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Continuing
Studies Overview

Frequently Asked Questions

Certificate in Documentary Studies

Courses Offered for the
Upcoming Term

Current
and Past Term Courses

Workshops and Institutes
Past
Term Courses
Offered in conjunction with Duke Continuing Studies.
Please register on-line for this free information session.

REQUIRED
COURSES
Seminar in Documentary Studies: Section
One
Michelle Lanier
Seminar in Documentary Studies: Section Two
Joy M. G. Salyers
This required class is designed for students in the Certificate
in Documentary Studies program or those who plan to enroll. Photography,
video, oral history, writing, ethnography and community partnerships—Documentary
Studies is interdisciplinary and multifaceted in nature, encompassing
many genres and numerous means of interacting with the world and
its peoples. Through short readings, close examination of several
documentary projects, and guest speakers who will present their
own projects and perspectives on the documentary experience, you
will gain a broad introduction to the diverse fields that comprise
documentary studies. We emphasize not only methodologies, but also
philosophies and ethics of fieldwork in different settings. Throughout
the term, students will explore fieldwork examples and, at the final
meeting, will present preliminary projects of their own. These projects
may be the beginning of long-term documentary initiatives, or simply
a means of helping decide directions for future projects.
Section 1: Michelle Lanier Segbefia
Date: Tuesdays, September 12–November 7
No class on October 31
7–9 p.m. (16 hours)
Materials fee: $10 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $210
Enroll by 8/29: $195
Class ID 10470
Section 2: Joy Salyers
Date: Saturdays, October 14–December 9
10 a.m.–12 p.m. (16 hours)
Materials fee: $10 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $210
Enroll by 9/29: $195
Class ID 10471
Michelle Lanier is a folklorist and
oral historian. As co-director of the local organization In Our
Hands, she works with clients from eight to eighty, using oral history,
creativity, and other experiential tools to connect individuals
and communities. She has experience working with families—her
own and others’—conducting interviews with family members,
seeking out "lost" family stories, and recording intimate
family and community events such as funerals and reunions.
Joy M. G. Salyers is a folklorist, writer, and anti-racism educator
with an MA in Folklore. Joy consults with individuals and groups
on a variety of topics. Her specialties include helping communities
document their own histories, and using oral history, experiential
learning, and creativity to bridge community divisions, develop
identity and combat prejudice. She also consults privately to help
documentarians get a project "unstuck." Joy's fieldwork
has ranged from documenting personal life histories to collaborating
with members of a modern performance community.
Final Project Seminar in Documentary
Studies
Randolph Benson
Certificate students who have completed at least five full courses
(including the required Seminar in Documentary Studies) and who
have done substantial work toward their final projects are encouraged
to gain admission to this seminar by sending a list of courses taken
and work completed toward the final project via email to dkdreyer@duke.edu
(in the subject line of the e-mail please write "Project Seminar").
Once approved, participants may register as they would for any other
class. The seminar will consist of group discussions about each
student’s project and progress toward completion, along with
guided planning on taking projects to their intended audiences.
Participants who successfully complete their project this course
will be awarded the Certificate in Documentary Studies.
Date: Wednesdays, October 18–December 13
7–9 p.m. (16 hours)
Materials fee: $10 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $265
Class ID: 10472
Randolph Benson is a graduate of Wake
Forest University and the North Carolina School of the Arts School
of Filmmaking. His film Man and Dog has
appeared in eighteen film festivals in seven countries and has garnered
numerous awards, most notably a Gold Medal in the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences’ Student Academy Awards. His work
has been featured on the Bravo Network, the Independent Film Channel
(Split Screen), WTTW-Chicago, UNC-TV (North Carolina Visions), and
Telewizja Polska S.A.- Poland, and received an Eastman Kodak Excellence
in Filmmaking Award at the Cannes Film Festival.
GENERAL
INTEREST
Documenting the Sacred
Pamela Broom and Dawn Dreyer
How do you document faith? How can we convey something essentially
unseen through photography, video, sound, and writing? In this course,
participants will engage in dialogue about different sacred traditions,
through readings and invited guests. You will be respectfully asked
(but not required) to share your own spiritual perspectives and
traditions, and to consider how our belief systems affect the way
we see others. Participants will complete a documentary project
in the medium (or mediums) of their choice, and will be encouraged
to think about ways that they can act in collaboration with their
subjects. How you define “the sacred” is completely
up to you.
