CONTEMPORARY
Wednesday, December 9, 2009
CONTEMPORARY
MOVING IMAGE LAB
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
LEAVE HER TO HEAVEN, BIGGER THAN LIFE and Z
November 27 - December 4
The CCA celebrates the vibrant world of film preservation with newly restored prints of three classic, rarely seen films in 35mm.
LEAVE HER TO HEAVEN
“Staggeringly beautiful … A
strangely heartening reminder
of just how exhilaratingly
bizarre Hollywood
moviemaking could get!”
–The Auteurs
John Stahl’s gorgeously
intense Technicolor
masterpiece stars Gene
Tierney (“the fatalest of the
femmes in this melodrama”
–NY Post) as a woman
who meets and seduces
a best-selling author
on a train, setting off a
spectacular series of deadly
misadventures (including
a scene in the New Mexico
mountains). Unmissable.
(U.S., 1945, 110m, 35mm,
Criterion Pictures)
filmforum.org/fi lms/leave.html
BIGGER THAN LIFE
“Revelatory! A revival not to
be miss ed!” –The New Yorker
Scott Foundas calls it
“Father Knows Best
reconfigured as Greek
tragedy”: Nicholas Ray’s
unforgettable Cinemascope
masterpiece—which has for
years been nearly impossible
to see—stars a terrifying
James Mason as a man
altered by an experimental
drug … an experiment that
ends up twisting the entire
Rockwellian town where he
lives. “One of the best, most
radical, least-known American
films … A canny retelling of
the Jekyll and Hyde story.”
–Village Voice.
(U.S., 1956, 95m, 35mm)
filmforum.org/fi lms/bigger.html
Z
“An extraordinary thriller!
One of the fastest, most
exciting melodramas ever
made” –Pauline Kael
The winner of the Cannes Jury
Prize (awarded unanimously)
and the Best Foreign Film
Oscar, Costa-Gavras’
landmark counter-culture
thriller dives deep into
revolutionary street-level
politics and brutal response
by the powers-that-be. A
touchstone of subversive
cinema, Z remains as vibrant
and relevant as ever, 40 years
after its initial, worldwidesmash,
release. With
Yves Montand, Jean-Louis
Trintignant and Irene Papas.
(Algeria, 1969, 127m, 35mm)
rialtopictures.com/z.html
CENTER for
CONTEMPORARY
ARTS
CCA Cinematheque.1050 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM 87505
505.982.1338 | www.ccasantafe.org
Monday, November 16, 2009
I'm Keeping an Eye On You
CENTER FOR
CONTEMPORARY
ARTS
1050 OLD PECOS TRAIL, SANTA FE, NM 87505
505.982.1338 WWW.CCASANTAFE.ORG
I’M KEEPING AN EYE ON YOU
December 4, 2009 through January 31, 2010
Opening Friday December 4, 5:00 - 8:00pm
Center for Contemporary Arts | Moving Image Lab
Curated by John Spiak
Contact: Peter Zangrillo,
Visual Arts Director
peter@ccasantafe.org
505-982-1338 x21
Through personal, established relationships, casual encounters, forced institutional interactions or contact
from a safe distance, we often overstep our boundaries. Whether we are conscious or not of our boundary
breaking, at one time or another we are all guilty of intruding into other people’s lives and space. What
may pass as uneventful for one individual may be the cause of great anxiety and fear for another. I’m
Keeping an Eye on You explores the broad and lasting effects of our curiosity and intrusions upon others.
Artists featured in I’m Keeping an Eye on You include: Mounira Al Solh (Amsterdam/Beirut); Rachel
Garfield (London); Charlotte Ginsborg (London); Pia Greschner (Berlin); Myung-Soo Kim (Tempe); Yaron
Lapid (London); Jeff Luckey (New York/Berlin); Johnna MacArthur (Los Angeles); Michael Mohan (Los
Angeles); and Corinna Schnitt (Hamburg).
Organized by John Spiak, ASU Art Museum curator, I’m Keeping an Eye on You premiered as a Video
Project Space at Aqua Art Miami in December 2008. This project is made possible by the generosity of
Aqua Art Miami and Friends of the Arizona State University Art Museum.
