Month: March 2024

(Via UConn Today) Latest Project from UConn Filmmaker a Personal One; Uncle’s Story Told in ‘A Double Life’

March 25, 2024 | Kimberly Phillips

The film tells the story of attorney Stephen Bingham, a Connecticut native who became a fugitive after being accused of helping spark a 1971 prison uprising

Stephen Bingham stands outside San Quentin Prison in California in the present day. The film, “A Double Life,” features his story. (Photo courtesy of Catherine Masud)

Latest Project from UConn Filmmaker a Personal One; Uncle’s Story Told in ‘A Double Life’

 

When Catherine Masud was young, maybe 9 or 10 years old, she happened to be home alone after school one day when two men wearing sunglasses and long dark trench coats, dressed as if they were out of a movie, showed up on her family’s front stoop in inner city Chicago.

The front door of the home was a full pane of glass, completely see-through and screaming for curtains by today’s standards, she says, so there was no hiding from the men who showed her an FBI badge and asked for her mom.

“She’s not home yet,” she told them. “Can I ask your names?”

“No need for names. Just tell her we’ll come by another day.”

Masud says she watched as the men turned and walked away, down the sidewalk and into a dark-colored Cadillac parked on the street, then drove away.

The minutes-long encounter might have rattled anyone – young or old.

For Masud and her family, though, the FBI at that time surveilled much of their lives, tapping phones and tracking whereabouts as government agents searched for Masud’s uncle who was accused of passing a gun to prisoners’ rights leader George Jackson and sparking an uprising at San Quentin Prison in 1971.

“I was told you never talk to your friends about this,” Masud says of the FBI and the story of her extended family. “I was told you never mention the name Stephen Bingham to anyone.”

‘The past is never dead’

Filmmaker Catherine Masud, an assistant professor-in-residence jointly appointed in UConn’s Department of Digital Media & Design and the Gladstein Family Human Rights Institute, and her brother, Alfred, roughhouse with their uncle, Stephen Bingham, only months before he went underground in the wake of the 1971 riot at San Quentin Prison in California. (Photo courtesy of Catherine Masud)

An assistant professor-in-residence jointly appointed in UConn’s Department of Digital Media & Design and the Gladstein Family Human Rights Institute, Masud was 8 when her uncle vanished from his life in California after the tumultuous events of 1971 when Jackson, three correctional officers, and two inmates were killed.

She says she and her brother didn’t really understand what had happened, especially since Bingham had visited Chicago only a few months prior, roughhousing with the children in favorite uncle style.

“I grew up thinking he was probably dead,” Masud says, noting that even her grandparents in southeastern Connecticut contended they didn’t know what happened to their youngest child. “But the FBI kept coming by our house and our phones were tapped, so you could say it cast a shadow over my childhood.”

Nonetheless, as children do, Masud grew up. She went to college at Brown University, then went to work for an overseas nongovernmental organization.

By the time Bingham returned home, turning himself in to police and later facing charges of first-degree murder, Masud had settled in South Asia where she made films with her Bangladesh-born husband, Tareque. Geography stymied a chance to reconnect, more than just hearing about one another in family circles, until a few years ago when she herself came home.

What did he do all those years?

What was it like to assume a new identity?

Who was this person he’d become?

“I approached him about telling his story in a documentary. He waffled at first and said he wasn’t sure he wanted to talk about it,” she says. “He said that what happened was in the past. But as I found out later, it was very much in the present for him. The past is never dead.”

Over the course of three long interviews with Bingham, Masud learned about her uncle’s involvement in the Freedom Summer Project in 1964, his work with Cesar Chavez and the farm worker strikes in California, and his early career as an advocacy lawyer.

She answered the questions of what he did during those 13 years, where he went, and how he survived. She learned about his French wife, his continued activism, his child.

And in interviews with his legal team, friends, family, acquaintances, and supporters, she learned so much more about the Stephen Bingham who she remembered only as the fun uncle who wore a leather jacket and rode a motorcycle.

Telling more than just one story

“A Double Life,” which premiered late last year and will be screened at UConn in April, lays out not just Bingham’s story, but considers the roles of lawyers in social movements and how racial tensions in America in the late 1960s and early 1970s affected so many aspects of life, including Bingham’s case.

