The Department of Film & Screen Media in association with San Francisco Silent Film Festival presents - A Masterclass: "Detective Work", Thursday 25th March @4pm.
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The Department of Film & Screen Media in association with San Francisco Silent Film Festival presents - A Masterclass: "Detective Work", Thursday 25th March @4pm.
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Masterclass with writer-director Shaun O'Connor. Monday 22nd February, 16h-18h, live session via MicrosoftTeams: https://bit.ly/3qsQZjU
Director Shaun O’ Connor is a filmmaker whose work encompasses short and feature film production. His most recent film, A White Horse, was longlisted for the Oscar’s best international short (2021).
Read morePresented by LUX Critical Forum Cork & Cork Film Centre, Aisling O Connell will stage a week-long occupation of the Crypt at St. Lukes Hall. She will inhabit the space alongside The Films of Reason, her latest body of work. This will be able to be viewed online.
The Films of Reason exist in paint, film and performance. During the occupation, the artist will put herself and the work ‘on trial’. In the absence of live spectators, the work will be the only audience and the camera the only witness. The exhibition will be immediate and shifting, subjected to various live processes. Ultimately, The Films of Reason will be pushed over the boundaries of exhibition, and this process will result in three new film works, episodes, that will be released online as they are completed.
For more info, please visit: https://visualartists.ie/events/online-screening-aisling-o-connell-the-films-of-reason-an-occupation/
Read on visualartists.ieA short film by a UCC graduate is in contention for an Oscar nomination, after securing a place on the Academy Awards 2021 longlist.
Kerry writer and director Shaun O’Connor’s
was filmed in Cork city and county. The story, which takes place in the 1970s, explores how mental hospitals were once used as catch-alls for people considered "troublesome" or "abnormal".Mr O'Connor, a 2006 UCC graduate of MA in Film Studies, was inspired to explore this subject after discovering that gay conversion therapy was widespread in the British Isles in the 1960s and ’70s.
The director said his time in UCC had a formative impact on his successful career: “My time at UCC was pivotal in my filmmaking career.
"Doing the MA in Film Studies there introduced me to so much film history and gave me new ways to interpret and appreciate the medium. It was a formative experience. And the college, course and lecturers have all been incredibly supportive of my work in the years since."
For more info, please visit: https://www.irishexaminer.com/news/munster/arid-40219604.html
Read on irishexaminer.comThe Arts Council and University College Cork are delighted to announce the appointment of Tadhg O’Sullivan as Film Artist in Residence for 2021.
Read moreJack Joyce, MA student in Irish Writing and Film joined other postgraduate students in Film & Screen Media at an exclusive film journalism workshop as part of the 65th Cork International Film Festival.
Read moreEight UCC students have been awarded the prestigious title of Puttnam Scholar.
Read moreRomantic Ireland's Dead and Gone, a short documentary produced by UCC's Lord Puttnam Scholars, is currently screening online at the Cork International Film Festival.
Read moreO'Rahilly Building, University College Cork, Ireland