallery, 392 Broadway, New York, NY 10013

On Thursday, August 1st, at 6:30pm, Gabo Camnitzer and former youth filmmaker Michael Jacobsohn will host a screening and in-person discussion at P·P·O·W Gallery about the pioneering audiovisual teaching experiments of New York City’s Young Filmmakers’ Foundation. This event is co-programmed by Gabo Camnitzer and Jessica Gordon-Burroughs, and co-sponsored by the Film-Makers’ Cooperative.

In-person discussion following the screening between Gabo Camnitzer and former youth filmmaker Michael Jacobsohn. In this program, we will explore the pioneering audiovisual teaching experiments of New York City’s Young Filmmakers’ Foundation and how it enabled radical artistic practice. 

Screening lineup:

  1. Jaime Barrios’ Film Club (1968, 16mm to digital)
  2. Michael Jacobsohn’s The Young Braves (1968, 16mm to digital)
  3. Linda Rivera’s Young Love (1970, 16mm to digital)
  4. Anthony Joseph’s Superbug (1972, 16mm to digital)
  5. Interview with Tony Joseph by Jessica Gordon-Burroughs, video by Michael Jacobsohn

 

The event will be streamed live on Wave Farm Radio and broadcast at a later date on Montez Press Radio as a part of a series of broadcasts called "Airhead – Faculty Meetings at P·P·O·W."

Filmmakers:

Chilean filmmaker Jaime Barrios arrived in New York City in 1963 to attend the School of Visual Arts and was soon active in an experimental scene, which overlapped with the New York Underground and tightly intertwined with his media activism at the Young Filmaker’s Foundation (YFF). The YFF, founded by art educator Rodger Larson alongside Barrios and New York philanthropist Lynne Hofer, was a community outreach project for New York City youths dedicated to training them in the art of 16mm filmmaking. Later emulated throughout the United States as part of the nationwide War on Poverty, the New York City film workshops served as a blueprint of a brief, yet effervescent, movement.

Michael Jacobsohn began making award-winning movies as a teenager at the Henry Street Settlement Movie Club. His work has been shown internationally and is now in the permanent collection at NYPL Lincoln Center. He was a staff editor at ABC News &Sports for 28 years and his awards include an Emmy. He has since produced and directed three full-length documentaries and several shorts and is currently at work on a documentary about the fabled Cornelia Street Café.

Anthony Joseph began making movies in high school with his father’s Super-8 camera. He grew up in New York City and studied filmmaking at NYU film school. In between jobs in the 9-5 world, he worked on feature films, TV commercials and music videos, and wrote scripts for film and stage. Currently he lives in the midwest, retired with his wife and three cats, working on a computer animated action comedy.

Linda preferred to not give a formal bio, and let her work speak for itself.

Co-programmers:

Dr Jessica Gordon-Burroughs is Lecturer (US: Assistant Professor) in Latin American Studies and Visual Culture at the University of Edinburgh (UK). Her essays have appeared in Journal of Latin American Cultural Studies, Journal of Cinema and Media Studies, Discourse, among other journals and collections, including the article “Looking Back and Away: Jaime Barrios’s Film Club (1964)”, recently reprinted in extract form by the The Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona. She has recently presented on her research at Documenta fifteen, the Cuban National Film Institute (ICAIC), and Oxford University.

Gabo Camnitzer is an artist and educator working across experimental pedagogy, installation, and video. Camnitzer’s work revolves around questions of education and knowledge exchange, often focusing on childhood to examine the societal structures that surround and shape subjectivity. Camnitzer is Associate Professor of Art Education at MassArt. He has previously held teaching positions at UMass Dartmouth, Columbia University, Valand Academy, and the Neighborhood School (PS 363), a public elementary school in NYC. He has presented projects at venues such as Queens Museum, New York; Konsthall C, Stockholm; Momentum Biennale, Moss, Norway; Hacer Noche, Oaxaca; Kunstsaele, Berlin; GfZK, Leipzig; Artists Space, New York; Bonniers Konsthall, Stockholm; Gertrude Contemporary Art Center, Melbourne; Museo Blanes, Montevideo, Uruguay. He received his MFA from Valand Academy, Gothenburg, Sweden, and attended the Whitney Independent Study Program, New York. He sits on the editorial board of the Swedish Art Journal, Paletten.