Date: Tuesdays, September 26–November 21
No class on October 31
7–9 p.m. (16 hours)
Course fee: $250
Enroll by 9/19 $230
Class ID: 10473
Pamela A. Broom, of New Orleans, Louisiana,
obtained an undergraduate degree in general studies and humanities
from Tulane University in 1996. She is currently writing a thesis
for completion of a master’s degree in urban studies and applied
urban anthropology at the University of New Orleans. Her career
focus has included the cause of literacy, the needs of women, and
community building. She is a recent recipient of a Louis Stokes
Fellowship to study social work and community building in pursuit
of a master’s degree in social administration at Case Western
Reserve University.
Dawn Dreyer is the learning outreach director at the Center for
Documentary Studies (CDS) at Duke University. Dawn is committed
to developing educational programs in documentary studies that are
based in long-term collaborations with local communities. She works
closely with beginning and professional documentary artists to develop,
fund, and execute their projects., Dawn is the board president of
the Southern Documentary Fund. She is a writer, photographer, and
audio producer. In 2005, Dawn produced “The Three Furies:
Poverty, Addiction, and Mental Illness” for the WUNC Public
Radio series North Carolina Voices: Understanding Poverty.
This series recently won the 2006
Alfred I. duPont–Columbia University Awards for excellence
in broadcast journalism. Dawn received her BA in English from the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and her MA in Rhetoric
and Composition from Florida State University.
WRITING
Returning to the Source: Poetry and Documentary
Work
Tanya Olson
Explore how the act of reading and writing poetry can evoke meaning
from historical and contemporary documentary sources. Through close
readings, discussion, and writing exercises inspired by examples
of poetry read in class, participants will have the opportunity
to deepen work on existing projects or to begin thinking and writing
in new directions. This course is appropriate for any documentary
artists working with words, sound, and images—anyone who wants
to explore how thinking and writing in new forms can spark fresh
ways of seeing and engaging documentary source material. No previous
experience writing poetry is necessary.
Date: Thursdays, September 14–November 9 (no class on 10/12)
6–8 p.m. (16 hours)
Materials fee: $10 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $230
Class ID: 10562
Tanya Olson holds a Ph.D. in twentieth-century
British literature from the University of North Carolina–Greensboro
and currently teaches English at Vance-Granville Community College.
She teaches a documentary fiction class each summer at the Governor’s
School East at Meredith College. She is a poet who plays with the
idea of documentary in her own work.
AUDIO
AUDIO: INTRODUCTION
Make That Audio Doc: Introduction to
Sound Recording and Digital Mixing
Paul Overton
Produce your own short audio documentary using your own recorded
sound! Students will learn the basics of recording, interviewing,
and editing using digital editing software.
Date: Tuesdays, September 19–November 14
7–9 p.m. (16 hours)
Materials fee: $10 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $250
Enroll by 11/3: $230
Class ID: 10507
Paul Overton is an independent producer
living in Durham with his girlfriend, two dogs, and his tape recorder.
He teaches technical theater at Riverside High School in Durham.
Paul has an MFA in technical theater from the University of Delaware
and was a sound designer for many years before entering the world
of documentary audio. His work has aired on WZBC in Boston, KVNF
in Colorado, WUNC in North Carolina, and KUOW in Seattle. Unfortunately,
he also plays the ukulele.
AUDIO: ADVANCED
Advanced Audio Projects
Karen Michel
This advanced workshop is for individuals currently working with
documentary audio that would like instructor and peer support to
move to the next level with their project. Students will be required
to play excerpts from their works-in-progress, and the course will
be designed around the specific needs of the participants. With
the instructor, participants will explore narrative strategies and
receive technical and creative guidance. (Limit 6)
Date: Thursdays, September 28–November 2
7–9 p.m. (12 hours)
Course fee: $345
Enroll by 8/24: $325
Class ID: 10509
Karen Michel is an upstate New York-based
independent radio producer who got her start in media as a guest
on Art Linkletter's Kids Say the Darndest Things. She
has lived and worked in Alaska, Mexico, Japan, Greenland, India,
Canada, Kenya, Nepal, Madagascar, and other geographies real and
imagined. Her academic training is in visual arts and cross-cultural
education; she's been an exhibiting artist (jewelry, photography,
drawing, and holography) and a teacher. Since falling into a job
in public radio in Fairbanks, Alaska, long ago, she has been committed
to sound, as an audio artist and as a journalist. She's received
many awards and fellowships—Peabody, Robert Wood Johnson,
National Endowment for the Arts, Corporation for Public Broadcasting,
National Federation of Community Broadcasters, the Japan Foundation,
and the Fulbright/Indo-U.S. Subcommission, among them.
