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Film and Media Arts

From moving pictures to an established industry, film and media have the power to capture our most powerful stories. Learn more about how it has evolved and helped tell diverse stories.

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Where Do I Fit?
57:15
ADHD in adults, queer athletes, Chinese-American family struggles and animated shorts.
A contact sheet set against a black background. There are five portraits on each column, all of which are black and white. The images are multiple exposure, overlaying images of people in Indigenous regalia over Mexican American portraits.
For over three decades, photographer Christina Fernandez used her work as a way to explore immigration, labor, gender and her Mexican American identity with her layered images.
A black and white photo of the Nicholas Brothers, Fayard on the left and Harold on the right, mid-air as they jump with their arms up and their legs pointed to the side. The two are in sync, their body language matched up to one another. Behind them is a band playing brass and wind instruments.
A new exhibition at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures highlights how Black cinema, despite the challenges of American racism, has carved its own paths throughout history.
A young man with a lot of cameras hung around his neck.
Bruce Talamon has trained his lenses on some of the music industry’s brightest stars, but it all began at Wattstax.
A faded colored photo of a stage propped up in the air with steel and metal rods. Performers in white funk/'70s clothing and gold jewelry stand on stage and perform. A man in white bell bottoms, a fringe jacket and silver chains holds up a silver trumpet. A man with a white afro and a white vest stands with a saxophone. A man stands in the middle wearing a white jacket with long fringe hanging off the sleeves and an intricate gold chain around his neck. He is singing into a microphone. Two men stand near him, also in white, flashy outfits playing the guitar and bass respectively.
Fifty years ago, music label Stax Records organized Wattstax, a benefit concert at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum that commemorated the seventh anniversary of the 1965 Los Angeles Uprising.
R&B and Funk Photog Looks Back at Wattstax
3:52
Noted photographer Bruce Talamon recalls Wattstax and the events that shaped his career.
oscars-politics
Sacheen Littlefeather made Oscar history when she turned down Marlo Brando's best-actor Oscar in 1972 over the treatment of American Indians by the film industry. Nearly 50 years later, the Academy formally apologizes to Littlefeather and welcomes her to a "healing" event next month at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures.
A black and white photo of a compact dirt road leading up to a mountain range in a desert environment. A road drives down the road, towards the camera. Clouds hover closely to the mountain range.
The Alabama Hills is a beautiful, scenic, diverse and world-famous location, sought out by artists, filmmakers and tourists for its landscape allure. Yet over the years these hills have been used, abused and vandalized by visitors.
Two men on a horse on a beach.
Award-winning photojournalist Julie Leopo finds a new reality on the shores of Oxnard, where Brown bodies like hers could exist by the water.
People wearing elaborate traditional garments typical of the Indigenous communities in the Philippines.
Los Angeles photographer Francis Gum showcases the traditions and history of the Indigenous Peoples in the Philippines through his work with San Francisco-based Parangal Dance Company.
A rendering of a city that is culturally-embedded with African American culture. It shows streets and cars that are brightly-patterned.
Artist Ben Caldwell’s answer to the very real fears around gentrification and the attendant dispossession of Black people and their social contributions is Sankofa City, a multi-pronged media project that celebrates Leimert Park’s unique history while embracing technological change and redevelopment
Natasha, who is wearing a red dress with white flowers, and Shant, who is wearing a white, cable-knit sweater, clink wine glasses over a dinner table topped with a white tablecloth and various dishes. Natasha and Shant look at each other as they toast.
Lighthearted, fun and a sneaky lesson in world politics. "The Armenian Dating Show" explores the spiderweb of history and culture that connects Armenians in America.
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