4/19/09
The Universe of Keith Haring

Keith Haring had a seemingly inexhaustible supply of just the right energy: a radiant, joyful enthusiasm that he shared with unflagging vitality first on the streets of New York and then on the world stage.
Like Andy Warhol, whom he revered and later befriended, Haring was the visual artist as social phenomenon, connecting the gay scene to hip-hop, Madonna to museum culture, the democratic street to the rarefied art world. If his story is only marginal to the history of art, it looms large in the cultural history of our time, which Haring (who died of AIDS in 1990, at 31) saw far too little of.
“The Universe of Keith Haring,” a documentary by the filmmaker Christina Clausen, is a loving if routine primer on this bright young man from Kutztown, Pa., who moved to New York to study art and paint the town red. His legacy is resurrected through colorful archival footage and remembered by friends and admirers like the artists Kenny Scharf and Yoko Ono, the gallery owners Jeffrey Deitch and Tony Shafrazi and the choreographer Bill T. Jones.
Coming to the Goggle Theater May 1st to May 7th
Runtime: 90 min
http://www.centrepark.com/goggletheatre.html
Labels: film
2/7/09
New Film Explores Sexual Identity and the Nazi Era

Reading, Pa.- The first local screening of the film Is What Was by Albright alumnus and English lecturer Jerry Tartaglia will be shown on Monday, February 9, 2009, at 7:30 p.m. The screening, which is free and open to the public, will be held in Klein Lecture Hall, Center for the Arts.
Is What Was, which was supported by an Albright Creative Research Experience (ACRE) grant, premiered at MIX 21: The New York Queer Film and Video Festival on October 15, 2008.
This experimental documentary film essay began as a visual diary of a visit to the Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp near Berlin, where gay men were tortured and murdered by the Nazis. Through the use of vernacular photos of Nazi soldiers taken at the time of the Holocaust and present day images by photographer Sean Michael Kirk, Albright class of 2008, the film explores the formulations of sexual identity and the Nazi era. Art direction and technical assistance was provided by Tyler Arcaro, Albright class of 2009.
Tartaglia is an experimental filmmaker, writer and educator whose contribution to experimental film and queer cinema spans four decades. He co-founded Berks Filmmakers Inc., one of the longest surviving showcases for non-traditional film and video making in the U.S.
He was the first to write about the gay sensibility in American avant garde film and has screened his films around the world. In the early 1990s, he began the work of restoring and preserving the film legacy of Jack Smith.
Tartaglia currently teaches cinema and writing at Albright and is working on a new film.
For more information or disabled assistance, call Jerry Tartaglia at 610-921-7809. Klein Lecture Hall is located in the Center for the Arts on the Albright College campus at 13 th & Bern Streets, Reading.
Labels: film
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