AUDIO WORKSHOP
The Audio Postcard
Jennifer Deer
The NPR Web site describes audio postcards this way: “This
is sound that is not just ambience. It’s the audio equivalent
of that four-color photo. It should really make listeners feel they
were there.” The audio postcard is a short format, but a meaty
one. Through an elegant layering of voices and ambient and natural
sound, the postcard allows audio documentary to do what it does
best: place the listener smack in the middle of the sights, sounds,
smells, and mood of a place or an event. We will spend the morning
listening in depth to and discussing the mechanics and applications
of the postcard—then we’ll head out to see if we can
make one. This workshop is open to all levels. If you own recording
equipment, bring it. Students will work on a project as a group.
Please bring a bag lunch. (Limit 10)
Date: Saturday, October 21
10 a.m.–5 p.m. (6 hours)
Materials fee: $10 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $135
Enroll by 10/6: $120
Class ID: 10508
Jennifer Deer is an audio producer
and graduate student living in Durham. Her work for radio has been
heard recently on such nationally syndicated programs as NPR’s
Day to Day and Weekend America.
She also co-curates the audio documentary
podcast Big Shed.
VIDEO
––JUST ANNOUNCED––
Knowing
Your Rights: Legal Fundamentals for Documentary Filmmakers Workshop
in NC, TX, and NY
VIDEO: INTRODUCTION
Introduction to Documentary Video Production
Chris Potter
This introduction to documentary video production will give you
the basic skills you need to go out and shoot. Learn the difference
between being a “tourist” or shooting a family gathering
and making sure you have the footage you need when you sit down
to edit your documentary. We will talk about planning and organizing
your project, and learn some basic camera, lighting, and audio techniques
that don't require expensive equipment. NOTE: Any video camera will
work for this introductory course. Please contact instructor with
any questions about purchasing equipment.
Date: Wednesdays, September 13–October 25
6:30–9 p.m. (17.5 hours)
Materials fee: $10 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $250
Enroll by 8/30: $230
Class ID: 10474
Chris Potter studied documentary film
and video techniques at the Rice University Media Center. He has
produced and directed commercial, industrial, and public service
videos at Southern Media Design & Production for more than twenty-five
years. His current projects include a series of videos on the historical
ecology of southeastern Burgundy and a documentary video on a New
Deal resettlement community in northeastern North Carolina.
Introduction to the Art of Documentary
Video Editing
Erika Simon
How do you craft footage into a story—and better yet, your
story? We’ll analyze documentaries to learn basic editing
conventions and study the effects of certain stylistic choices.
Then, through in-class exercises and weekly homework assignments,
we will try it out for ourselves. Learning to use Final Cut Express,
each student will edit the same supplied footage to create their
own take on “the same” story, which we will share with
each other in class. NOTE: Must have access to a camcorder beginning
September 28. No experience necessary. Basic computer skills required.
Some homework assignments will require the use of CDS facilities
between classes.
Date: Thursdays, Monday, September 7–November 2
7–9 p.m. (16 hours)
Materials fees: $10 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $250
Enroll by 8/24: $230
Class ID: 10476
Erika Simon has been teaching Final
Cut to beginners at CDS since 2003. She was an editor for Carlyle
Poteat and David Kasper’s Gatewood: Facing the White
Canvas. She produced and edited
Levante: Theater for Social Change for Student Action with Farmworkers
(SAF) and edited a PSA in Spanish
that aired on Univisión. She is a recipient of the Martha
Nell Hardy Award for Outstanding Teaching, UNC–Chapel Hill.
Telling Your Story: Placing Yourself
in the Documentary Film Tradition
Randolph Benson
There are an infinite number of ways to tell your nonfiction story
in film: cinema vérité, archival footage, photos,
interviews, and recreations are only a few examples. Will your film
be a personal doc? A portrait, experimental, or propaganda? We will
study documentary filmmaking through the screening of films and
clips, class discussions, readings, and presentations. Outside of
class, each student will be encouraged to keep a film journal in
response to the films screened, readings, and/or other researched
materials. Surveying the tradition, history, and conventions of
nonfiction filmmaking, you will have a firm foundation from which
to choose how to fulfill your documentary vision. You will also
be encouraged to share ideas about your projects.
Date: Tuesdays, September 12-October 31
7–9 p.m. (16 hours)
Materials fee: $15 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $250
Enroll by 8/29 $230
Class ID: 10475
Randolph Benson is a graduate of Wake
Forest University and the North Carolina School of the Arts School
of Filmmaking. His film Man and Dog has
appeared in eighteen film festivals in seven countries and has garnered
numerous awards, most notably a Gold Medal in the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences’ Student Academy Awards. His work
has been featured on the Bravo Network, the Independent Film Channel
(Split Screen), WTTW-Chicago, UNC-TV (North Carolina Visions), and
Telewizja Polska S.A.- Poland, and received an Eastman Kodak Excellence
in Filmmaking Award at the Cannes Film Festival.
