Video Documentation Partnership

projects developed in collaboration with individual video artists and documenters

Tria Lockhart Kendler / Cynthia Porter Gehrie

"Documenting the Creative Process -- Bald Eagle Painting" This video, featuring wildlife artist James Lockhart will premiere at an exhibit opening at Lake Forest College, October 22, 1998. An official web site for James Lockhart is being developed in conjunction with this video series.

"Bagpipes and Bonfire" a video for Lake Forest Open Lands Association, to be presented on public access cable nightly in September as part of their annual membership celebration and campaign.

Marge Graham / Cynthia Porter Gehrie

"Faith Builds A Chapel" a videograph of a one-week seminar on the vision and construction of a family chapel dedicated to peace in the midst of the second world war. To be broadcast on PBS in Wisconsin, in collaboration with Lawrence University.

Kathy Abbott / Cynthia Porter Gehrie

"Mothers of Many Styles" an instructional video using Personality Inventory to assist mothers in developing their own mothering style. For Janet Penley, Penley Associates. To use in parenting workshops and professional training workshops.

Kathy Abbott/ Marge Graham / Cynthia Porter Gehrie

Two videographs in collaboration with A Woman's Place in New Buffalo, Michigan
"Playwriting Through Improvisation" A videogrpah of a women's retreat using improvisation to develop a play.
"Making Marks," A videograph of a women's retreat to explore visual art.
 
Tria Kendler / Cynthia Porter Gehrie
 
India Videograph 1996, "Order and Chaos,"Tria Kendler and Cynthia Gehrie This videograph documents images of culture starting in a small Hindu temple in a wildlife sanctuary and progressing through village and city, ending in Delhi at a new massive urban Hindu temple. Using music and image exclisively, it is an experiment in video expression independent of language barriers. Premiered in Zagreb,Croatia at Multimedia Women's Center, NONA, January 1998.
 
India Videograph 1996, "Migration, A Journey without Borders," documents the presence of Bugel, Siberian Crane at Bhartpur, India. Bugle was hatched at the International Crane Foundation, Baraboo, Wisconsin and brought to Bhartpur with two others as a young crane. Of these three, only Bugle remains. It is hoped that he will join other cranes one day and begin the migration pattern used by Siberian Cranes in decades past.


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