Screendance finds its roots in the traditions of concert dance, museum culture, and film festivals. Film festivals - from which we borrow the structure for programming screendance - boast a history of discrimination towards bodies of color, varied gender expressions, bodies of different abilities, and more. Through an exploration of the history and socio-cultural context of film festivals in the west and dialogue with curators and directors from a handful of screendance festivals across the United States, this piece will present a set of curatorial challenges particular to our field, the creative solutions being explored by presenters and champions of screendance, and a consideration of where the field falls short, so we can better mitigate...
With the rapid development of camera technologies and screening platforms over the past 10 years com...
Film festival curation and programming remain highly individualistic practices, that negotiate sever...
No abstract availableThis editorial was originally published by Parallel Press, an imprint of the Un...
Screendance finds its roots in the traditions of concert dance, museum culture, and film festivals. ...
This article explores stylistic and demographic commonalities in American dance film through the cur...
Moving 24fps is a platform where teams of one professional dance maker and one filmmaker are paired ...
No abstract availableThis article was originally published by Parallel Press, an imprint of the Univ...
This is an edited version of a paper, which was first presented at the American Dance Festival (ADF,...
This article aims to extend the idea that screendance is a set of dispositions and elements which ca...
This thesis project is comprised of a written paper and a choreographic work. The choreographic comp...
Due to the recentness of the field of dance filmmaking, little research exists on the difference bet...
This is a review of the Dance on Camera Festival that took place in January 2017 in New York City at...
Following the Screendance Competition at the Leeds International Film Festival in 2015, I was struck...
Engaging in identity-based programming, LGBTQ film festivals are nudged into finding a balance betwe...
This dissertation looks back at how popular queer films—canonical then or now—were programmed at urb...
With the rapid development of camera technologies and screening platforms over the past 10 years com...
Film festival curation and programming remain highly individualistic practices, that negotiate sever...
No abstract availableThis editorial was originally published by Parallel Press, an imprint of the Un...
Screendance finds its roots in the traditions of concert dance, museum culture, and film festivals. ...
This article explores stylistic and demographic commonalities in American dance film through the cur...
Moving 24fps is a platform where teams of one professional dance maker and one filmmaker are paired ...
No abstract availableThis article was originally published by Parallel Press, an imprint of the Univ...
This is an edited version of a paper, which was first presented at the American Dance Festival (ADF,...
This article aims to extend the idea that screendance is a set of dispositions and elements which ca...
This thesis project is comprised of a written paper and a choreographic work. The choreographic comp...
Due to the recentness of the field of dance filmmaking, little research exists on the difference bet...
This is a review of the Dance on Camera Festival that took place in January 2017 in New York City at...
Following the Screendance Competition at the Leeds International Film Festival in 2015, I was struck...
Engaging in identity-based programming, LGBTQ film festivals are nudged into finding a balance betwe...
This dissertation looks back at how popular queer films—canonical then or now—were programmed at urb...
With the rapid development of camera technologies and screening platforms over the past 10 years com...
Film festival curation and programming remain highly individualistic practices, that negotiate sever...
No abstract availableThis editorial was originally published by Parallel Press, an imprint of the Un...