Beyond excited to announce that I will be part of the group exhibition Echoes From The Ice which will be at Skaftafell Visitors Center in Vatnajökull National Park in Iceland. The exhibition opened on July 6th, and Elegy For A Glacier will be screened during the duration of the exhibit. I will be on site on August 23 to present and share Voices
Excited to announce that Elegy For A Glacier was officially selected for the TVFilm series on WMHT - my local public broadcasting station. Elegy will be shown on July 11, at 11:30 PM and also includes a brief interview with me that was filmed at the WMHT Studios. I love that this film has been making the rounds internationally, and now I have
March 21, 2025 I was present and on the floor of the UN Headquarters in New York City for the launch of the first World Day for Glaciers. To say the day was a surreal experience is an understatement, and one that I am grateful and humbled to have known, as well as for the opportunities that are beginning to blossom from it.
I am excited to announce that our first funding has come in to produce shorts that will contribute to the full film through the Arts Connect Grant – facilitated through The Arts Center of the Capital Region – and supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts, and New York State. This round of funding will help to purchase equipment, storage and
I am excited to announce that Elegy For A Glacier has been selected for screening at the USAPECS (Association of Polar Early Career Scientists) Polar Film Festival! Hosted by USAPECS in conjunction with APECS International’s Polar Week The Polar Film Festival (PFF) is a showcase of some of the best new films about the polar and alpine regions produced by researchers, community members, indigenous peoples,
I am very excited to announce the first public exhibition of my video/spoken work/sound project Elegy For A Glacier is currently on exhibit at the Trolley Barn Gallery in Poughkeepsie, NY through August 9.
Temperatures here the past few weeks have been dancing between 40-50°F, and the formations documented in this visual poem, were all gone within days as the water returned to it's liquid form. The last time I recall the lake freezing over completely for more than a few weeks was about 7 years ago.