What makes a place feel like ‘home’? How do we find our home in the world? How do we know when we are ‘home”? This short video originated in one of the first sessions of the Digital Artists Collaborative of 3200 Stories. We had spent the morning unpacking concepts of ‘place’ and ‘home’ as relates to terms like “local,” a contemporary catch word for preserving human values in the basic practices of daily life. Then we broke up into pairs and, in this case, trios, to collaborate on some expression of our ideas. Masha Kouznetsova is an artist and illustrator; Laura Weinbach a songwriter and singer; and I, primarily a writer. Our conversation wandered a bit in the vastness of possibility, and eventually zoomed in on a little story about a formless entity that yearns for a sense of home to anchor itself in time and space. Eventually it meets another entity, and they recognize one another. They find that feeling at home in the world is not a matter of finding a particular place out there, but of connection to others. Place is not the thing – but rather, being. Because they now live in relation to one another – they are home. What we created out of this idea is a fully produced song and a series of drawings that suggest what an animated film would look like. The video allows Laura’s plaintive song and Masha’s poignant sketches to “talk” to one another, hopefully drawing viewers into the dialogue.
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3200 Stories brings together a diverse group of artists and creative thinkers to wrestle with big Jewish questions through the creation and distribution of original digital content. Grounded in the concept of Midrash – a classic investigative process of Jewish texts – we meet to immerse ourselves in a variety of Jewish “texts” (audio, video, text, and image). Through the exploration of big Jewish questions, concepts, ideas, stories, themes, traditions and practices the Digital Artist Collaboration will take a “Midrashic Posture” to prompt the production of digital content that uncovers meaning by “creating”.
Created by performer Sean San Jose, choreographer Nina Haft, visual artist Wendy McNaughton, the documentary production company Citizen Film and Hip-Hop music and theater collective Felonious "we are permanent but we are not temporary" is a series of four videos that explore and re-imagine the themes of Sukkot: home and shelter; roots and rootlessness; hospitality; permanence and transience.
The videos are part of Gimme Shelter: The Digital Sukkah Experience, an online audiovisual installation produced by 3200 Stories and the JCCSF.
Can your workspace ever be the same once something magical has transformed it?
That is the question at the heart of the Cubicle Concerts, an on-line performing arts series that turns workspaces into performance venues. It is an opportunity for artists and audiences to re-imagine what a performance space can be. It is an oasis for anyone working to make this world a more creative place.
Cubicle Concerts is produced in partnership with BAYCAT (Bayview Center for Arts and Technology), a non-profit community media producer that educates, empowers and employs underserved youth and adults in the digital media arts. Together we collaborte to create opportunities for artists, performers and filmmakers to hone their craft and support the expression of contemporary art forms in unique, new ways.
Put yourself front row center for today’s newsmakers, storytellers, strategists and seers. JCCSF’s Arts & Ideas YouTube channel brings you the likes of Kim Gordon, Neil Gaiman, Malcom Gladwell, Angel
Everyone’s welcome at the Jewish Community Center of San Francisco, the oldest JCC on the West Coast. Subscribe to the JCCSF YouTube Channel and get a glimpse of the people and programs that make us w