VIDEO: INTERMEDIATE
The Five-Minute Documentary
Jim Haverkamp
The short documentary form presents a host of challenges and a wealth
of opportunities for film and videomakers of all experience levels.
You will produce a short film or video on a topic of your choosing.
The course will encourage creative treatment of material and place
particular emphasis on the use of sound. Brief instruction on Super
8 film will also be provided. Working knowledge of Final Cut Pro
or other video editing software is required.
Date: Tuesdays, October 17–December 5
7–9 p.m. (16 hours)
Course fee: $285
Enroll by 10/3: $265
Class ID: 10477
Jim Haverkamp is an award-winning
filmmaker and editor based in Durham. His credits include the documentaries
Monster Road (co-producer, co-editor)
and Armor of God
(co-director), both collaborations with Brett Ingram. His other
documentary and fiction films have screened in festivals across
the country, and he was awarded a Filmmaking Fellowship from the
North Carolina Arts Council in 2000. He is a former organizer of
the Flicker Film Festival in Chapel Hill.
Intermediate Documentary Editing with
Final Cut Pro
Simone Keith
Learn and discuss video editing techniques using the advanced features
in Final Cut Pro. Find out what makes a smooth cut, understand the
proper use of effects and transitions, and explore sound mixing
while editing your next documentary project. Basic Final Cut Pro
skills are required; and access to a portable FireWire hard drive.
Recommended text: In the Blink of
an Eye by Walter Murch (required);
Final Cut Pro for Dummies (recommended)
Date: Mondays, October 23–December 4
6:30–9 p.m. (20 hours)
Materials Fee: $10 (exact amount due at first class)
Course Fee: $285
Enroll by 10/9: $165
Class ID: 10478
Simone Keith’s short documentary
Heavier Than Air has screened
at numerous festivals and aired on UNC-TV. A native of Brazil, she
has been making documentaries and video essays since arriving in
North Carolina ten years ago. Keith has earned two Telly Awards
and has collaborated on The Wonder of It All, a
UNC-TV documentary about the life of George Beverly Shea, which
was nominated for a regional Emmy. She currently works at North
Carolina State University, where she is the videographer and editor
for In the Garden with Bryce Lane.
Intermediate Documentary Video Field
Production
Simone Keith
In this course, you will learn how to negotiate technical problems
in the field without compromising quality. Choose the best location
for your shot, work with available light, select the right microphone
for the right situation, set proper audio levels, and "shoot
in sequence." We will also discuss proper framing and composition
techniques and the advantages of handheld vs. tripod shots.
Date: Saturdays, October 28–November 4
10 a.m.–4 p.m. (15 hours)
Materials fee: $15 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $285
Enroll by 10/12: $265
Class ID: 10479
Simone Keith’s short documentary
Heavier Than Air has screened at numerous
festivals and aired on UNC-TV. A native of Brazil, she has been
making documentaries and video essays since arriving in North Carolina
ten years ago. Keith has earned two Telly Awards and has collaborated
on The Wonder of It All, a
UNC-TV documentary about the life of George Beverly Shea, which
was nominated for a regional Emmy. She currently works at North
Carolina State University, where she is the videographer and editor
for In the Garden with Bryce Lane.
VIDEO: ADVANCED
Advanced Video Projects
Cynthia Hill and Michael Davey
This advanced workshop is for students currently working on a documentary
video that would like instructor and peer support to move to the
next level with their project. Students will be required to show
excerpts from their work-in-progress, and the course will be designed
around the specific needs of the participants. With the instructors,
you will explore narrative strategies and receive technical and
creative guidance. This course is appropriate for anyone working
in short- or long-form video documentary.
Date: Wednesdays, September 20–October 25
7–9 p.m. (12 hours)
Materials fee: $10 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $345
Enroll by 9/6: $325
Class ID: 10497
Cynthia Hill is an independent filmmaker
based in Durham. Hill’s credits include Tobacco Money
Feeds My Family (Producer/Director/Co-Editor),
The Guestworker (Co-Producer/Director/Co-Editor),
February One (Co-Producer), and
Grace and the New Rules (Editor). Hill’s
work has broadcast nationally on PBS and the Sundance Channel and
has been featured in festivals around the globe. Hill is a 2003
Indie Arts Award recipient and the co-founder of the Southern Documentary
Fund.
Michael Davey, a painter and editor
living in Durham, is co-editor of Tobacco Money Feeds My
Family and The Guestworker.
