(1924),
Western feature directed by Richard Thorpe, starring “Buffalo Bill Jr.” and Jean Arthur
(George Eastman Museum).
The Bus
(1965),
cinema-verité documentary by Haskell Wexler, following the cross-country journey of several activists to the 1963 March on Washington
(UCLA Film & Television Archive).
Camera on Chicago
(1940–83),
documentation of Chicago’s changing face and cultural diversity by amateur filmmaker Warren Thompson
(Chicago Film Archives).
Play film
Canyons in the Making
(ca. 1948–50),
instructional film featuring the Grand Canyon by naturalist Paul G. Howes
(Bruce Museum).
Certain Stars
(1967),
minimalist work by Victor Grauer, produced by scratching patterns on black film leader
(Anthology Film Archives).
Chord 1–5
(1975),
five minimalist film compositions of black and white frames by Victor Grauer
(Anthology Film Archives).
Combat
(1975),
expressionist black and white exploration of contrasts by Victor Grauer
(Anthology Film Archives).
Composition 1
(1978),
Victor Grauer’s minimalist film composition of black and white frames
(Anthology Film Archives).
Daly Family Collection, Part 2
(1919–21),
home movies of leisure activities enjoyed by the founding family of the Anaconda Copper Mining Company at the Daly Mansion
(Montana Historical Society).
Dink: Pre-Blues Musician
(1975),
scholar Cecelia Conway’s portrait and performance film of African American banjo player Dink Roberts
(Folkstreams).
Play film
Distant Star
(1967),
minimalist work by Victor Grauer, produced by scratching patterns on black film leader
(Anthology Film Archives).
Doll Messengers of Friendship
(1929),
documentation of a 1920s doll exchange between the U.S. and Japan, initiated by the Committee on World Friendship Among Children
(Chicago Film Society).
Dzibilchaltún Archaeological Expeditions
(1957–60),
lecture film by Dr. E. Wyllys Andrews of the NGS–Tulane University expedition that excavated one of the largest Mayan sites on the Yucatán peninsula
(National Geographic Society).
Play film
(1947–49),
documentation of conventions held by the national association of farmers who utilized aircraft, staged as part of OSU’s Farm and Home Week
(Oklahoma State University).
Play film
France III
(1961),
Beryl Sokoloff’s experimental portrait of a nation in turmoil
(Phoenix Arts Alliance).
(ca. 1930s–40s),
home movies by the owner of a photography studio in Pueblo, Colorado, documenting family life and the local Japanese American community
(Pueblo City-County Library District).
Play film
(1980),
dramatic feature about redevelopment and gentrification in the Little Tokyo neighborhood of Los Angeles, starring Mako, Pat Morita, and Yuki Shimoda
(Visual Communications).
Hum 255
(1970),
filmed discussion of political activism led by students expelled after the 1968 strike at the University of Chicago
(Kartemquin Films).
(1973),
Sedat Pakay’s documentary of James Baldwin in Istanbul
(Yale Film Archive).
James B. Carey Collection
(ca. 1945–48),
home movies of travels in Europe and the Soviet Union by the secretary-treasurer of the CIO and future president of the International Union of Electrical Workers
(Rutgers University).
(1960),
exploration of the streets of New York by Beryl Sokoloff
(Phoenix Arts Alliance).
Not Wedded But a Wife
(1921),
Mutt and Jeff cartoon released by Fox
(ASIFA-Hollywood).
Observing As You Go
(1957),
naturalist Paul G. Howes’s instructional film
(Bruce Museum).
On the Shores of Lake Michigan
(1948),
travelogue of the region’s touristic and industrial highlights by Illinois photographer Julian Gromer
(Chicago Film Archives).
Play film
Paris Travelogue, April 1948
(1948),
footage of the Jewish Distribution Committee’s Paris conference to assess the conditions of Holocaust survivors in Displaced Persons camps
(American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee).
Portrait 2 (David Lee)
(1976),
Victor Grauer’s experimental depiction of a Pittsburgh Filmmakers student
(Anthology Film Archives).
Portrait 5 (David Lee)
(1978),
Victor Grauer’s experimental depiction of a Pittsburgh Filmmakers student
(Anthology Film Archives).
Portrait of Dave Lee (Portrait 1)
(1976),
Victor Grauer’s experimental depiction of a Pittsburgh Filmmakers student
(Anthology Film Archives).
Prewar Peasants of Central Europe
(1938),
art collector Clara Hoover’s documentation of an intensive folk art workshop spread across Hungary
(Museum of International Folk Art).
Prose 1
(1975),
Victor Grauer’s minimalist film composition of black and white frames
(Anthology Film Archives).
The Scientific Expedition to the South Pacific in the Yacht Zaca
(1934–35),
documentation of the AMNH Templeton Crocker Expedition of 1934–35 by California Academy of Sciences artist Toshio Asaeda
(American Museum of Natural History).
Play film
(1917),
Metro Pictures melodrama involving brain surgery, hypnosis, and past lives, based on the E. Phillips Oppenheim novel
(George Eastman Museum).
String Game
(1975),
Victor Grauer’s experimental documentation of Pittsburgh Filmmakers students at play
(Anthology Film Archives).
SUMMER 68
(1969),
documentary following three activist groups as they prepare to protest the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago
(Third World Newsreel).
(1961),
abstract study of light and pattern and of nature and artifice by Beryl Sokoloff
(Phoenix Arts Alliance).
Veil
(1972),
minimalist work by Victor Grauer, produced by scratching patterns on black film leader
(Anthology Film Archives).
Verse 1
(1975),
Victor Grauer’s minimalist film composition of black and white frames
(Anthology Film Archives).
Verse 1B
(1975),
Victor Grauer’s minimalist film composition of black and white frames
(Anthology Film Archives).
Voices
(1967),
hand-painted stroboscopic experimental film by Victor Grauer
(Anthology Film Archives).
Wataridori: Birds of Passage
(1976),
documentary celebration of the Issei, the first generation of Japanese Americans
(Visual Communications).
Webs and Stems
(1967),
hand-painted stroboscopic experimental film by Victor Grauer
(Anthology Film Archives).
What the F*%k Are These Red Squares?
(1970),
documentation of a “Revolutionary Seminar” teach-in held during a teacher/student strike at the Art Institute of Chicago
(Kartemquin Films).
William Henry Fluhrer’s Air Transport Command Films
(ca. 1941–45),
home movies by a lieutenant colonel of missions in Europe and North Africa during WWII
(University of Oregon).
William Trader: Children Leave for School
(ca. 1971),
successful film protest of the child separation policy inflicted by state government upon Native families in rural Alaska
(Alaska Moving Image Preservation Association).
(1953–55),
anthropologist Robert Ravicz’s documentation of Yaqui village life and Fiesta de Gloria celebrations in Sonora
(Museum of Texas Tech University).