VC's Ghetto-Style Camera Harness
1 media/2021_0917_VC_Archives_Camera_Harness_a.ferrer_thumbnail.jpg 2021-10-11T10:17:56-07:00 Curtis Fletcher 3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e 39590 2 As inelegant as it was inventive, this handmade camera harness was developed by Visual Communications staffers in early 1979 to allow hand-held photography using VC's workhorse motion picture camera, the Eclair NPR — a 16mm camera that, with a 400-foot film magazine, could weigh as much as 40 pounds. This harness was put into service by cinematographers Dale Iwamasa and Takashi Fujii for VC's feature-length drama HITO HATA: RAISE THE BANNER.This home-made steadicam exemplifies the resourcefulness and invention that characterized Visual Communications' approach to grassroots mediamaking. As an organization operating on a shoestring budget, the need to "make things work" with little money is evidenced in this item and its impact on the organization's work. Since its founding in 1970, Visual Communications has produced films, provided support services for Asian American artists and filmmakers, workshops and trainings for the community, and more presentation opportunities for independent media in Los Angeles. plain 2021-10-19T13:54:08-07:00 03/01/1979 Visual Communications No Copyright- in public domain 34.0508107 , -118.2403273 Visual Communications Staff Unknown Azatuhi Babayan 74097555e69815676ea9b222e9e6b3bfcbe131cdThis page has paths:
- 1 2021-10-14T10:02:55-07:00 Curtis Fletcher 3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e Communities Curtis Fletcher 9 Los Angeles has long been multicultural, with peoples of different backgrounds finding a home and a place to create community. The stories told here spotlight communities little featured in traditional narratives of the city and county history. They include activism by the Chumash people, who predate California as a state, seeking to ensure the continuity and visibility of their history in Malibu. It also includes stories of African-American communities, Japanese-American communities, and activists defending the rights of day-laborers and street-vendors. structured_gallery 2021-10-22T11:12:57-07:00 Curtis Fletcher 3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e
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Curtis Fletcher
3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e
Visual Communications
Curtis Fletcher
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Based in the Little Tokyo area of Downtown Los Angeles, VC was founded in 1970 by a group of pioneering independent filmmakers to record, collect, and preserve a visual record of Asian Pacific American cultural heritage. VC originally worked as a film collective, concentrating on honestly portraying accurate images of Asian Americans and meticulously capturing pivotal social movements. VC produced groundbreaking works about the Asian American experience, including: CHINATOWN 2-STEP, a documentary on the suburbanization of Chinese American community in Los Angeles and the role of the Chinatown Drum and Bugle Corps; MANONG, a film on the first generation Filipino American immigrants; and WATARIDORI, a documentary on early Japanese American immigrant pioneers. VC published three books, In Movement: A Pictorial History of Asian Pacific America, Little Tokyo: One Hundred Years in Pictures, and Moving the Image: Independent Asian Pacific American Media Arts. Productions were used for education and activism that addressed setting up ethnic studies programs on local campuses, city redevelopment issues, the redress campaign for Japanese Americans interned during World War II, and the declaration of martial law in the Philippines. VC's own past in all media, narrative films, documentaries and educational projects are intertwined with the Asian Pacific American movements of the 1970s, and in itself represents a rich resource for researchers of the Asian Pacific American movements. The Archives' purpose is to document the history of the organization by organizing, preserving, and creating access to a variety of media art and primary materials recording impactful political moments and depicting the Asian Pacific American heritage for staff use, as well as by scholars who are interested in Visual Communications' role in the Asian American communities and history. The holdings include over 300,000 photographic images, 1,500 titles in the Media Resource Library, 100 films and videos produced by Visual Communications, and over 1,000 hours of oral histories of pan-Asian Pacific American content. As a valuable resource of Asian media art representations, The Archives is open to a wide variety of users, and we encourage the public, artists, filmmakers, students, faculty and others to pursue an intercultural understanding of the Asian American heritage. VC's vision for the archives is to accurately reflect and represent the diversity of the American populace and to cement Asian Pacific American experiences in the historical record through the preservation, access, and dissemination of our materials, which provide historical context and insight of Asian Pacific American influence not only for Asian Pacific Americans, but also for all Americans.
https://vcmedia.org/ structured_gallery 2021-10-19T11:28:54-07:00 Curtis Fletcher 3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e