YourList
  ARTS (441)   BUSINESS (92)   EDUCATION (36)   HUMANITIES (540)   MASSACHUSETTS (392)   SCIENCE and TECHNOLOGY (108)   SOCIAL SCIENCE (602)  
RECORD
Cityscape
People who watched this also watched

Aviation Memories

"Aviation Memories" is described as a "virtual multi-channel video installation.". . . > more

Lown Ranjer Aind Tontow, The

Mydlack's eclectic work begins with an explanation. In 1985, he created the idea to tour a series of. . . > more

Lucille Clifton reads "Turning"

Emmy award-winning poet, Lucille Clifton, introduces and reads her poem, "Turning," about trying. . . > more
   
 

Series: Frames of Reference
Program: Place to Dance, A
Date: 1975-01-01
Subject: Modern dance
People: Beatty, Talley; Bradlove, Joella; Brown, Ann; Grey, Paul; Dance Company from the National Center for African-American Artists; Richardson, Kim; Saunders, Keith; Wheelock, Lewis

Clip Description
In "Cityscape," choreographed by Talley Beatty, dancers from the Dance Company from the National Center for African-American Artists, costumed in brightly suspendered skirts and pants, perform a series of lively traveling phrases on paved surfaces. The piece is shot from an angle that emphasizes diagonals.

This work was created by the Workshop with the WGBH series "Say Brother" and broadcast as a segment in the "Frames of Reference" dance showcase "A Place to Dance."

"Frames of Reference" was a series that began circa 1978. Half-hour shows were produced to showcase commissioned and already created works. It was around this time that the focus of the Workshop shifted, to concentrate more heavily on creating works for broadcast. During its time, "Frames of Reference" was the focus of the Workshop's national arts programming effort. The series ended circa 1983.

Series Description
The New Television Workshop originated at WGBH, a public broadcasting station in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1974 to support the creation and development of experimental video art. This experimental programming included dance, drama, music, performance and visual arts on video and film. As early as 1968, WGBH was committed to the development of video art through residency programs, with artists such as Nam June Paik, and the "Rockefeller Artists-in-Television" project. Many of these early works (pre-1974) were broadcast both locally and nationally.

As an umbrella for arts related programming, the Workshop included "Artist's Showcase, " "Frames of Reference, " "Dance for Camera, " "Poetry Breaks," and "New Television," as well as acquired arts programming. Individual works were created for "Visions," a series produced by WNET (New York), and "Alive From Off Center," a series produced by KTCA (St. Paul - Minneapolis). The Contemporary Art Television (CAT) Fund was co-founded by the Workshop and Boston's Institute for Contemporary Art (ICA) in the 1980's, to commission works by video artists. In 1993 the Workshop ceased production at WGBH.

See also: http://main.wgbh.org/wgbh/NTW/FA/TITLES/Cityscape292.HTML

 

No transcript is available for this record.