The documentary, “A Double Life,” features the story of Stephen Bingham as told by his niece, filmmaker Catherine Masud, assistant professor-in-residence jointly appointed in UConn’s Department of Digital Media & Design and the Gladstein Family Human Rights Institute. (Photo courtesy of Catherine Masud)

“The family is also part of the story,” Masud says. “There are intergenerational tensions that were important to talk about and it was important to address the legacy out of which Steve came – this background of white privilege, grandson of a U.S. senator, son of a state senator.”

Throughout the film, Masud lets Bingham and his associates tell the story, interjecting as narrator only a few times. The film isn’t her story after all.

Privately, hers is one of speculation: Could she have walked by her uncle on the streets of Paris in 1983 when she was studying there abroad? It’s also part shared experience: Both had close loved ones, a husband and a daughter, killed by motor vehicles in different years and different places, and still both found strength in that loss to fight for improved road safety.

“I remember the moment I met Steve after he came out of hiding because I have this visual of him kind of backlit and all I could see was his hair. Somebody said to me, ‘Oh, here’s Steve.’ I couldn’t believe I was meeting him, and he was walking toward me. It was very strange because here was this person who all these years I thought was never coming back and might even be dead, yet there he was,” she says.

Masud says that even nearly 30 years later, as she was getting up the nerve to approach him with the idea for a documentary, she was intimidated – her, an award-winning filmmaker who’s worked with survivors of mass atrocities and genocide.

“Even though he’s a very warm person, he’s also sometimes reserved or standoffish. I think that was part of the change that happened in his personality because of the time he spent underground, always being on guard, always looking over his shoulder,” she says.

She also says she hesitated in asking him because she didn’t want to be the source of more trauma as Bingham relived his past. But realizing time heals and older age often prompts reflection, now ended up being just the right time for the project – for both of them.

Masud is back in the United States, rebuilding a life here after her husband was killed in 2011 in Bangladesh along with most of her film crew. “A Double Life” is her first feature-length project in the U.S.

Stephen Bingham lived underground for 13 years in the wake of the 1971 riot at San Quentin Prison in California. He lived under the name Robert Boarts. Here, he’s pictured by the Seine River in Paris in the 1970s. (Photo courtesy of Catherine Masud)

“I was in Bangladesh for most of my adult life with almost a different identity. It wasn’t a secret identity, it wasn’t underground, but it was a bifurcated existence because when I came back here, I felt like a foreigner,” she says. “I could identify with what it must have been like for Steve. He was completely immersed in the culture of a different place. It was similar for me.”

She says Bingham doesn’t regret the years he spent living underground and would have regretted only not returning to the U.S. His father, Masud’s grandfather, paid his annual dues to the bar association, so Bingham wouldn’t lose his license and could go right back to practicing upon his return, should he return.

“If this film gives audiences some insight into what Steve went through, if it gives them some inspiration and teaches them the importance of sticking to your principles even through adversity, then I’d be happy,” she says. “I would be glad if it gives them a deeper understanding of not just a particular historical period but how that resonates in the present and what we have to learn from that.”

“A Double Life” will be screened Monday, April 1, at 4 p.m. in the Konover Auditorium in the Thomas J. Dodd Center for Human Rights. It was screened at the Pan African Film & Arts Festival in January and the Mill Valley Film Festival in October, where it won an Audience Favorite Award.

 

UConn Today Article: https://today.uconn.edu/2024/03/latest-project-from-uconn-filmmaker-a-personal-one-uncles-story-told-in-a-double-life/

(Via UConn Today) UConn Connections Aplenty in ‘Symphony of Colors’ Art Exhibition in Stamford

March 13, 2024 | Kimberly Phillips

‘This show felt so special because a lot of the artists are my friends or people who I’ve become close with the past year’

“Infused Sunset” by artist Sharon Smalls is on display as part of the “Symphony of Colors” exhibition at the Ferguson Library near UConn Stamford. The show was curated by Isabella Montenegro ’19 (SFA). (Kimberly Phillips/UConn Photo)

UConn Connections Aplenty in ‘Symphony of Colors’ Art Exhibition in Stamford

 

Briana Ford ’24 (CLAS) doesn’t generally talk about her art, even if she’s asked.

“Putting my work on a wall is extremely vulnerable,” she says. “If you ever see me at an art show, I usually walk away and if someone asks who painted a piece, I’ll point to the person next to me. I identify as a surrealism/realism painter. I want you to look at it, figure it out, and not have to think too much.”