IMAGE CREDIT: Mounira Al Solh, The Sea Is a
Stereo, Video number 2, Paris without a Sea,
2007-2008, Digital Video, Courtesy of the artist
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Chris Jonas' Garden (chapter 1 "Night") with the
GARDEN “Night” is a music-driven intermedia performance/installation that uses live music and projected video in performance to explore metaphoric and psychological realms of night. This first Garden Chapter, “Night” has been created in collaboration between Chris Jonas (projected video, composition), the San Francisco-based Del Sol String Quartet (www.delsolquartet.com), stage director Acushla Bastible, movement artist Echo Gustafson, photographer Petr Jerabek, and a team of artists, volunteers and Littleglobe interns.
“Del Sol is one of today’s most adventurous and open-minded chamber groups, playing with elegance, virtuosity, clarity, a pervasive artistry and a visceral engagement with the works they take on,” Chris Jonas said. “I am very excited about this collaboration.”
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
Anthony Buchanan Lecture Series
at CCA Santa Fe
Tuesday, December 8, 6 PM
Sunday, December 13, 6 PM
Sunday, December 20, 6 PM
Anthony Buchanan is a local experimental filmmaker, media artist, journalist and scholar of underground and world cinema. He has exhibited in Santa Fe as well as other towns in the midwest including Boulder, Colorado, where he was a friend of the late avant-garde filmmaker Stan Brakhage. Buchanan is currently working on a book on the aesthetics and Romantic influence of Brakhage's work. In addition, Buchanan is at work on the preservation of the archive of video artists Woody and Steina Vasulka. Buchanan frequently writes for the Pasatiempo, covering film and the exhibitions by local and visiting video and media artists.
Shamanic Cinema: The Moving Image as Mystical Medium
A Lecture Series With Anthony Buchanan in the CCA Digital Media Lab
$5 suggested donation
Tuesday, Dec 8th at 6.00pm
Weimar Cinema And The Occult
Weimar culture, seething with revolutions in the arts, theatre and decadent culture, merged their fascination with darkness, psychology and heavy occultism with their evolving cinematic language. The early German films, memorable for their deep shadows, heavy iconography and mysterious imagery, are saturated with mystical and Occultist symbolism. For many visionary filmmakers such as F. W. Murnau, his Occultist producer Albin Grau, and theatre director/filmmaker Paul Wegener, the cinema was the ultimate medium for expressing the hidden images of the psyche and a means of carrying on the tradition of secret initiation. Many classic films will be discussed, such as Nosferatu, The Golem, and The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari in connection with the spiritualism that brought them to light.
Sunday, December 13 at 6.00pm
The Shamanic and Kabbalistic films of Harry Smith
Harry Smith, American icon, Hermetic scholar, alchemist, filmmaker and madman, was one of the great eccentrics of the Twentieth century. His obsessions with everything from Native American cosmology to American folk music were already legendary when he began making some of the earliest abstract and hand-crafted films that sparked a revolution in underground film. But Smith’s films, ranging from subliminal color and geometric abstractions to highly symbolic alchemical and religious visions, transcend cinema and become spiritual journeys in themselves. For Smith, filmmaking was the modern equivalent of ancient alchemical practice. His films will be discussed in connection to the Kabbalistic and shamanic visions they represent, but also for the treasures of American culture they have become. Smith’s films live on as some of the most influential images and forms our culture has ever produced.
Sunday, December 20th at 6.00pm
Alejandro Jodorowsky, Spiritualism and the Tarot
One of the greatest living shamans of cinema, Alejandro Jodorowsky’s quirky and eccentric films can be seen as moving Tarot images. Jodorowsky has always treaded the line between avant-garde and tradition, but his highly personal work has transgressed both these categories. Submerged in mythology, psychology and spiritual revelation, the often ridiculous and decadent imagery are a record of Jodorowsky’s spiritual quest for enlightenment throughout his life. Jodorowsky’s early pursuit of Buddhist truth and Nothingness culminated in a lifelong fascination with the Tarot and its insistence on creating personal interpretations of ancient spiritual iconography. Jodorowsky’s life and influence will be discussed alongside clips of his masterpiece of cinematic Tarot, The Holy Mountain. His faith in ancient visual depictions of spiritual states make him an indispensable mythmaker of our time.
* Although relevant clips will be shown from each piece, none of these films will be shown in their entirety. For those who wish to not have the stories spoiled, it is recommended to see the films beforehand or afterwards.
The CREMASTER cycle comes to CCA Santa Fe, Cinematheque!
Rare screenings on 35mm of Matthew Barney’s legendary five-film series
Monday, November 12 - Sunday, November 15
Cremaster Marathon: $12 for all three screenings
Screenings are regular ticket prices except for marathon.
