FILM SCREENING: Alternative Projections: Experimental Film in Los Angeles, 1945-1980: Visual Communications

  • en
Film & Other Media

Dec 20114
2:00p.m.

Downtown Independent Theater
251 S Main St
Los Angeles, California, 90012
United States

In the course of media art in Los Angeles, the late 1960s and 1970s brought a rise in the possibilities of media access for minority groups that generally did not have access to the tools of cinema or control of how they were presented in mass media. Much of this critical work came out of the EthnoCommunications program at UCLA, formed in 1968, which worked to bring in African American, Asian American, Chicano, and Native American students. The remarkable work of the African American students is the focus of the L.A. Rebellion series at the UCLA Film & Television Archive, also part of Pacific Standard Time. This program highlights the documentary-focused early years of Visual Communications (VC), an organization created by a group of visionary Asian American filmmakers, educators, and activists from the EthnoCommunications program. 

VC’s founders — Duane Kubo, Robert Nakamura, Alan Ohashi, and Eddie Wong — incorporated the organization in 1970 on the heels of a groundbreaking photographic exhibition about Japanese American internment assembled by Nakamura and Ohashi entitled "America's Concentration Camps." (The modular exhibit, popularly referred to as "The Cubes Exhibit," is currently on display at the Japanese American National Museum as part of their show “Drawing the Line: Japanese American Art, Design & Activism in Post-War Los Angeles.”) The foursome envisioned Visual Communications as a filmmakers' collective that sought to re-represent the history and culture of Asian Pacific Americans, use media for social change, and train future generations of Asian Pacific American filmmakers. The first such organization in the United States, VC continues to engage in community-based filmmaking through training, education and filmmaker support initiatives, public screening and exhibitions programs including the annual Los Angeles Asian-Pacific Film Festival, and film/video preservation activities. VC is also home to one of the largest repositories of photographic and moving image archives on the Asian Pacific experience in America. http://www.vconline.org/

In person: Robert Nakamura, Eddie Wong, Duane Kubo, and Alan Kondo! 

$10 general, $6 students/seniors, free for Filmforum, Visual Communications , and Japanese American National Museum members. Tickets can be purchased here.

For more information, visit www.lafilmforum.org or alternativeprojections.com
Click here for parking info. Downtown Independent Theater: 213.617.1033.

Co-presented by the Japanese American National Museum.

In conjunction with the exhibition Drawing the Line: Japanese American Art, Design & Activism in Post-War Los Angeles

 

JANM . Last modified Nov 22, 2011 10:57 p.m.


Get updates

Sign up for email updates

Journal feed
Events feed
Comments feed

Support this project

Discover Nikkei

Discover Nikkei is a place to connect with others and share the Nikkei experience. To continue to sustain and grow this project, we need your help!

Ways to help >>

A project of the Japanese American National Museum


The Nippon Foundation