
THE DOCUMENTARY HAPPENING HAS BEEN RENAMED THE DOCUARTS INSTITUTE. CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE FEBRUARY 7–10, 2008 DOCUARTS INSTITUTE.
2007
Documentary Happening
Eleventh Annual Documentary Happening
January 31–February 4, 2007
GUEST ARTISTS:
Judith Helfand & George Stoney (video)
Barrett Golding (audio)
Registration (Full Event): $50
Individual Sessions: $5
Evening Presentations: January
31–February 3
Daytime Events: February 2–4
REGISTRATION/TICKET
SALES
Available 1 HOUR Before Events & ALL DAY Saturday at Richard
White Lecture Hall, East Campus, Duke University
The Happening, presented by the Center for Documentary Studies (CDS)
at Duke University with support from the Duke
Program in Film/Video/Digital, is a community festival
where documentary artists come together to see and discuss work,
to learn and be inspired. Welcoming work by first-time audio, video,
and multimedia documentarians and by more experienced artists, the
Happening presents creative work that is exciting, innovative, and
a pleasure to experience. For people already familiar with CDS,
the Happening is a wonderful weekend of celebrating connections
and each other’s work; for newcomers, it’s an opportunity
to be welcomed into an open and friendly environment, and to learn
more about CDS programs.
FOR DIRECTIONS
TO CDS: http://cds.aas.duke.edu/about/here.html
FOR DIRECTIONS TO RICHARD WHITE LECTURE HALL:
http://www.duke.edu/web/film/directions/Direast.html

EVENING
EVENTS
Wednesday, January 31
Reception: 6–7 p.m., Center for Documentary Studies
Screening: 7:30 p.m., Richard White Lecture Hall, East Campus, Duke
University
ROCATERRANIA
Directed by Brett Ingram
[This event is also the Fresh Docs:
Work in Progress session for January.]
Rocaterrania
is a feature-length documentary portrait (work in progress) of scientific
illustrator and visionary artist Renaldo Kuhler. In the past forty
years Kuhler, now seventy-five, has created hundreds of plates for
the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, illustrating diverse
flora and fauna for obscure scientific journals and reference books.
The only son of Otto Kuhler, the legendary industrial designer of
steam engines such as the 1937 Hiawatha, Renaldo grew up in the
immense shadow of his father and struggled to affirm his own identity
as an artist. Like many German immigrants, Otto Kuhler romanticized
the Old American West. When he fulfilled a lifelong dream by moving
his family from upstate New York to a remote cattle ranch in Colorado
in 1948, teenager Renaldo found the isolation unbearable and retreated
to the private fantasy world of his notebooks. What began as the
illustrated history of an imaginary country called Rocaterrania
became Renaldo’s secret lifelong obsession—the sublimated
telling of his own life story.
BRETT INGRAM
Formerly an electrical engineer on the Space Shuttle Main Engine
Program, Brett Ingram exchanged his pocket protector for a movie
camera in 1990. His short documentaries and animated films have
won thirty awards collectively and have screened at more than 150
festivals and cinema venues internationally.
Ingram’s first documentary feature, Monster
Road, won sixteen awards (including
“Best Documentary” at the 2004 Slamdance Film Festival)
and screened at more than eighty festivals and cinema venues internationally
before premiering on the Sundance Channel in 2005. Ingram has twice
been awarded a Film and Video Artist Fellowship from the North Carolina
Arts Council.
He teaches filmmaking in the Department of Broadcasting and Cinema
at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
Thursday, February 1, 7:30 p.m.
THE UPRISING OF ’34
(1995, 90 min)
Followed by a conversation with
Judith Helfand and George Stoney
Richard White Lecture Hall, East Campus, Duke University

The General Textile Strike of 1934, barely publicized and rarely
acknowledged in history books, remains a stirring yet amazingly
forgotten chapter in Southern history. The
Uprising of ’34, a film by George
Stoney, Judith Helfand, and Susanne Rostock, examines this hidden
legacy of the labor movement in the South and its impact today.
In 1934, Southern textile workers took the lead in a nationwide
strike in which half a million people walked off their jobs—the
largest single-industry strike in the history of the United States.