SCHEDULE
Thursday, November 12
8p - Cremaster 1 & 2
Friday, November 13
8p - Cremaster 3
Saturday, November 14
8p - Cremaster 4&5
Sunday, November 15
3p - Cremaster 1 & 2
5:30p - Cremaster 3
8:45p – Cremaster 4 & 5
“The first truly great piece of cinema to be made in a fine art context since Dali and Bunuel filmed UN CHIEN ANDALOU in 1929 … one of the most imaginative and brilliant achievements in the history of avant-garde cinema … The Waste Land for a generation that grew up with STAR WARS … salvages what in myth, ritual and art is still accessible to the modern world.” –Guardian
Matthew Barney—who the New York Times called “the most important artist of his generation”—embarked upon the now-legendary CREMASTER cycle in 1994. In the 15 years since, its reputation has continued to grow. The films will be seen in rare 35mm screenings at the CCA Cinematheque November 12-15, including a marathon of all five works. A full schedule is below. Tickets are at normal prices except for the marathon, which is $12 for all five films.
Each of the five films, running between 40 minutes and three hours, is a gorgeous, unclassifiable work of cinematic art. Film Forum described the works as such: “an epic cycle of birth and sexual differentiation melding genres as diverse as the Busby Berkeley musical, the gothic Western, and operatic spectacle, encompassing Celtic myth, Masonic initiation rites, motorcycle races, obscure historical references, high fashion, lush music, and category-defying imagery, as it spans half the globe, from Boise to Budapest, with Barney himself popping up as a tap-dancing satyr, a naked magician, a giant, and serial killer Gary Gilmore.”
Despite its status as a major work in terms of modern art and cinema—it is a startling work in terms of technical achievement and independent moviemaking— few have seen the entire cycle on 35mm film. Thanks to the support of Barney’s production company, the Center for Contemporary Arts is proud to present the entire CREMASTER cycle as Barney intended.
CREMASTER 1
“Utterly original stuff.” –John Rockwell, The New York Times
In twin hovering Goodyear blimps, a woman arranges red and green grapes into geometric patterns imitated by Isaac Mizrahi-clad dancing girls on the blue astro-turfed football field below.
(U.S., 1995, 40m, 35mm)
CREMASTER 2
“A world as strangely alternate as Lewis Carroll’s … a sprawling, hallucinatory quiltwork of gorgeously shot scenes” –Steven Henry Madoff, Time
Drawing from Hollywood’s mythology of the American West, Barney tells the story of murderer Gary Gilmore (Barney) as he searches for a familial connection with
Harry Houdini (Norman Mailer) as he wanders through a glimmering-gold afterlife complete with dancing cowboys.
(U.S., 1999, 79m, 35mm)
CREMASTER 3
“Endlessly fascinating . . . Barney’s most hypnotic work yet.” –New York Magazine.
Barney’s The Entered Apprentice faces off against Chrysler Building architect Hiram Abiff (played by sculptor Richard Serra) in the Art Deco landmark, while battling punk bands, Rockette-like chorines, and a half-cheetah woman (Aimée Mullins) as he scales the atrium of the Guggenheim Museum in an interlude.
(U.S., 2002, 182m, 35mm)
CREMASTER 4
“A surreal, slapstick fantasy; sexuality turned into a bizarre vaudeville.” –Stephen Holden, New York Times.
Flame-haired goat-boy The Loughton Candidate (Barney) slowly taps his way through an eroding floor into the sea, as competing color-coded motorcycle teams set off in opposite directions to circle the Isle of Man.
(U.S., 1994, 42m, 35mm)
CREMASTER 5
“A ravishing stretch of cinema... rich and quite, quite strange.” –David Frankel, Artforum
Ursula Andress (DR. NO) stars as the Queen of Chain, the sole audience for a lush operatic spectacle performed by the Budapest Opera and Philharmonic Orchestra within a grand 19th century opera house, accompanied by faeries, a magician (Barney on horseback), various attendants of unspecified gender and species, and a bevy of live pigeons.
(U.S., 1997, 54m, 35mm)
Monday, November 2, 2009
Marcellin Simard
Center for Contemporary Arts
spector ripps project space
Nov. 6th – Jan 10th
Opening Reception Friday Nov. 6th 5 - 8pm
Persistence of Vision
Persistence of Vision, a solo exhibition by Marcellin
Simard in the spector ripps project space, will
feature paintings, sculpture, and mixed-media
installation. Transcending the barriers and constraints
of daily reality, Simard conjures a hallucinatory and
vertiginous world where nightmare fades to dream,
children are warrior-saviors, and the fantastic is
animated. Simard’s work treads a fine line of magic
between peril and salvation.