It might also be the reason Ford paints under the name Brie Miyoko and leads a dual life as a human development and family sciences major, with plans after graduation to focus mostly on a career in child development.

“I Don’t Bang or Slang on Gang” by Brie Miyoko ’24 (CLAS) is on display as part of the “Symphony of Colors” exhibition at the Ferguson Library near UConn Stamford. The show was curated by Isabella Montenegro ’19 (SFA). (Kimberly Phillips/UConn Photo)

But her painting, “I Don’t Bang or Slang on Gang,” which is on display as part of the “Symphony of Colors” exhibition at the Ferguson Library next to UConn Stamford, marries both her interests. The piece was inspired by a photograph a friend took during a visit to Ivory Coast and shows four boys wearing smiley-face stickers, making silly faces, and staring down into a camera lens.

“To me, it’s ‘Black boy joy’ of just being carefree on the beach,” Ford says, momentarily breaking from her credo of not talking about her work. “They’re just children, not something to be demonized or targeted for failure. They are just Black children who want to have fun.”

And as much as she doesn’t like the spotlight, “Don’t Bang or Slang” was featured in all the promotional materials for the show that features Fairfield County artists, many connected to UConn Stamford, through the curating skill of Isabella Montenegro ’19 (SFA).

Montenegro says her curating experience started during the pandemic on Instagram when she’d go to exhibitions, take pictures of works that moved her, and post them online – during a time when, for many, visiting an art gallery wasn’t enough reason to leave the house.

And while she didn’t consider that curating, others did and suggested she apply to The Norwalk Art Space as its first Korry Fellow in curating.

That successful application prompted a handful of curating opportunities in Fairfield County and a seat on the board of the Stamford Art Association, which approached her in late 2023 to ask if she’d be interested in putting on a show at the Ferguson Library for Black History Month in February and Women’s History Month in March.

She titled it “Symphony of Colors” because she says she wanted to tell a harmonious story of Black artists and their experiences.

“After the artists dropped off their works and I started figuring out what walls everything was going on, when I was done hanging everything, I sat down, looked around the room, and had the biggest smile,” she says. “This show felt so special because a lot of the artists are my friends or people who I’ve become close with the past year.”

Montenegro says she doesn’t consider herself an artist – she notes that if she drew a picture of a dog, it wouldn’t much look like one – but does call herself a “creative” and does see now that she has an artistic eye when figuring out how to group sometimes disparate works, whether in size and shape or subject matter.

“Power Puffs,” top, and “Untitled” by Brea Thomas-Young ’19 (SFA) are on display as part of the “Symphony of Colors” exhibition at the Ferguson Library near UConn Stamford. The show was curated by Isabella Montenegro ’19 (SFA). (Kimberly Phillips/UConn Photo)

The show, after all, is about the artists, she says, and in the case of “Symphony” 14 Black artists, some of them young and emerging and others who are more defined in their work.

Take, for instance, Brea Young ’19 (SFA) who has exhibited in four shows yet says this one is perhaps the most special – she used to visit the Ferguson as a young child, borrowing books and sitting for story time.

“I’ve always been an artsy person and enjoyed the artwork displayed at the library, but now coming here and saying, ‘That’s my piece,’ to be able to bring my niece here to see the show and my work, is extra special,” she says.

Her painting, “Power Puffs,” which shows the silhouette of a Black girl from the forehead up with Afro puffs on top of her head, is one that Young says was inspired by her inner child. It was her favorite hairstyle growing up, one she describes as a “superpower” in which she felt most confident.

“My niece looked at that piece and said, ‘I do my hair like that! It looks like me,’” she says, remarking she hopes the young girl also feels powerful in the hairdo.

Montenegro says that many of the pieces refer to the artists’ experiences or childhood – Young’s other work in the show, “Untitled,” is a round canvas depicting a pattern reminiscent of the loud prints on Coogi sweaters from the 1990s, with which she says she was fascinated as a child.

Tara Blackwell (Malone), who is associate director of UConn’s Center for Career Development for the regional campuses, has been a painter off and on most of her life, she says, working steadily over the last decade and drawing inspiration from one of her favorite television shows growing up: Sesame Street.

“Young, Gifted & Black – Roosevelt Franklin” depicts the Sesame Street character who was on the program from 1970-75. She says that as a young girl his song, “The Skin I’m In,” resonated most with her.