He has worked in the production business
for almost twenty years and during that time has edited a wide variety
of projects including documentaries for PBS, Discovery, Learning
Channel, Discovery Health, and Animal Planet.
Video Workshops
Finding Structure and Creating a Story
Vivian Bowman Edwards
Like music, poetry, and writing, documentary films need a structure
that will carry the story forward from beginning to resolution.
In this one-day workshop, you will learn how to think about, define,
organize, and focus the story of your documentary, and develop your
creative thinking to find new and interesting ways to convey your
themes. We will watch several short documentary films to analyze
individual approaches to structure; and we will use in-class exercises
to bust through the creative block that has your project stalled.
Whether your film is in the idea stage or languishing in the editing
room, this class will help you see your project with fresh eyes
and give you the skills to get to that final edit.
Students may bring clips from works-in-progress that will be screened
as time allows if approved by the instructor in advance. No prior
experience required. Please bring a bag lunch.
Recommended text: Documentary Storytelling
for Video and Filmmakers by Shelia Curran
Date: Saturday, November 4
10 a.m.–5 p.m. (6 hours)
Materials fee: $10 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $135
Enroll by 10/20: $120
Class ID: 10498
Vivian Bowman Edwards is an independent
documentary filmmaker, producer, and director. Her first documentary
Searching was made for Nancy Kalow’s
Visual Storytelling class at CDS. Searching was
screened at numerous film festivals, including the Full Frame Documentary
Film Festival and the Lussas Film Festival near Paris, France; at
the Carolina Filmmakers Showcase; and on cable television. Bowman
Edwards was field producer for the award-winning television documentary,
The Battle for America’s Schools: How the Children
Won and Lost, which aired on MSNBC
in 2004. Her current project Show Up, Speak Out: The Public
Life of Betty Ann Knudsen is now in
post-production.
Preparing and Animating Stills in Final
Cut Pro
Carol Thomson
Want to create the “Ken Burns” effect in your video
doc? Learn the basics of scanning stills and preparing digital images
for import into Final Cut. And once imported, bring them to life
with animation techniques. We’ll cover tips and tricks to
get smooth motion. Bring several photos or digital images to class
for hands-on practice. Experience with Final Cut required. Please
bring a bag lunch.
NOTE: The workshop will be taught with Final Cut Pro, not Final
Cut
Xpress, for both demonstration and hands-on work. Experience with
either Final Cut Pro or Final Cut Xpress is required.
Date: Saturday, October 28
10 a.m.–3 p.m. (4 hours)
Materials fee: $10 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $90
Enroll by 10/13: $80
Class ID 10503
Carol Thomson has been creating websites
and multimedia works since 2000 when she began her documentary studies
in Australia. Carol completed her Certificate in Documentary Studies
at the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University in 2005.
She is working on a multimedia documentary Bridging Rails
to Trails: Stories of the American Tobacco Trail that
will be published on the web and as a CD-ROM. A work-in-progress
version can be seen at http://bridgingrailstotrails.com.
Carol’s web and multimedia company, FireStream Media, LLC,
is located in downtown Durham.
Documentary in the Digital Age: Publishing
your Video Documentary on the Web
Carol Thomson
You have your short video doc finished and you want it to be seen.
The Internet is one way to reach an unlimited audience, but you
are not a Webmaster and you don’t know where to start. Learn
the basics of preparing video for the Web, loading video to a Web
page, and establishing a low-cost Web presence. On Day One we will
discuss video compression, creating HTML, and putting your files
on the Internet. Video formats include QuickTime and an introduction
into Flash video. On Day Two, you will bring in a short video clip
on an external drive (six minutes or less, ready to import in Final
Cut) and will then compress the video, create the HTML to display
it using Dreamweaver, and publish it on the Internet. If you do
not have access to your own Website host, a temporary host will
be available. Experience with Final Cut
required. Please bring a bag lunch.
Date: Saturdays, September 30–October 7
10 a.m.–5 p.m. (12 hours)
Materials fee: $10 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $210
Enroll by 9/15: $195
Class ID: 10505
Carol Thomson has been creating websites
and multimedia works since 2000 when she began her documentary studies
in Australia. Carol completed her Certificate in Documentary Studies
at the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University in 2005.
She is working on a multimedia documentary Bridging Rails
to Trails: Stories of the American Tobacco Trail that
will be published on the web and as a CD-ROM. A work-in-progress
version can be seen at http://bridgingrailstotrails.com.
Carol’s web and multimedia company, FireStream Media, LLC,
is located in downtown Durham.
Video Docs: Project Planning and Management
Georgann Eubanks and Donna Campbell
Every true documentary project requires a high tolerance for ambiguity.