Simard combines the people and situations of his
waking life with deep subconscious explorations to
create allegorical paintings. These contemporary fables
are comprised of family and friends who weave stories
alongside timeless icons: priestesses, demons, and
warriors. His sculptures are the stuff of shadow and
fantasy—a sinister black viper with gnashing teeth, a
fifteen-foot monster dipping deep below the gallery
floor, black crows that transform to white doves.
As described by CCA Director Lea Rekow: “I read
this work as the phenomenology of what’s presenting
itself in Marcellin’s life. Belief creates existence. The
inner creates the outer…That’s one of the reasons the
imagery in Marcellin’s work is so strong. His images
are the language of not his ‘real’—but of his truth.”
Marcellin Simard currently lives and works in Santa Fe,
as an artist, practicing cardiologist, and father of three
young children. Simard moved to Santa Fe from Los
Angeles, where, in addition to his careers as artist
and physician, he took courses to received an MFA.
Simard recently had a solo exhibition at Linda Durham
Contemporary Art.
center
Mapping A Green Future
PBS television interview that aired Friday night, Oct 30th. and continued to air on different stations through Nov 2nd.
http://www.knme.org/watch/watch.php?v=2009-10-30_IF_315&category=politics-issues&bw=2738
MAPPING A GREEN FUTURE
Lea Rekow, CCA Executive Director, interviewed on KSFR's Santa Fe Radio Cafe
http://www.santaferadiocafe.org/shows/RC%2010-8-09%202.mp3
Santa Fe New Mexican, The (NM)TWILIGHT'S LAST GREENINGDOUGLAS FAIRFIELDPublished: October 9, 2009One component of artist Basia Irland's contribution to the new exhibit Mapping a Green Future at the Center for Contemporary Arts consists of music for cello and a mezzo-soprano singing the names of the chemical pesticides found in the Calaveras River in California. The piece, Clandestine Calaveras, plays throughout the Muñoz Waxman Gallery. "My work [for the exhibit] includes sculptural backpack/repositories containing canteens, logbooks, maps, video documentaries, and photographs from three of my five Gathering of Water projects," said Irland, professor emeritus in the department of art and art history at The University of New Mexico, from her studio in Albuquerque. Irland, a sculptor, installation artist, poet, and book artist, is active in water issues and is one of more than a dozen artists taking part in the exhibition.Mapping a Green Future is a multidisciplinary endeavor, the result of a collaboration between CCA, New Energy Economy, and the American Institute of Architects. It is being presented in conjunction with LAND/ART, a continuing series of New Mexico projects dealing with land-based art."The origin of the show came by way of a chance meeting with myself and John Fogarty, executive director of New Energy Economy," said Lea Rekow, CCA's executive director and curator of the exhibit, in a recent interview. New Energy Economy works to find business opportunities in the state by developing solutions to climate change. "This exhibition presents itself as a way of mapping a sustainable lifestyle, both at home and in industry, that is far less harmful to ourselves and the Earth. It's not a utopian concept of the future but a display of unencumbered possibilities that should not hold us back from making this a reality. Concerning how we generate energy, we're still living in archaic times with our use of coal and uranium; even 'clean' coal isn't a viable advancement. And we have no effective way of dealing with waste uranium. It all continues to be problematic."And, indeed, coal is part of the exhibit. In an effort outside Rekow's curatorial activities, area schools and nonprofit organizations have come together to have three and a half tons of coal delivered to the show -- roughly the amount of coal used by every American each year -- which, according to Rekow, will be divvied up into shopping bags for people to carry to the state Capitol during a "March to the Roundhouse" event scheduled for 1 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 24, to coincide with International Day of Action on Climate Change."The challenges before us -- climate change and peak oil -- will require us to quickly rethink our energy systems in America," said Fogarty. "It will be a restructuring of our entire society, and will require all segments of our society to come together to develop solutions. The arts community will play an important role in lighting the path to a future that is powered by the sun, the wind, and the land." For the exhibit, Fogarty and Rekow have put together an interactive video booth that invites people to describe how they receive their electricity, as well as how they would like that energy to be generated in the future.Along with work by Rekow, Fogarty, and Irland, artists Claudia Borgna, Beatriz da Costa, Bill Gilbert, Catherine Harris, Eve Andrée Laramée, Jenny Marketou, Joan Myers, Jenny Polak, and Brooke Singer, as well as the team of Andrea Polli and Chuck Varga and the Center for Land Use Interpretation (CLUI), have created various pieces that call attention