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Archives
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Gifford
Miller |
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Liz Krueger |
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Leslie Crocker Snyder |
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Catherine Stimpson |
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Eric Gioia |
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Adolfo Carrion Jr. |
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David Weprin |
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Featured Non Profit
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NY Children - A Planet
Impact Project
Planet Impact
was founded by a
group of New Yorkers
who attended Wharton
Business School
together.
Planet Impact
selected Danny
Goldfield and his NY
Children Photography
Project for
positively impacting
the community in
which he lives - New
York City.
Danny is
photographing one
child from each of
the world's 192
countries. Each
subject is either an
immigrant or a first
generation child and
lives in one of the
five boroughs of New
York City.
The aim is to create
a rare and valuable
opportunity for
these diverse
families to meet and
commune in New York
City.
The plan is to have
an event where all
192 children meet
each other and
celebrate their
photographs in a New
York City museum
gallery.
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Catharine R. Stimpson
Former Director of Fellows of MacArthur Foundation and University
Professor and Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Science, New York
University
Consider the Jezebel of the Hebrew Bible, a rotten bitch of a queen if
ever there was one. She serves Baal rather than the Lord and so corrupts
her husband King Ahab that he does, too. She is conniving, greedy,
perfidious, and murderous. Her fate is richly deserved---to be devoured
by dogs at the wall of the city.
Now consider the Jezebel of contemporary independent film, a daring
production company if ever there was one. Its founders and owners, Greta
Schiller and Andrea Weiss, saucily took the name of the most evil of
women and flipped its meaning. Jezebel is no longer the symbol of female
evil but of a wild and iconoclastic female creativity.
Schiller and Weiss founded Jezebel in 1984. Before I met them
personally, I knew their great documentary about gay history, Before
Stonewall. It was Schiller’s first major feature-length release. Weiss
won an Emmy for her work as its research director. I then encountered
Weiss when she was a graduate student at Rutgers University and I served
on her dissertation committee. Her pathway to a Ph.D. became a
path-breaking book, Violets and Vampires: Lesbians in Film (1992). Then,
in the mid-1990s, both partners brought their lights and cameras, wit
and ambition, salt and savoir-faire, to my office to shoot me as a
talking head for Paris Was A Woman, their joyous, innovative film about
women in the Bohemias of Paris in the first part of the 20th-century. I
found them both women of conscience, capable of working enormously hard
and being lively and original company. I still do.
Schiller and Weiss have built an amazing record. Sometimes, they work
together---for example, on their triology about women jazz musicians.
Sometimes, they work independently---for example, Schiller’s documentary
about Cecil Williams, a gay white member of the African National
Congress, The Man Who Drove With Mandela, or Weiss’s Escape to Life: The
Erika and Klaus Mann Story. Despite their awards and prizes, the extent
of their accomplishments is insufficiently appreciated, certainly in the
U.S. In part, this is because of their subject matter. They take on
minority experience, that beyond the walls of the conventions of the
majority, be it that of lesbians and gays, blacks, Jews, and women. In
part, this lack of adequate appreciation is because of the style of
their documentaries. They have zealously unearthed previously lost
material, but their subjects, given their marginality, may not have left
rich records. As a result, Jezebel has explored a hybrid style, which
brings together archival words and images, video animation, voice-overs,
and re-enactments. Jezebel is imaginative, but never sacrifices
credibility and plausibility.
Like many non-profits in the arts, Jezebel exists on the proverbial
shoestring. Its materials weave together grants, royalties, teaching
jobs, an artist in residency here, an appearance there. Schiller and
Weiss are also connoisseurs of thrift and personal sacrifice, although
they have too much humor and vibrancy to indulge in self-pity and
martyrdom. They live on the edge because that is where the vehicle of
their imagination, creativity, and sense of purpose drives them.
I often think of Jezebel when I think of the paradoxical attitudes of
the United States towards the arts. Some people pay handsomely for art
and find social status in doing so, while others display a spasmodic
indifference. Still others disdain the arts and use the more
experimental artists among us as target practice, treating them as if
they were the Jezebels of old. Yet artists like Schiller and Weiss keep
on doing their work. When our culture is capable of seeing it clearly
and whole, our culture will realize what gifts these wild and
iconoclastic women have given us. Their non-profit lives are our
cultural capital and profit us bountifully.
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Catherine Stimpson
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Featured Non Profit
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Jezebel
Productions
Jezebel Productions
was founded by Greta Shiller and
Andrew Weiss in 1984.
Their vision is to create films
about real people whose
inspirational stories have been
overlooked by history.
Before Stonewall, a documentary of
the gay rights movement in America,
won an Emmy.
Their latest release is "Recall
Florida" which follow former
Attorney General Janet Reno in her
recent bid for Governor and raises
serious questions about the election
process.
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Featured Non Profit
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Big Mouth Productions
Big Mouth Productions was
founded by Katy Chevigny and
Julia Pimsleur.
They
produce provocative social-issue
documentaries such as Deadline,
which was presented on NBC's
Dateline and raises issues
concerning the death penalty.
Big Mouth Productions launched
MediaRights.org in July 2000.
MediaRights.org
is a nonprofit organization and web
site dedicated to fostering greater
awareness of social-issue
documentaries, advocacy videos and
the work of activist organizations
around the United States.
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