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Genre: Arts

  • Next To Heaven

    Rob Parrish retires to his video laboratory and downloads public domain films from archive.org. He then writes and records short monologues based on the images from the films, and then re-edits the films to the newly recorded narration. The result: Unique short videos (aka “video bonbons”) that are full of flavor! Now mind you, some of the bonbons taste of garlic, hellish hot pepper, river mud, and flop sweat . . . but they are treats for the discerning palate. Will you eat these bonbons?

  • HD
  • iMovies

    Classic Movies, Cartoons, and Shorts available for streaming or downloading. Enjoy!

  • Pete Kearney on blip.tv (beta)

    Animation mixed with action sports mixed with film mixed with whatever else. I work with everything from stop frame to after effects, super 8 to HD...ect. You can check out my mainly bmx related website at www.halfpastfilms.com. Feel free to buy a t-shirt as well

  • PhotoWalkthrough.com

    PhotoWalkthrough.com presents video tutorials showing the post processing of a photograph using Adobe Photoshop and other programs. Along the way you will learn about the tools and techniques used and gain insight into the creative decisions that directed the artist's hand. Here we are again, tutorial 3 of our Distorted Tree image. This time I talk a little bit about why I like the Holga style and show you some images from a Holga then go on to work on the sky of my image and generally increase the contrast. Also I mention the double size [...]

  • OPEN CHANNEL - Screen Resource Centre

    OPEN CHANNEL is an icon of the Victorian film industry having nurtured the careers of many of Australia's filmmakers such as Peter Weir, Fred Schepsi, Sue Brooks, Andrew Wiseman, Chris Warner, Sue Maslin, Cath Dyson, Lizette Atkins and Beth Frey, to name a few. In its early history OPEN CHANNEL acted as a key advocate for the development of community television in Australia and was instrumental in the establishment of successful community television consortium Channel 31 (C31).

  • HD

    KQED: SPARK

    SPARK is about San Francisco Bay Area artists and arts organizations -- it is a weekly television show, an educational outreach program and a Web site. More than a showcase for art objects and the artists who make them, SPARK takes the audience inside the creative process to witness the challenges, opportunities and rewards of making art.

  • Meet the GIMP!

    The GIMP is a image manipulation program. It is free (as in speech and in beer), it is open source and it runs on Linux (and other Unixes), Windows and MacOS. It can do nearly all the stuff you can do with Adobe® Photoshop® and more than a lot of other programs. I'll show you in this screencast how to use it for postprocessing digital camera images. There will be a new episode each thursday (european) night.

  • ARTv

    Welcome to ARTv! Whether its our live, interactive satellite broadcasts, video from PerformancePlus events for lifeling learners, or shows developed for mobile and Internet-based learning, this new "channel" will provide quick access to all the Kennedy Center's educational video content. "When you sit in a theater, you're sitting closer to a complete stranger that you ever would in your own living room. You haven't just seen a show, you've been part of something." Edward Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? is the story of George and Martha, two of the most famous roles ever written for the stage. Over the course of one wickedly hilarious evening, the cocktails come out and the gloves come off as this riveting duo takes their two young guests on the ride of their lives. Direct from Broadway and London's West End, the production at the Kennedy Center featured its acclaimed original stars-- Kathleen Turner (2006 London Evening Standard Theatre Award, Best Actress) and the dazzling Bill Irwin (2005 Tony Award, Best Actor). In this Power of Theater podcast, part of the Kennedy Center Education Department's Performance Plus program, actress Kathleen Turner (Serial Mom) discusses the importance of theater as a means of creating a shared experience among strangers and her need to touch the lives of her audience. For more information on Performance Plus, visit kennedy-center.org/plus. ArtsEdge, the Kennedy Center's arts education network, supports the creative use of technology to enhance teaching and learning in, through, and about the arts, offering free, standards-based teaching materials for use in and out of the classroom, media-rich interactive experiences, professional development resources, and guidelines for arts-based instruction and assessment. Visit ArtsEdge at artsedge.kenndy-center.org. Photo by Carol Rosegg

  • PhotoShelter.com

    PhotoShelter was founded in 2005 by professional photographers and Internet whiz kids in an effort to create a truly archival storage solution for digital image files and to provide a platform for fellow photographers to distribute, display, and sell their images online. Two years later, the PhotoShelter crew is very psyched to launch the PhotoShelter Collection, an open, edited image marketplace that awards professional and amateur photographers a free opportunity to sell a unique brand of imagery to editorial and commercial buyers. The Collection complements the Personal Archive subscription by providing a highly targeted outlet for sales that allows its contributors to maintain their creative integrity – and to be paid fairly at the same time. For buyers, the Collection promises an ever-growing offering of fresh imagery from unexpected sources with the added benefit and convenience of professional editing. Subscribe to the PhotoShelter podcasts for great insight on the rapidly evolving digital imaging industry! Here's the first video that we've produced (and when I say "we," I mean "Mike") from the New York Town Hall. It's a fantastic panel discussion between Kareem Black, Chase Jarvis, Jennifer Miller, Landon Nordeman, George Pitts, and Catherine Talese that covers issues of copyright, marketing, Getty, and other topics related to the business of photography.

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