Bard Film and Electronic Arts Class of 2023 Film Trailer.
Areas of Study
The program encourages interest in a wide range of expressive modes in film and electronic arts. These include animation, narrative and non-narrative filmmaking, documentary, performance, and installation practices. Regardless of a student’s choice of specialization, the program’s emphasis leans toward neither fixed professional formulas nor mere technical expertise, but rather toward imaginative engagement and the cultivation of an individual voice that has command over the entire creative process. For example, a student interested in narrative filmmaking would be expected to write an original script, shoot it, and then edit the film into its final form. Students are also expected to take advantage of Bard’s liberal arts curriculum by studying subjects that relate to their specialties.
NOTICE
The LPFM application filed by the Film and Electronic Arts program at Bard College for 97.3 in Tivoli, NY has been accepted for filing by the FCC on January 2, 2024. The public notice of this acceptance can be found here.
Contact Us
Reach out by email or call us at 845-758-7253.
NEWSROOM
Art Newspaper Spoke with James Fuentes ’98 About His Gallery’s Move to Tribeca
“James Fuentes Gallery, long a forward-looking presence in the contemporary art scene on New York’s Lower East Side, is the latest space to decamp to Tribeca,” writes Jillian Billard for the Art Newspaper. The eponymous gallery of alumnus James Fuentes ’98, who will be awarded the Charles Flint Kellogg Award in Arts and Letters at this year’s Bard College Awards, has long championed “artists with practices outside the commercial conventions of the contemporary art market.”
Bard Film Professor A. Sayeeda Moreno Awarded Residency by Provincetown Film Institute
A. Sayeeda Moreno, assistant professor of Film and Electronic Arts at Bard, was honored with a one-week residency to develop her upcoming feature film, Out in the Dunes, a coming-of-age romance set in 1990s Provincetown on Cape Cod. Immersing herself in the locale, she explored Provincetown to seek enrichment for her screenplay.Bard Film Professor Ephraim Asili Wins $50,000 Creative Capital Award
Ephraim Asili MFA ’11, associate professor of film and electronic arts and director of the Film and Electronic Arts Program, has won a 2024 Creative Capital Award for $50,000, which provides unrestricted project funding, to support his documentary film Eternal Rhythm. The film explores the personal and artistic relationship between Don and Moki Cherry after the couple moved from New York to Moki’s native Sweden in 1970. There they began a decade-long collaboration that merged multicultural expressions of art, music, and radical living into a synergetic model for communal creativity.- 4/12Friday
Urinetown
7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EDT/GMT-4 Fisher Center, LUMA Theater - 4/13Saturday
Urinetown
2:00 pm – 3:00 pm EDT/GMT-4 Fisher Center, LUMA Theater - 4/13Saturday
Urinetown
7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EDT/GMT-4 Fisher Center, LUMA Theater - 4/14Sunday
Urinetown
4:00 pm – 5:00 pm EDT/GMT-4 Fisher Center, LUMA Theater