Sweaty Eyeballs Animation is collaborating with Memory.is!

sweatyeyeballslogo1Sweaty Eyeballs Animation is excited about a new collaboration with the live-streaming website Memory.is! Curated by Phil Davis (Digital Art + Design) this hour long program includes work from the past six years of Sweaty Eyeballs Animation Invitational screenings (from 2012-2017), and is streaming only on Memory.is!

The Program will repeat every hour on the hour until May 10th, 2018.

The program of animation is:

  • Bottle – Kirsten Lepore
  • Small People With Hats – Sarina Nihei
  • Slow Wave – Andy Kennedy
  • But Milk is Important – Anna Mantzaris & Eirik Grønmo Bjørnsen
  • Trachial Shave – Gina Kamentsky
  • Once It Started It Could Not End Otherwise – Kelly Sears
  • A Prank Time – Jaime Rodriguez
  • Adam – Evelyn Jane Ross
  • Boogodobiegodongo – Peter Millard
  • Yield – Caleb Wood
  • Loop Ring Chop Drink – Nicolas Ménard

The Sweaty Eyeballs Animation Invitational began as the brainchild of animator and Towson University professor Phil Davis as a way to bring unique voices in international and independent animation to Baltimore audiences. Since 2012, Sweaty Eyeballs screenings have showcased an eclectic mix of animated narrative, documentary, music videos, and experimental work pushing the boundaries of art, style, and technology.

Go to memory.is to watch this program of short films spanning the past six years of Sweaty Eyeballs Animation Invitationals.

For more details on the program visit memory.is/sweaty-eyeballs

 

Carrie Fucile: Drift

Carrie Fucile, COFAC Lecturer in Digital Art + Design Foundations announces a solo show of her work May 4-27, 2018 at IA&A at Hillyer, entitled Drift.

Through sound, installation, and performance, Carrie’s work addresses issues of territorial and bodily boundaries, political upheaval, and global capital. Over the course of her exhibition, Drift, a fan will slowly blow sand from a neat formation in the middle of the floor, into drifts that accumulate at the far corner of the gallery. As the fan blows, the sound of the moving air and sand will be picked up by a contact microphone attached to the floor and broadcast through an amplifier placed in the corner.

IA&A at Hillyer is located at 9 Hillyer Ct NW, Washington, DC 20008. More information can be found at athillyer.orgCarrie Fucile_Drift