to environmental concerns."My work is rich in multimedia elements through video, audio, performance, installations, social interfaces, live broadcasts, Internet, and using ephemeral objects and material, said New York-based Marketou, recently artist in residence at CCA. "I am interested in transforming simple actions like walking, drifting, smelling, watching, and mapping into critiques about social, economic power systems of behaviors and aggression."For this exhibition Marketou is showing a small version of a large-scale public installation called Red Eyed Sky Walkers from 2007. "It's a response to the conditions that reflect our culture, which is completely networked and controlled under the culture of surveillance and systems of information and fear," she said. The piece contains one video projector and two red weather balloons 5 to 6 feet in diameter inflated with helium, which will be tethered in the gallery. The balloons are equipped with tiny wireless surveillance cameras and digital transmitters with receivers that each day record visual information in real time. This is then projected a wall. Depending on the participation of the spectator, the work "explores how technology can be used to transform and understand our relationship to our environment, the public space and architecture that we inhabit, and the visualization of surveillance data," Marketou said.Equally as novel as Marketou's weather balloons and Irland's work is Cloud Car by Polli and Varga. Equipped with special devices, a vehicle produces vapors that enshroud it, representing visually how our automobile-, oil-, and carbon-based culture affects air quality throughout the world. In addition, da Costa, associate professor of arts at the University of California, Irvine, plans to release a group of homing pigeons fitted with global positioning systems to monitor air pollution in Santa Fe. Borgna -- who was born in Germany, raised in Italy, and is currently based in London -- tackles the subject of recycling; she will construct an oasis of palm trees made up of plastic shopping bags.Rekow's concerns in creating this thematic exhibit are shared by many. "The exhibition is a microcosm of other such gatherings and awareness groups elsewhere around the world," she said. Rekow has made arrangements to stream into the gallery live broadcasts of selective proceedings from the annual Bioneers conference in San Rafael, California, taking place from Friday, Oct. 16, to Sunday, Oct. 18. The Bioneers is an organization of "social and scientific innovators" established in 1990 to explore how nature operates and to better serve the planet and its inhabitants through solutions "inspired by nature and human ingenuity." (For information about the conference, a schedule of events, and prices, see ccasantafe.org.)"We have an opportunity right now to re-energize our economy by solving global warming, but we need to reach people at a visceral level in order to create the requisite political will," states Fogarty. "And I have been impressed with the Center for Contemporary Arts and the way that they are effectively blending art with social action, particularly with Mapping a Green Future, which grew from this pressing need to bring the arts to the climate movement."
Thursday, June 25, 2009
Monday, May 4, 2009
In A Dream podcast
Interviewed on KSFR's Santa Fe Radio Cafe with host Mary-Charlotte
www.santaferadiocafe.org
Friday, April 24, 2009
D'Ambrosio, Post, and Polli
APRIL 30, 2009
SAVE THE DATE!
3 NEW ARTISTS AT CCA!
Antonino D'Ambrosio
April Artist in Residence
In Sun and Shadow
April 30, 2009
6:00pm: screening, Spector Ripps Project Space
6:20pm: guided tour, CCA Grounds, land art
Continuing his creative-activist series La Terra Promessa, two short films in time lapse were shot for two land art installations produced on site at CCA. Using hand carved stone placed in a choreographed manner, D'Ambrosio worked on the second installation with youth from County Day Reporting Program to construct "Diamanti nel di Massima" (Diamonds in the Rough). La Terra Promessa series is dedicated to Lorenzo D'Ambrosio (1941-1988) and Nicola DiSandro, master bricklayers who are the true architects of democracy helping to build this country ("La Terra Promisa") on their knees, with their hands and their hearts. Local filmmaker Kate Bradley-Klose provided support videography. Soundtrack to the film by Hank Schroy.
United Content Providers
Longterm media outreach installation
Baby Grand Master [piano]
April 30, 2009
7:00pm: performance, Moving Image Lab
The Baby Grand Master [piano] is a long-term community outreach program installed in the Moving Image Lab. Youth and community are free to come and remix audio/visuals from the vast library of data housed by the baby grand, or can load up their own audio/visuals and VJ their own tracks.
Andrea Polli
Permanent installation
Hello, Weather!
April 30, 2009
Andrea Polli's Hello, Weather! attempts to de-mystify the collection and use of weather and climate data by bringing artists, technologists, ecologists and environmentalists together around her new public weather station permanently installed at CCA.