Kermit the Frog’s song, “It’s Not Easy Being Green,” also helped Blackwell work through feelings of acceptance, she says, and her piece by the same name pays tribute to that while tying in the struggle of the more contemporary Black Lives Matter movement.

“I was a very shy child and wish that I was able to use my voice more in certain situations. I think I still feel that way now as a woman,” she says. “Through art I use my voice. It’s interesting because I’m very soft spoken and quiet, but my artwork is very bold, bright, colorful, and kind of satirical as well.”

“Untitled” by artist SAIN’t Phifer is on display as part of the “Symphony of Colors” exhibition at the Ferguson Library near UConn Stamford. The show was curated by Isabella Montenegro ’19 (SFA). (Kimberly Phillips/UConn Photo)

Montenegro has paired Blackwell’s third entry “Good Trouble” – one of a series of paintings that display fortune cookie-type sayings and in this case declares from civil right activist John Lewis, “Get in good trouble, necessary trouble” – with paintings of Malcolm X and Lewis, a former U.S. representative.

“I didn’t ask for any of the artists for specific works. I also didn’t ask them to send me a photograph ahead of time. I just gave them the theme, title, and what I was looking for, so when they dropped off their submissions that was the first time, in many cases, that I saw them,” Montenegro says.

In some instances, like with the John Lewis quote, the pairings came naturally. On the two curved walls of the gallery space, though, Montenegro needed to get a little more creative.

“I grew up taking art classes but there wasn’t anything that I felt confident enough about to keep pursuing. In high school I took a marketing elective, and at UConn was drawn to DMD with a concentration in digital media strategy for business,” Montenegro says, adding of her work as curator, “I’ve now come full circle.”

“Symphony of Colors” is on display through March 21 in the Third Floor Auditorium Gallery at the Ferguson Library’s main branch, 1 Public Library Plaza, Stamford. It’s two blocks from UConn Stamford in the city’s downtown.

 

 

UConn Today Article: https://today.uconn.edu/2024/03/uconn-connections-aplenty-in-symphony-of-colors-art-exhibition-in-stamford/

Resurgence: 2024 UConn Digital Media Design BFA Senior Exhibition

Resurgence logo

Resurgence:: 2024 UConn B.F.A. in Digital Media Design Senior Exhibition 

 

The UConn Digital Media & Design (DMD) Department is excited to announce the 2024 DMD BFA Senior Exhibition, Resurgence. The in-person exhibition is open from April 6 to April 24, 2024 in the Jorgensen Gallery at UConn’s Jorgensen Center for the Performing Arts, with an opening reception on Friday, April 5 from 4:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. EDT.  Also featured on opening night are two programs of screenings of films and animations in the Jorgensen Auditorium at 3:00 p.m. and 6:30 p.m., culminating with awards. Regular gallery hours are Monday to Friday, 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., and prior to performances, and during most intermissions. All events are free and open to the public.

 

Limitless features the work of 45 senior UConn DMD Bachelor of Fine Arts students from the Storrs and Stamford campuses. Exhibited artworks range from 2D and 3D animations to narrative and documentary films, mobile apps, websites, and games. The title Resurgence reflects the expansive hopes of the exhibiting artists – to rise up against challenges and to overcome setbacks. To learn more about the exhibition, visit: http://dmd.uconn.edu/bfashow

 

Exhibiting artists:

