2015 Federal Grant Winners
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- Ambassadors in Levis: The Tucson Arizona Boys Chorus (ca. 1970), documentary produced by the University of Arizona (University of Arizona).
- Beach Hike (1958), conservation film about a 3-day hike protesting a proposed coastal highway along the Olympic Peninsula (Oregon Historical Society).
- Bon Temps Carnival Balls (1960–65), home movies of African American Mardi Gras carnival balls (Tulane University, Amistad Research Center).
- Chemical Architecture (1968), film by Frank Mouris and Peter Schlaifer commissioned for the “Plastic as Plastic” show at the Museum of Contemporary Crafts in New York (Yale University).
- Cinema Metaphysique Nos.1-5 (1966–72), film-video hybrid works by Jud Yalkut and Nam June Paik, with music by Takehisa Kosugi (Anthology Film Archives).
- Clarence (1968), Jud Yalkut’s documentation of the seven-story house of outsider artist Clarence Schmidt (Anthology Film Archives).
- Construction of the Seaboard Paper Company Mill (1930), professionally shot footage documenting the company’s factory in Bucksport, Maine (Northeast Historic Film).
- Crow Indians on the Jesus Trail (ca. 1942–43), profile of the Crow Indian Mission in Lodge Grass, Montana (American Baptist Historical Society).
- Czechoslovakia: Portrait of a Tragedy (1968), American-produced film made during the Prague Spring featuring interviews with future president Vaclav Havel, economist Ota Sik, as well as ordinary citizens (Wende Museum).
- D.M.T. (1966), psychedelic film by Jud Yalkut (Anthology Film Archives).
- Dr. Eugenie Clark Laboratory Films (1946–65), research footage taken by the noted marine scientist (Mote Marine Laboratory and Aquarium).
- Drifting (1923), new restoration of Todd Browning’s underworld saga about opium smuggling, featuring Anna May Wong in an early role (George Eastman House).
- Electronic Fables (1971), film-video assemblage and audio collage by Jud Yalkut and Nam June Paik (Anthology Film Archives).
- Electronic Moon No. 2 (1967), Jud Yalkut’s film of Nam June Paik's video art (Anthology Film Archives).
- Electronic Yoga (1966), film by Jud Yalkut and Nam June Paik (Anthology Film Archives).
- Falnes Home Movies (1937–40s), travel films shot by NYU history professor and OSS analyst Oscar J. Falnes (New York University).
- Frederick L. Anderson Collection (1942–45), footage shot by a U.S. Air Force major general including a holiday trip with Winston Churchill to Cuba (Hoover Institution, Stanford University).
- From A to Z: The Story of Special Summer Schools (1964), sponsored film made by Goldsholl Design Associates for the Chicago Board of Education (Chicago Film Archives).
- Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Company Collection (1948–58), footage of the largest African American insurance company in the West, including a tour of its landmark office designed by Paul Revere Williams (UCLA Library).
- The Guest (1977), short psychological thriller by film scholar Pearl Bowser (National Museum of African American History and Culture, Smithsonian Institution).
- Hank Rides Again (1963), tour of Arizona led by a Model-T Ford, produced by the Arizona Development Board (University of Arizona).
- Hoover Kodacolor Home Movies (1928–30), films taken by Herbert Hoover’s family showing trips and White House activities (Herbert Hoover Presidential Library-Museum).
- James Harvey Young World’s Fair Films (1933–34), footage of Chicago’s “A Century of Progress” exhibition (Emory University).
- John Cage Mushroom Hunting in Stony Point (1972–73), the composer’s mycological pursuits, filmed by Jud Yalkut (Anthology Film Archives).
- Kenyon Film (1972), Jud Yalkut’s diary film featuring poet Paul Blackburn and filmmaker George Landow (Anthology Film Archives).
- Kip Taylor Loon Collection (1970s–80s), ecological documentation of Common Loons in New York’s Adirondack Park (Biodiversity Research Institute's Adirondack Center for Loon Conservation).
- Kusama’s Self Obliteration (1967), Jud Yalkut’s portrait of artist Yayoi Kusama (Anthology Film Archives).
- Lewis J. Boss Collection, Part 2 (1929–32), community portraits of North Scituate, featuring hand-tinting and humorous intertitles, by a local amateur filmmaker (North Scituate Public Library).
- Little Diomede (1960), documentary about the Inupiat of Little Diomede Island in the Bering Strait (Oregon Historical Society).
- Lodge Grass Mission (ca. 1949), documentation of a church event at the Crow Indian Mission in Lodge Grass, Montana (American Baptist Historical Society).
- Mambo (1951), Jordan Belson’s first surviving film, featuring mambo music and painted scrolls (Center for Visual Music).
- Mandala (1953), Jordan Belson’s abstract depiction of Buddhist symbols (Center for Visual Music).
- Metamedia: A Film Journal of Intermedia and the Avant-Garde (1966–73), Jud Yalkut’s footage of fellow experimental artists (Anthology Film Archives).
- Metro!!!: A School Without Walls (1970), profile of a Chicago-based progressive experimental high school (Chicago Film Archives).
- Mirror Eye (1992), Beryl Sokoloff’s abstract portrait of Times Square (Silver Bow Art).
- Montana and its Aircraft (1968), sponsored film from the Montana Aeronautics Commission on the need to improve state airports (Montana Historical Society).
- Montana and the Sky (1952), sponsored film from the Montana Aeronautics Commission on the daily use of aviation (Montana Historical Society).
- More Than One Thing (1969), documentary profile of an African American teenager living in the Pruitt-Igoe housing complex of St. Louis (Washington University in St. Louis).
- Navajo Film Themselves: Behind the Scenes (1966), Richard Chalfen’s footage of the project to teach filmmaking to Navajo residents of Pine Springs, Arizona (University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology).
- Orris Brown Collection (1940s–50s), footage related to Superior Film Studios, one of Houston’s first independent feature film companies (Texas Archive of the Moving Image).
- P.A. (1983), Beryl Sokoloff’s kinetic exploration of New York City (Silver Bow Art).
- Quick Dream (1967), first film by Academy Award winner Frank Mouris (Yale University).
- Roof Piece (1973), avant-garde dance performance filmed by Babbette Mangolte (Trisha Brown Dance Company).
- A Soil for Growth: A Story of the Gifted Child Program (ca. 1966), sponsored film made by Goldsholl Design Associates for the Chicago Board of Education (Chicago Film Archives).
- Spain (1962), early 8mm work by Beryl Sokoloff capturing the lingering Old World traditions in Franco-era Spain (Silver Bow Art).
- Twice as Nice (1989), feature film by Jessie Maple about twin-sister basketball stars competing for a single spot in the NBA draft (Black Film Center/Archive, Indiana University).
- Videotape Study No. 3 (1966–69), Jud Yalkut and Nam June Paik’s filmed manipulation of political videos (Anthology Film Archives).
- The Way of Peace (1947), an animated plea for pacifism written and directed by Frank Tashlin for the American Lutheran Church (UCLA Film & Television Archive).
- We Live in the Arctic (1947), lecture film about the Alaskan adventures of Bud and Constance Helmericks (University of Alaska Fairbanks).
- WSU Historic Films (ca. 1925–32), student activities, including athletic events and inter-class games (Wayne State University, Walter P. Reuther Library).
- W.W. Howells Home Movies (1929), footage taken by the future Harvard anthropologist of the Santa Fe Fiesta and ancient ruins in northern New Mexico (New Mexico State Records Center and Archives).
- You’re Not Real Pretty But You’re Mine (1968), early student film by Frank Mouris (Yale University).