1050 Old Pecos Trail...Santa Fe NM 87505...505.982.1338
©2009 Center for Contemporary Art Santa Fe, New Mexico
CCA News May 2009
CCANews January 09
CCA News
MAY 2009
SPECIAL THANKS
SAVE THE DATE
GO FOR LAUNCH
BABY GRAND MASTER
HELLO, WEATHER!
ERIN CURRIER
DREAMWEAVER
TUTORIALS
COLLECT 8
CINEMATHEQUE
SPECIAL THANKS TO THE COMMUNITY
CCA would like to thank the community for helping make our 30th anniversary event a success! A special thanks goes out to generous donations from artists and our hard-working volunteers.
SAVE THE DATE
SAVE THE DATE for CCA's 8th Annual Photo Auction, June 6, 2009, 6:30pm - 9:30pm in the Munoz Waxman Gallery.
With outstanding national and international photographers donating works for sale, 2009 promises to be the best year yet. Past Photo Auction artists have included: Ansel Adams, Erika Blumenfeld, Edward Burtynsky, Nan Goldin, David Levinthal, and Gerhard Richter.
All profits benefit CCA, which is celebrating its 30th anniversary.
GO FOR LAUNCH
GARDNER POST AND BRIAN KANE
May 6 - July 12, 2009
Reception: Wednesday, May 6, 6:00 - 8:00PM
Munoz Waxman Gallery| CCA
GO FOR LAUNCH uses original uncut footage from the first space mission to create a large-scale, multi-projection installation environment. It is a commentary on the Space Race, the Cold War, technological superiority and WMDs, all issues that are particularly relevant to both our region and current political climate.
BABY GRAND MASTER
UNITED CONTENT PROVIDERS
The Baby Grand Master [piano] is a long-term community outreach program installed in the Moving Image Lab. Youth and community are free to come and remix audio/visuals from the vast library of data housed by the baby grand, or can load up their own audio/visuals and VJ their own tracks.
HELLO, WEATHER!
ANDREA POLLI
Permanent installation
CCA Grounds
Andrea Polli's Hello, Weather! attempts to de-mystify the collection and use of weather and climate data by bringing artists, technologists, ecologists and environmentalists together around her new public weather station permanently installed at CCA.
SCHOOLGIRLS AND SCHOOLBOYS
ERIN CURRIER
May 8 - 30, 2009
Opening Reception: Friday, May 8, 5PM
Spector Ripps Project Space
About her current works, Ms. Currier states, "So often in matters relating to our deepest desires, our politics and our personal philosophies, the adolescent is at the forefront -- this is why we all, to greater and lesser extents, are invested in the outcome of our adolescent crop. 'Schoolgirls and Schoolboys' is a sampling of this work."
Intro to DreamWeaver/WeB Design
May 23 and 24
Instructor: Ethan Bach
Price: $80 members | $100 non-members
(8 hours)
A two day workshop is designed for people who would like to get a website up and running right away. Participants will learn basic web design utilizing pre-existing templates and the design mode. By the end of the workshop students will know how to create hyper links and menus, insert images, upload to a web server and update their new website as needed.
Advanced DreamWeaver/Web Design
May 30, June 6, June 13, June 20 and June 27
Instructor: Ethan Bach
Price: $200 CCA members | $240 non-members
(20 hours)
This 5 week workshop is designed for those who would like to create dynamic web designs. Participants will learn advanced skills in web design utilizing this robust software. By the end of the workshop students will know how to create custom buttons, Flash text and video, interactive menus and more.
To register for classes contact Filip Celander, Digital Media Arts Director, 505.982.1338 x19 or filip@ccasantafe.org
TUTORIALS
CCA offers private tutorials for Mac users. $50 per hour. For more information contact Filip Celander, filip@ccasantafe.org 505.982.1338 x19
COLLECT 8
Thanks to all the artists who contributed to make Collect 8 a stunning show.
Buyers and artists: don't forget to pick up your artwork!
Art pick up: April 27 - May 1, 2009 12pm - 5pm
CCA is not responsible for art left after May 1, 2009.
CINEMATHEQUE
For a complete list of films and their showtimes visit: www.ccasantafe.org
In a Dream
Opens May 1
Everlasting Moments
Opens May 8
Hunger
Opens May 15
Enlighten Up!
Opens May 22
Secret of the Grain
Opens May 29
1050 Old Pecos Trail...Santa Fe NM 87505...505.982.1338
©2009 Center for Contemporary Art Santa Fe, New Mexico