Artifact is pleased to announce the completion and launch of the online course Capturing Experience : How People 50+ Can Help Your Organization. This free course is designed to help nonprofits engage people 50+ in compelling service opportunities. Artifact contributed design, Flash animation, ad interactive components to this course sponsored by The Center for Intergenerational Learning.
Artifact is wrapping up production on the motion graphics package for the “9th Annual State of The Black Union,” including show opening title sequences and supporting graphics. These special broadcasts are hosted by Tavis Smiley of the Tavis Smiley Group and will air on the TV One network later in ‘08. The programs were executive produced by Chepell Chase and Anthony Jamison of Shoot Em Up Film Media Inc. of New York.
Filed under: Documentary | Tags: Documentary, image, reality, technology, virtual
Artifact director Julie Goldstein finished post-production on Virtual Memory in May. The documentary will air on WYBE as part of the Philadelphia Stories Series. One part history and one part poetry, Virtual Memory is a meditation on the essence of mechanical image-making and its impact on human consciousness, from the physical process of photography and film, to the alternate universe created by computers and virtual reality. Using a compilation of found material, the film bids a kind of fond farewell to the 20th century technologies that paved the way to the present moment and the ethereal future.
Filed under: Documentary | Tags: art, creative, Documentary, economy, industry
It was a busy May; Artifact also completed post-production on The View from Amber Street (2008 ), an update and extension of our 2006 documentary. The new film will air on WYBE as part of the Philadelphia Stories Series. The View from Amber Street documents a pair of industrial buildings in Philadelphia – their history, the neighborhood they inhabit, and the unique balance of manufacturers and artists who are its tenants, past and present. During the course of making the film, the buildings were sold, raising questions about the building’s future as an integrated center for art and industry. At the crossroads of both gentrification and globalization, the Amber Street buildings are representative of a neighborhood, a city, and a national economy in transition.
Filed under: Info
We are proud to announce that Artifact has been selected as the recipient of an Athena PowerLink Advisory Panel by the Delaware Valley chapter of the National Association of Women Business Owners.