| Faculty Development funds helped to pay for a part of the cost of
my 5-week residency at the American
Academy in Rome.

It was an honor for me to be accepted for a residency in this venerable
place. And it turned out to be a perfect home base for my first
encounter with the city of Rome. The Academy was populated by esteemed
colleagues from a number of disciplines and illustrious institutions
- each of whom gave talks, walks, lectures, and garnered access
to many historical Roman sites not open to the public. I was powerfully
influenced by discussions with my Rome Prize colleagues - in particular
a film historian from Yale, Noa Steimatsky, and the poet Lisa Williams
- leading me to cut a new version of my film, Some things about
water: while there. I was invited to share this work with the entire
academy and had a screening for the Academy Residents and Fellows,
with a 2-hour discussion afterward. I consider this experience invaluable
to the final form of my film. I was also able to shoot many rolls
of footage for my new project, most importantly tracking locations
from Fellini and Antonioni films of the sixties, films that figure
prominently in the themes of this new work.

I had the intention of taking my film project there to work on the
experience of "time" in my own filmmaking, backgrounded by my study
of Italian cinema, however I was sorely unprepared for my encounter
with the city of Rome itself. I had to put my plans aside and open
up to an entirely different experience. This was probably the most
powerful lesson. Of course the financial challenge is another thing
- I hadn't prepared for the Euro-Dollar exchange dropping considerably.
Fortunately the assistance of Otis's development funds made it possible
to weather the extra burden. Beyond the documentation mentioned
above, I am placing a copy of my movie in DVD form in the library,
with images, and excerpts on the website. I am also including information
on the American Academy in Rome (website links, alumni, application
information) to recommend this residency to other Otis faculty.




The photographs included here are various sight-seeing activities
with the Rome Academy fellows and visitors, among them a shot of
John Pinto, art historian who is the foremost expert on Hadrian's
Villa leading a day long tour of Rome fellows.
Photos:
1. My workspace in the loft of my studio at the Academy
2. Interior of the Pantheon
3. Pyramide
4. Capitolini Museum
5. Capitolini Museum
6. John Pinto at Hadrian's Villa
7. Hadrian's Villa
8. Excavation among working buildings in old Jewish Ghetto, looking
out on Theatro Marcello
9. Natural History Museum in the EUR section; Mussolini's dream.
10. Outside the Coliseum.
11. Inside the Capitolini Museum
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