You think you know what you want to capture, the story you want
to tell, but you have to be willing to let the process unfold and
let your subjects have their say. Given the somewhat unscripted
nature of fieldwork, what are the appropriate expectations in project
planning and the day-to-day management of your project? What can
you promise your funders and your subjects? How do you budget your
time and money? How can you avoid "scope creep"? How do
you know when to quit shooting? And how do you get to the finish
line?
This class will best serve students who are in the process of starting
a video documentary, large or small, and who want to think through
the various factors involved, including visual style; potential
themes and architecture for the piece; target audiences; equipment
and personnel; budgeting and production timeline; shoot plans; rights,
permissions, and release forms; prospective funders; and promotion/distribution/broadcast.
On the first Saturday, we’ll cover these factors, using some
of our own projects as examples, good and bad. On the second Saturday
each participant will have a chance to share his or her project
with the class and instructors who will serve as benevolent critics
and brainstormers.
Date: Saturdays, November 18–December 9
9 a.m.–3 p.m. (12 hours)
Materials fee: $10 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $210
Enroll by 11/3: $195
Class ID: 10506
Donna Campbell and Georgann Eubanks
are the Managing Partners of Minnow Media, LLC, a full-service multimedia
production company based in Carrboro. Eubanks has written profiles
and promotional materials for the last twenty-five years and hosted
a local radio program for three years. Early in her career, Campbell
founded Lake Norman Magazine near
Charlotte, became Knight Ridder's first female publisher, and then
moved into documentary production for public television, for which
she has won numerous awards. Between Campbell and Eubanks, they
have interviewed a range of famous subjects, including Michael Jordan,
William Styron, Mother Theresa, Maya Angelou, Ruth and Billy Graham,
and Walter Cronkite, but their favorite subjects are usually the
result of serendipity—the folks they often meet in their travels
throughout rural North Carolina. For more information, see: www.minnowmedia.net.
PHOTOGRAPHY
Fundamentals of Documentary Photography
Ava Johnson
Beginners to more experienced photographers will benefit from this
exploration of darkroom techniques. We will address camera basics
for those who need an introduction, but we will spend the majority
of class time in the darkroom printing our photographs. Learn about
film developing, darkroom etiquette, how to mix chemicals, different
paper types (fiber and resin-coated), and how to select a series
of prints. Our goal is to begin a documentary project and complete
five to ten finished prints by the end of the course. The spirit
of the class is to take risks, explore, and have fun.
Required text: Black and White Photography:
A Basic Manual, by Henry Hornstein
Date: Wednesdays, September 13–November 1
6–8 p.m.
Materials fee: $50 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $250
Enroll by 8/30: $230
Class ID: 10511
Ava Johnson is a performer, artist,
and activist living in Durham. She received her BFA in photography
from the Savannah College of Art and Design, her MFA in studio art
from UNC–Chapel Hill, and graduated from the school of hard
knocks while braving the cold winds of Chicago before returning
to her home state. When not questioning mainstream thinking or making
up funny songs, she is the proud co-parent of Barnaby (the wonder
dog), public information coordinator at CDS, and one of the founding
performers of the Cuntry Kings drag/performance group.
Understanding Color Photography
Leah Sobsey
This introductory course will explore the fundamentals of color
photography. We will discuss the basic principals of color theory,
when to choose color versus black and white, and how this choice
changes the interpretation and understanding of a photograph. We
will look at both the historical and contemporary uses of color
photography.
The course will combine lectures and assignments and is designed
for participants who are comfortable using their film or digital
camera. This is the first part of a two-part class; a second course
will be offered in the spring that covers additional techniques
and digital printing.
Date: Wednesdays, September 13–October 25
6–8 p.m. (12 hours)
Materials fee: $5 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $255
Enroll by 8/30: $235
Class ID: 10512
Leah Sobsey is an artist and educator.
She received her MFA from the San Francisco Art Institute in 2001
and completed the Resident Certificate Program at the Maine Photographic
Workshops in 1997. Her work has been exhibited widely and is in
private collections across the country. She has taught at the San
Francisco Art Institute, Duke University, the Maine Photographic
Workshops, and currently teaches at UNC–Greensboro.
Documentary Photography as Fine Art
G. Douglas Vuncannon
Where do documentary photography and "fine art" converge?
Going beyond the realm of composition and craft, class discussions
will strive to identify elements of still photography that have
the power to transcend the simple recording of images. You will
develop your own photographic vision through weekly assignments
and have the opportunity to share your work during classroom critiques.