For a time these new union members, in response to New Deal legislation,
stood up for their rights and became a force to be reckoned with
in the South. Then management moved in and crushed the strike. Some
mill workers were murdered, thousands more were blacklisted, and
many were so intimidated that “union” became a dirty
word in Southern communities for decades to come.
The Uprising of ’34
is “meant to challenge the myths that Southern workers can’t
be organized, that they will work for nothing, and that they hate
unions,” says Stoney. More than a social document, the film
is intended to spark discussion on class, race, economics, and power—issues
as vital today as they were seventy years ago. “This is more
than a story about a strike; it’s a story about community.
We went out of our way to make sure that we didn’t make a
‘which side are you on’ film,” says Helfand. “The
thrust of this film is to give the workers their chance to speak.”
GEORGE C. STONEY & JUDITH HELFAND
George Stoney is a native of Winston-Salem, North Carolina, with
a passionate interest in the history and culture of the South. He
has written, directed, and produced more than fifty documentary
films, videos, and television series, including the Emmy Award–winning
We Shall Overcome
and The Weavers: Wasn’t
That a Time (both co-produced by Jim
Brown), How the Myth Was Made,
and the classic All My Babies,
about African American midwives in Georgia. Stoney has been a professor
of film and television at New York University’s Tisch School
of the Arts since 1970. An innovator in the art of community-based
film and video, he is an internationally respected media educator.
Stoney’s community-based approach to filmmaking significantly
influenced the career of Judith Helfand, who defines herself as
a filmmaker/organizer and has worked as a documentary producer and
educator for the past ten years. Her film A
Healthy Baby Girl, which had its broadcast
premiere on P.O.V., was in competition at the 1997 Sundance Film
Festival and received a Peabody Award for Excellence in Journalism
and Public Education. Blue
Vinyl, the 2002 “toxic comedy”
directed and produced with Daniel Gold, was broadcast nationally
on the HBO series America Undercover.
Accolades include the 2002 Excellence in Cinematography Award, an
IDA nomination for Best Documentary, a Nice Modernist award from
Dwell
magazine, the 2002 Environmental Messenger of the Year award from
the Environmental Grantmakers Association, a 2002 EPIC Award from
the White House Project, and recent Emmy nominations. She and her
filmmaking partner Daniel Gold will be premiering their most recent
documentary, on human nature and global warming titled Everything’s
Cool, at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival.
Helfand also co-founded Working Films, a nationally recognized organization
dedicated to leveraging the power and prestige of documentary to
promote economic, social, and environmental justice. She is a full-time
professor at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts
in the Department of Undergraduate Film and Television.
Friday, February 2, 7:30 p.m.
DO YOU HEAR VOICES?
An Audio Road Trip with Barrett
Golding
Richard White Lecture Hall, East Campus, Duke University
Experience some short sonic conjurings from HearingVoices.com
and other radio projections exploring the Black Audio Arts of Juxtaposition,
Voxpop, Manipulation, Montage, Storytelling, and Found-Sound. A
little talk and a lot of radio stories that’ll change your
life, or at least make your night.
BARRETT GOLDING
Barrett Golding has been an independent audio producer since 1983.
His work has been broadcast by NPR, PRI, BBC, CBC, VOA, and CBS,
including on Lost & Found
Sound, All Things Considered, CBS
Radio's The Osgood Files,
and NPR’s The DNA Files
w/ John Hockenberry, Morning Edition, Marketplace, Weekend America,
Day to Day SoundPrint, and This
American Life. He has won numerous
awards, including ones from the Scripps Howard Foundation, the American
Bar Association, the National Federation of Community Broadcasters,
and the Montana Broadcasters Association. Golding is executive producer
of the HearingVoices.com
radio project. From 1987 to 1992, he was a member of the radio comedy
troupe No One You Know, heard on the Olympia Comedy Network, a network
of five hundred commercial stations. He is also a Web site designer
and creative director of the Dreamwaves project.
Saturday, February 3, 7:30 p.m.
THOSE WHO CAN, TEACH
CDS Continuing Studies Documentary Artists/Teachers Present Their
Work
Richard White Lecture Hall, East Campus, Duke University
This presentation features the talents and perspectives of a sampling
of the many fine instructors in the CDS Certificate in Documentary
Studies program. Throughout the year in conjunction with Duke Continuing
Studies, CDS offers courses, institutes, and workshops for adults
who are interested in learning to do their own documentary work.
