Janine Marchessault holds a Canada Research Chair in Art, Digital Media and Globalization at York University. Her research over the past five years has been concerned with excavating some of the Canadian experiments with film and media that were showcased at Expo 67 in Montréal. A particular concern in her work has been the historical relationship between architecture and the cinema screen. Her research has also focused on  urban space and cartographies of place, with a lens on Havana, Helsinki, Berlin and Toronto. Over the past twenty years, she has worked with the curatorial collective Public Access, to investigate new models of urban public art.

She is the author of Ecstatic World: Media, Humanism, Ecology (forthcoming, MIT Press); Marshall McLuhan: Cosmic Media (Sage Publications, 2005); and co-editor of Fluid Screens, Expanded Cinema (University of Toronto Press, 2007) as well as Wild Science: Reading Feminism, Medicine and the Media (Routledge, 2000). She is a past President of the Film Studies Association of Canada and a founder of the Future Cinema Lab which has been funded by a Canada Foundation for Innovation Grant. The lab is devoted to ‘new stories for new screens’. She is also a member the 3D Film Consortium (3DFLIC), where she is investigating the new aesthetic grammars of 3D media.

Place, Memory and Site Specific Art Exhibitions

This talk will address new approaches to site specific art by looking at several examples that combine urban screens, large scale architectural projections, locative media and participatory art forms.  My research seeks to understand how such media art exhibitions create experimental communities and social excavations that redefine our sense of urban place and common purpose.

Presenter(s) websites, twitter handles, or other related sites

Projects:

www.visiblecity.ca

www.l-o-t.ca

www.leonadrive.ca

www.futurecinema.ca



Siobhan O’Flynn teaches in the Canadian Studies Program at University of Toronto and at the Canadian Film Centre’s Media Lab. Her teaching focuses on how artistic works and practices across media engage with political, social and cultural concerns. Her academic research examines the function, design, and experience of narrative in interactive environments, with a particular emphasis on transmedia/crossmedia design; foresighting emergent trends in digital storytelling and entertainment in a Web 2.0/3.0 world; and pyschogeographic practices across media. Her schedule for Fall 2011 talks includes presentations at The StoryWorld Conference and Expo, San Francisco, Digifest, WIFT’s International Women in Digital Media Summit, The McLuhan 100 Conference, and the Sheffield Doc/Fest & Crossover Lab Convergence Catalyst Summit in Wales. She is currently engaged in a two-year research/data visualization project, funded by SSHRC, on Nuit Blanche and Transformational Publics with her collaborator, Faisal Anwar.

Siobhan will be talking about: Digital Narratives & Documentaries