Date: Mondays, September 25–November 6
6:30–9 p.m. (16 hours)
Materials fee: $5 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $255
Enroll by 9/11: $235
Class ID: 10513
G. Douglas Vuncannon is a visual artist
and composer who has worked as a freelance photographer and writer
since 1995. His short documentary films have screened at numerous
film festivals in the United States and Canada. In 2000, the Durham
Arts Council awarded him an Emerging Artist Grant. His photography
and writings have appeared in the Independent Weekly, and
he is currently working on a documentary project made possible by
a grant from Duke University’s Freewater Productions.
Advanced Photography Projects
Lisa Satterwhite
This advanced workshop is intended to deepen a student's engagement
with specific projects or photographic techniques. This course will
be offered by different photographers each term to provide the opportunity
to receive multiple perspectives on a student's work. This advanced
workshop focuses on creating exhibition quality photographic work,
and learning what it takes to exhibit in commercial galleries, alternative
spaces, museums, and not-for-profit spaces. We will discuss how
to apply for grants, fellowships, scholarships, and artist's residencies
that are most relevant to your work. (Limit 6)
Date: Tuesdays, October 24–November 28
7–9 p.m. (12 hours)
Materials fee: $10 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $350
Enroll by 10/10: $325
Class ID: 10514
Lisa Satterwhite is a photographer
and scientist at Duke University Medical Center whose current research
focuses on the effect of pesticides on cardiovascular development.
Born and raised in the mountains of western North Carolina, she
earned a B.A. in fine art and art history from the University of
Tennessee and a Ph.D. in cell biology from Johns Hopkins University,
and was a Damon Runyon Walter Winchell Cancer Research fellow at
Princeton University in classical genetics. She has published in
the field of cell division and contributed to major university teaching
texts. Also at Princeton, she studied advanced photography in the
Program for Visual Arts, focusing on medium and large format, alternative
process, and the history of photography. For more than twenty years,
Satterwhite has taught numerous art and biology courses at the high
school and university levels. She is interested in the links between
environmental philosophy, conservation biology, and the spiritual
aspects of creating art, and between environmental policy and human
health. Satterwhite’s current photographic work examines family,
intimacy, and ties to the land.
PHOTO WORKSHOPS
Re-Designing your Photography Web Site
Christopher Sims
Are you a photographer who has a Web site but wish it could be more
inviting, user-friendly, or easier to maintain? This workshop is
designed to give you feedback about your existing Web site from
other photographers and the instructor. We’ll review principles
of good site design, talk about how to streamline your workflow,
and dissect what makes other photography-related Web sites work
well. (Limit 8)
Date: Saturday, September 16
1–5 p.m. (4 hours)
Course fee: $90
Enroll by 9/1: $80
Class ID: 10515
Christopher Sims, who currently designs
the CDS Web site, has coordinated the exhibitions and awards programs
at CDS, as well as worked as a photo archivist at the U.S. Holocaust
Memorial Museum. He has a master’s degree in journalism from
UNC–Chapel Hill and is currently a candidate for an MFA in
Studio Art at the Maryland Institute College of Art. His photography
project on Durham-based U.S. Army recruiters received a national
fellowship from the Houston Center for Photography, was selected
for PDN’s Photography
Annual "Best Photography of the Year" in 2003, and was
featured in the book American Photography 20, a
collection edited by Kathy Ryan of the New York Times Magazine.
Alternative Process Workshop
Leah Sobsey
This course will explore a variety of historical and contemporary
photographic processes. We will discuss Platinum Palladium printing,
Vandyke printing, Albumen printing, and more, and we will do hands-on
printing with negatives that participants bring to class. The hands-on
techniques will be devoted to Cyanotype printing (blueprint), Polaroid
Transfers and Lifts as well as Liquid Emulsion printing that can
be painted on to any surface including paper, canvas, tile and stone.
Step outside of the traditional silver gelatin print and explore
the endless possibilities with alternative processes. You will need
to bring your black-and-white negatives and color slides to the
first class.
Date: Saturdays, September 16 & 23
12–4 PM (8 hours)
Materials fee: $35 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $175
Enroll by 9/1: $160
Class ID: 10516
Leah Sobsey is an artist and educator.
She received her MFA from the San Francisco Art Institute in 2001
and completed the Resident Certificate Program at the Maine Photographic
Workshops in 1997. Her work has been exhibited widely and is in
private collections across the country. She has taught at the San
Francisco Art Institute, Duke University, the Maine Photographic
Workshops, and currently teaches at UNC–Greensboro.
High Speed Infrared: A Photography Workshop
G. Douglas Vuncannon
Expect surprising results when using Kodak’s high-speed infrared
black-and-white film. This two-part workshop will offer an introduction
to the film’s history and technical applications, as well
as an explanation of its ability to render otherworldly tonalities.