Courses involve instruction in photography, film and video, audio,
and writing and include such topics as documentary traditions, techniques,
fieldwork, theory, and ethics involved in conducting and presenting
fieldwork.
For this evening, the spotlight is on the instructors’ work;
it’s a great chance to see what those who teach you can do,
and to consider what classes you want to take next.

DOCUMENTARY
HAPPENING DAYTIME EVENTS
Saturday and Sunday, February 3–4
SATURDAY
All Saturday events will be held in the Richard White Lecture Hall,
East Campus, Duke University.
REGISTRATION BEGINS at 8 a.m.
9–10:30 a.m.
DOCUMETING “THE OTHER” with George Stoney
In this seminar, George Stoney will explore the implications of
documenting “the other” through examples of placing
marginalized individuals on screen with positive effect. Stoney
will present examples from a selection of his documentaries, including
Walk with Me
(1960), The Newcomers
(1961), How One Painter Sees
(1985), and Coping with Difficulty
(1992).
10:30–11 a.m.
BREAK
11 a.m.–1 p.m.
“GURU” SESSIONS
Happening submissions curated and discussed by Judith Helfand (video),
Karen Michel (audio), and MJ Sharp (photo)
1–2 p.m.
LUNCH
2–3:30 p.m.
YOUTH NOISE ACROSS THE COUNTRY
Members of Youth Noise Network, the in-house youth radio project
at CDS, take us on a sonic tour of youth-produced radio from across
the nation. Learn what’s going on in the world of youth radio
and what makes youth-produced work unique.
3:30–4 p.m.
COOKIE BREAK!
4–5:30 p.m.
HEARING VOICES
Barrett Golding
The weird wide world or radio works: a presentation of the possibilities
of radio production, with examples from both young media mixologists
and some of us ancient audio alchemists.
SUNDAY
10:00 a.m., Bagels
10:30 a.m.–12 p.m., Presentation
BAGELS AND BUCKS
Held at the Center for Documentary Studies
Presented by the Southern Documentary Fund (SDF)
The Southern Documentary Fund brings successful fundraisers together
to help you think about how to raise your first funds; we’ll
also discuss how to break through to substantial amounts of money
for larger projects. As always, SDF presents honest talk and helpful
examples about the wild world of raising funds to support your important
work.
In 2002 a group of North Carolina–based media artists and
their supporters came together to create the Southern Documentary
Fund (SDF), whose primary goal is to serve as fiscal sponsor for
independent documentary projects produced within or about the American
South. In addition to fiscal sponsorship, one of the organization’s
long-term objectives is to provide documentary artists with access
to resources that will assist them in the production of their media
projects. SDF is committed to helping independent documentary artists
produce work in sound, writing, film and video, photography, and
interactive media. Working with SDF members, the organization seeks
to connect regional resources in order to increase visibility and
expand audiences for documentary projects. For more information,
see http://southerndocumentaryfund.org/.
2 p.m.
ALL MY BABIES
Screening with George Stoney
Richard White Lecture Hall, East Campus, Duke University
This beautiful film is the story of “Miss Mary” Coley,
an African American midwife in rural Georgia more than half a century
ago. Conceived as a demonstration film for illiterate “granny”
midwives—produced by the Association of American Medical Colleges
and the Georgia Department of Public Health—All
My Babies quickly transcended its
initial purpose. The film has been used around the world by UNESCO
and has become an enduring nonfiction classic. Written, produced,
and directed by George C. Stoney in collaboration with Mrs. Coley
as well as with local public health doctors and nurses, the film
shows the preparation for and home delivery of healthy babies in
both relatively good and bad rural conditions among black families
in the 1950s. In addition, the film is both a deeply respectful
portrait of “Miss Mary,” who is revealed as an inspiring
human being, and a record of the living conditions of her patients.
All My Babies
was selected in 2002 by the Librarian of Congress as a "culturally,
historically, and artistically significant work" for permanent
preservation in the National Film Registry.
banner image:
Illustration by Keith Norval
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