Manuel Alvarez (East Hartford, Conn.), God Mode, narrative short film
Palmer Anderson (Madison, Conn.), To Be Changed, 3D animation
Hannah Bagley (Mystic, Conn.), Unwavering, video game
Paolo Bautista (Newington, Conn.), Nurtured by Nature, Perfected by Science, website
Evan Beaman (New Hartford, Conn.), RACE INSTINCT, narrative short film
Robin Bologna (Greenwich, Conn.), Bothersome, 3D animation
Samantha Bresmon (Bethel, Conn.), Numi the Goblin Girl, 2D animation
Jason Chan (West Hartford, Conn.), Apple’s Law, 2D animation
Nick Cioffi (Trumbull, Conn.), The GM’s Grudge, 3D animation
Kasimir Comunale (New Haven, Conn.), Fishtopher, 2D animation
Pedro DeLima (Danbury, Conn.), The Princess and The Sword, 2D animation
Veronica Fahs (Wilton, Conn.), Ilaria, narrative short film
Megan Flynn (Chatham, N.J.), ClimbConnect, mobile app
Sydney Fournier (South Windsor, Conn.) Growing Pains, 3D animation
Matt Freeman (Amesbury, Mass.), Hockey Threads, website
DJ Furano (Greenwich, Conn.), Eyes in the Sky, documentary short film
Brooklyn Green (Vernon, Conn.), Marcy’s House, documentary short film
Alexander Gutting (Weston, Mass.), The Mysterious Box, 3D animation
John Hitchiner (Granby, Conn.), Dreamin’, 2D animation
Eun Sok Hong (Shelton, Conn.), Love Letter, 2D animation
Yuri Jimenez (Bridgeport, Conn.), UConn Outing, mobile app
Lexis Johnson (Paxton, Mass.), Prayer to God, narrative short film
Matthews Jordao (Trumbull, Conn.), It’s Gonna Be Okay, narrative short film
Kieran Kelly (Bernardsville, N.J.), Mouse House Maze, 3D animation
Haydn Kerr (Sydney, Australia), Cosmic Journey, website
Jonathan Kopeliovich (Los Angeles, Calif.), WHUS Radio: 100 Waves of Sound, website
Carlie Kubisek (Southington, Conn.), Cardinal North, 3D animation
Mary McGaffigan (Tyngsboro, Mass.), The Guided Path, 2D animation
Marisa Morneau (Ellington, Conn.), 80HD, mobile app
Gabriel Pontore (Newtown, Conn.), Labyrinth of Past Echoes, 3D animation
Dante Radcliffe (Groton, Conn.), Testing Me, 2D animation
Joy Rollins (Storrs, Conn.), Lune and the Light, 2D animation
Lauren Ruggiero (Andover, Conn.), Time Consuming, 2D animation
Sydney Salazar (Ansonia, Conn.), For Granted, 2D animation
Sydney Salomon (Long Island, N.Y.), Jack of All Trades, 2D animation
Evelyn Santana (Stratford, Conn.), Wisp’s Call, 2D animation
Gabriella Shorr (East Greenwich, R.I.), The Chocoholics’ Guide to College Baking, website
Daniel Suitum (Woodstock, Conn.), A Parent-ly Knot, video game
Tony Tran (Branford, Conn.), Baneland, video game
Jasper Treese (Cape Code, Mass.), Imposter, documentary short film
Allison Tuttle (Killingworth, Conn.), Reminiscing, documentary short film
Karli Vare (Fairfield, Conn.), Yarn Over, website
Annamaria Vdovenko (Simbury, Conn.), Rabbit Hole, 2D animation
Bianca Velez (Norwalk, Conn.), WorryBox, mobile app
Christopher Vivas-Nava (Bridgeport, Conn.), Reminiscent, 2D animation
Brandon Zheng (Willimantic, Conn.), Witch and Mushkin, 3D animation

 

The University of Connecticut’s Department of Digital Media & Design creates future leaders in entertainment, design, business, and communications. Students study animation, film/video production, game design, web/interactive media design, digital media business strategies, and digital culture. Our commitment to experiential learning prepares our students to respond to real-world challenges, and we encourage students to find and express their voice, building from their unique background and perspective. We acknowledge that a diversity of thought and expression is needed in today’s society and see great promise in our DMD students’ abilities to make a difference in the world as future digital media content creators, distributors, and analyzers.

 

The University of Connecticut’s School of Fine Arts balances artistic and cultural legacies with the innovative approaches and techniques of contemporary art. In doing so, the School of Fine Arts serves students at UConn in both their educational and their professional development. The outstanding faculty from the four academic departments (Art & Art History, Digital Media & Design, Dramatic Arts, and Music) are committed to providing rigorous professional education and all offer undergraduate and graduate degrees. The academic programs are supported by specialized and uniquely focused showcases, stages, exhibition spaces and forums which include the Jorgensen Center for the Performing Arts, The Ballard Institute and Museum of Puppetry, The William Benton Museum of Art, Contemporary Art Galleries, Connecticut Repertory Theatre, and von der Mehden Recital Hall.

 

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If you would like more information about the 2023 UConn DMD BFA Senior Exhibition, email Meredith Friedman at digitalmedia@uconn.edu.

 

Download a .pdf of this press release.