Some previous photographic experience is helpful but not required.
Required equipment: a 35mm camera and 25A red filter.
Date: Saturdays, September 16–23
2–4 p.m. (4 hours)
Materials fee: $15 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $90
Enroll by 9/1: $80
G. Douglas Vuncannon is a visual artist
and composer who has worked as a freelance photographer and writer
since 1995. His short documentary films have screened at numerous
film festivals in the United States and Canada. In 2000, the Durham
Arts Council awarded him an Emerging Artist Grant. His photography
and writings have appeared in the Independent
Weekly, and he is currently
working on a documentary project made possible by a grant from Duke
University’s Freewater Productions.
Legal Issues for Photographers
Daniel Ellison
This course will provide an introduction to copyright issues specifically
of concern to photographers. Who owns the rights to your photographs?
Who owns the rights to archival and other old photographs? The class
will also discuss “rights of publicity” and “rights
of privacy.” A variety of release forms and other contracts
will be reviewed. Students will be expected to bring in samples
of their own photographs for discussion of their work and their
work process.
Date: Saturday, October 14
9 a.m.–2 p.m. (4 hours)
Materials fee: $10 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $90
Enroll by 9/29: $80
Class ID: 10518
Daniel Ellison is an attorney in private
practice in Durham. He has been working with artists and nonprofit
arts organizations for over 20 years. A long-time supporter of the
Center for Documentary Studies, he is a frequent speaker and writer
on a variety of arts law issues. He is a past president (and executive
director) of the North Carolina Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts and
former chair of the North Carolina State Bar Association’s
Arts Law Committee. He developed Durham Arts Place, which recently
celebrated its tenth anniversary of providing affordable artist
studio spaces.
One-on-One Photography Critique
Leah Sobsey
This course is designed for students who wish to meet one-on-one
for individual feedback. Individuals will meet for one hour every
other week over for a total of three individual critiques. This
is a very personalized and specific approach to looking at your
work and pushing you in the right direction whether you are in the
beginning, middle or end of a project.
Date: Mon/Wed. October 30–November 29
5–8 p.m. (3 hours)
Materials fee: $10 (exact amount due at first class)
Course fee: $135
Enroll by: 10/16 $120
Class ID: 10520
Leah Sobsey is an artist and educator.
She received her MFA from the San Francisco Art Institute in 2001
and completed the Resident Certificate Program at the Maine Photographic
Workshops in 1997. Her work has been exhibited widely and is in
private collections across the country. She has taught at the San
Francisco Art Institute, Duke University, the Maine Photographic
Workshops, and currently teaches at UNC–Greensboro.
Portraits and Dreams: Literacy Through
Photography Workshop
Wendy Ewald and Denise Friesen
Discover the program created by photographer and teacher Wendy Ewald
that encourages students to explore their world through photography.
This workshop instructs teachers how to use photography and writing
as a tool for increasing students’ critical thinking, self-expression
and personal involvement in school. By linking picture making, writing,
and critical thinking, this workshop will help teachers make connections
across the curriculum. Teachers will use photography to investigate
self-portraiture and dreams, learn about Ewald’s collaborations
with children around the world, and plan a project to implement
in their classrooms.
Date: Thursday/Friday, October 12 & 13
9 a.m.–4 p.m. (12 hours)
Course fee: $285
Enroll by 9/28: $265
Class ID: 10519
Denise Friesen is Literacy Through
Photography’s Assistant Director for Education and a Lecturing
Fellow with Dukes Program in Education. Friesen oversees the LTP
program in the Durham Public Schools, leads LTP workshops, and teaches
an undergraduate course with Wendy Ewald. Before coming to work
at the Center for Documentary Studies, she taught for eight years
in the Durham Public Schools where she implemented numerous LTP
projects and earned her National Board Certification in Middle Childhood
Education.
Wendy Ewald, who has worked with
children in many countries and in various communities within the
United States, is the creative director of the Literacy Through
Photography program at the Center for Documentary Studies. She has
received numerous awards for her work with children and photography,
among them fellowships from the Fulbright Commission and the MacArthur
Foundation. Ewald has written nine books, most recently American
Alphabets.

Winter
2006
Fall 2005
Spring/Summer
2005
Winter
2005
Fall
2004
Spring/Summer
2004

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banner image:
Untitled, from the series Raising
Helana. Photograph by Lissa Gotwals, from her project for
the continuing studies course Final Project Seminar in Documentary
Studies. Gotwals's work from this series was published in issue
03 of Blueeyes
Magazine.
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