John Feodorov - Man & Fish
911 Media Arts Center is pleased to announce three new artists
selected to participate in their 2004 Media Artist in Residence program: Wendy Jo
Carlton, John Feodorov, and David Russo.
911's Media Artist in Residence program nurtures local emerging and established
artists using digital media as an art form. The program supports both digital
filmmakers as well as media installation artists. While in residence at 911,
artists have dedicated access to production equipment, post-production
facilities, and technical support. Each artist receives a project budget of up to
$4,000, in addition to a $1,000 artist honorarium. At the residency's
culmination, artists are supported in exhibiting their work to the public, either
in a screening venue or exhibition environment.
David Russo
An open call for project ideas was broadcast locally in Fall 2003, resulting in
over 20 applications from a myriad of talented artists and filmmakers. A peer
review panel convened in late December and selected this year's Media Artists in Residence:
Wendy Jo Carlton is a queer filmmaker and screenwriter who has been active in the
Seattle film community for many years. Her films have been shown internationally,
including: The American Film Institute, PBS, Seattle International Film Festival,
Outfest Los Angeles, and the San Francisco, Vancouver, London, and Chicago Gay
and Lesbian Film Festival. Wendy Jo's films Bumps and My Dinner at Dan's are
listed in Jenni Olson's comprehensive Best of Queer Film Anthology. She will
complete an experimental digital video project titled Flock during her residency
at 911.
For the past 10 years, John Feodorov has worked primarily as an installation
artist, often incorporating video and digital media with other elements. In 2001,
he was featured in the PBS television series Art for the 21st Century as well as
in the companion book published by Abrams Press. His work has been exhibited
throughout the country, most recently in Whiteness: a Wayward Construction at the
Laguna Art Museum. He is represented by Howard House gallery in Seattle. The 911
residency will allow John to complete a digital video installation he has
imagined for many years, focusing on landscape and ritual.
David Russo is an award winning filmmaker and artist based in Seattle. He was
recently named one of Filmmaker Magazine's "25 New Faces of Independent Film" and
was a runner-up in the Stranger's 2003 First Annual Genius Awards. His most
recent films Pan With Us (2003) and Populi (2002) premiered in back to back years
at the Sundance Film Festival and have appeared in dozens of festivals around the
world, garnering numerous awards. Populi, commissioned by Paul Allen, is on
permanent display at the Seahawks Stadium in Seattle. During his residency at
911, David will workshop key sections of his new feature screenplay, #2, and will
complete a short personal artwork/digital film called A Cow and I.
Wendy Jo Carlton The Boys in the Bean
911 Media Arts Center's Media Artist in Residence program is made possible
through generous funding from the National Endowment for the Arts and Seattle's
Allen Foundation for the Arts. 911 receives additional support from the Andy
Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.
911 Media Arts Center is Washington State's non-profit organization supporting
the creative use of new media. 911 offers: affordable access to equipment,
workshops in all aspects of media production, screenings of independent films and
videos, youth programs in media literacy and production, and artistic programs in
the exhibition of new media.
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