Film maker Tiffany Shlain, (above) director of Connected: An Autobiography about Love, Death and Technology, founder of the Webby Awards and named by Newsweek as one of the women shaping the 21st century was here, sponsored by the US State Department
Shlain’s master class
Her Cloud Film Making Manifesto Workshop was packed. Shlain has developed a style of filmmaking intricately bound up with the web, and works with the idea of sending out calls for people everywhere to send short video clips on themes on specific subjects.
Connected: An Autobiography about Love, Death and Technology
Shlain then combines these clips with animation and stock footage to make films which articulate simple feel-good ideas emphasizing the universality of human experience, and the interdependence of everyone on the planet. You’ll find more on http://tiffanyshlain.com. Check it out.
Heiko Lange’s The Noise of Cairo
The Noise of Cairo brought news of the art scene in post Mubarak Egypt, with artists talking of the new freedom they feel in making work. Cairo’s top gallery, The Townhouse features prominently, with director William Wells commenting it was too soon (2011) for artists to reflect seriously on the situation --- he thought they should wait till about 2016 to make a true assessment through their work. Wells may have a point in suggesting artists should not rush to make statements … and the latest election news from Egypt is not encouraging … but artists find different ways to respond at different times.
Ben Lewis
Ben Lewis’ The Great Contemporary Art Bubble is an expose of the art world in New York and London, and the shrewd marketing that goes behind the promotion of such art brand supremos as Damien Hirst. For instance, at a time when London’s White Cube gallery was claiming it had only a few Hirsts available, which could be sold only to selected very important clients, the true picture was completely different. A weighty leaked document showed they were holding an enormous cache of Hirst works, most fabricated by his army of assistants. Well, that’s the art world.





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