At The Evergreen State College we teach direct animation and cameraless film in 
our foundation program and in some other classes depending on the subject. As 
with others responding, I’ve found it a great way to bring fine arts students 
in to animation and media production. Also, Devon Damonte teaches a summer 
course here, Visual Music on 16mm and 35mm Film that involves all sorts of 
cameraless techniques including making photograms and hand-processing. Students 
appreciate the materiality of working with film and photo processes, especially 
if all they’ve done before is digital. It’s also a way to get them into 
thinking about forms beyond the narrative and single channel presentation.

Ruth 

http://www.randommotion.com-
sites.evergreen.edu/ruthhayes/ <http://sites.evergreen.edu/ruthhayes/>



> On Feb 12, 2020, at 3:58 AM, Albert Alcoz <albertal...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Hello,
> 
> Does anyone know if cameraless film is a common subject at university?
> 
> I am investigating the role of cameraless film in the studies of Fine Arts 
> and Media Studies.
> 
> Most of cameraless film workshops are organized by art centers, alternative 
> spaces or private film schools but i wonder the role it has within the 
> university. 
> 
> Is it taught as a technique that can be applied in the audiovisual industry 
> (such as video clips, advertisements, fiction animated films, etc.) or as a 
> line to develop artistic projects or personal film developments?
> 
> Would be great to know personal experiences concerning teaching this 
> animation technique related to experimental cinema. 
> 
> Best,
> Albert
> -- 
> http://albertalcoz.com/ <http://www.albertalcoz.com/>
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