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History The Festival has expanded dramatically since then and is now one of the largest video festivals in the United States.
It has evolved into one of Dallas' most enthusiastically supported cultural events. Overall attendance at the 12th Annual
Dallas Video Festival was over 9,000 and attendance grows significantly with each Festival. Under the curatorial direction of Barton Weiss, the Festival's programming embraces several purposes: to exhibit
works of the highest artistic quality, which audiences do not typically have the opportunity to see; to develop a broad
audience for the media arts, drawn from the many different cultural, economic and special interest groups within the
area; and to cultivate and support the work of artists in the region. In choosing programming for the Dallas Video
Festival, curator Barton Weiss works with other arts and community organizations to present programming that reflects
the breadth and diversity of the community. The Dallas Video Festival has developed a unique audience through its programming and ticket structure, designed
to encourage attendance by a broad-based public. Admission is structured into day passes or all-festival passes, which
allow access to all programs during one day or for the entire Festival. The Video Festival's diverse programming includes
popular and accessible programs, encouraging first-time viewers attending these programs to sample others they may
otherwise not have come to see. Many programs of the Video Festival are free, and the Association is committed to
maintaining extremely low admission prices for all programs to encourage access to all regardless of income level.
This has proven extremely effective in developing a large grass-roots audience, and it continues to attract new audiences
for the media arts in our region. Mission VAD’s year-round activities include the Dallas Video Festival, now in its 18th year; Frame of Mind, a 1/2 hour television program of independent video works from Texas artists which airs on KERA Ch. 13; the Summer Film and Video Institute, co-produced with Dallas Community Television; the Texas Filmmakers’ Series, which screens a Texas-made film every 4th Monday at the Angelika Film Center; the original Dallas 24-Hour Video Race, a wacky, fun video production competition; Open Screen Night at the Magnolia Lounge, where independent filmmakers can show new work; and screenings of local, national, and international video works at the Magnolia Lounge. It also publishes an extensive, weekly electronic newsletter relating to film and video related events and issues.
Why video? Back in 1986 when co-founders Bart Weiss and Melissa Berry collaborated to present a weekend of video entitled “Video as a Creative Medium,” they were interested in exploring this emerging medium that was primarily being used by pornographers, political activists, or a few insightful artists who employed it as an art form. What Bart and Melissa saw was the potential of a medium that was more accessible, more affordable, and thus more democratic than film—something more easily created and distributed so that more people with a wider range of vision could create it, and even more people could see it. Now the rest of the world has caught on to what we always knew. Video has evolved into a technically beautiful, flexible, accessible, and often clandestine medium which can be magic in the hands of artists and storytellers and a powerful weapon for documenting our lives and shaping and interpreting the world around us. It continues to evolve into whole new digital mediums like CD-ROMs, DVDs, websites, streaming video, HD and 24P, so we’ve happily expanded our definition of video since then. We’ve been there on the cutting edge, showing off these technologies as they happen, years before they entered the collective consumer conscious. By our guess, since then we’ve screened or hosted almost 4,000 different programs—a dizzying bombardment of cathode rays, interesting panels, wacky guests, and mind-blowing performances too numerous to mention here. Suffice it to say, the Dallas Video Festival--the first, the oldest, and the biggest video festival in the nation--has distinguished itself nationally as a veritable vortex of video, a proverbial pantheon of pixels, a place that can make your head spin, your eyeballs ache, your heart soar, and your mind expand. Our name is deceiving. We’re not just Dallas. We’re not just video. Dallas, well, because that’s where we call home. We love our local artists, and some of the works we show do from down the street. Then again, however, a lot of the works we show come from around the world—Bosnia, Zambia, Sweden, Chile, Israel, Russia. And video? Well, when the Dallas Video Festival was created, we didn’t know it would still be around 18 years later, nor could we have envisioned at the time a name that would have reflected the new mediums not yet invented. So, it may be time for a new name… stay tuned! We’re not a film festival. Not that we don’t show things shot on film. Not that we don’t love a good narrative film. We’re just…something a little different. In fact, we’re not even just video—we’re animation, we’re interactive, we’re digital, we’re art, activism, we’re something called “new media” that’s really more about content than about format and genre. Jim Hubbard, in a report entitled “The Coming of Age of Media as Art,” explains it well: “At least since the 1920s, artists have been exploring various imaginative uses of film. Utilizing surrealistic techniques to explode narrative, painting directly on film, creating abstract animation and revealing the physical and psychological underpinnings of film outside the language of Hollywood, artists have created an alternative art history. Beginning in the late 1960s and early 1970s with the introduction of the PortaPak (the first portable and affordable video camera) video artists began to realize the possibilities of the medium outside of the half-hoiur, commercial-interrupted norm of broadcast television. In the past decade, adventurous media artists have employed computers to make new images and to explore the possibility of interactivity in forging art forms that are utterly unlike anything known before. These endeavors—video art, experimental film, innovative narrative film and new media art—deserve support because they create something original and thought-provoking. These art forms change our world, making it a more complex and exciting place. They allow us to see ourselves in an entirely new light.” To that, we would add the documentary film, in all its glory as history, activism, documentation of stories otherwise untold, and the archive-based experimental film, as a record of the cultural psyche of past and future generations. So—that’s a bit about us. Hard to explain. Unusual. Possibly unique. Which is why you shouldn’t miss this year’s Dallas Video Festival. There’s not another one like it. The 18th one is coming up July 2005.
Summer Film and Video Institute Membership Perks Our electronic newsletter, published every week, gives you the scoop on VAD activities and what's
going on in the film and video community across the state. Look here first for info on screenings and workshops, new
technology announcements, and other items of interest, and links to other organizations across the state. To Become a Member |
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