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Three 1979 advertisements for IU South Bend. The first two advertisements feature fast and slow versions of a jingle proclaiming that IUSB offers "lifelong learning" and "evening classes." The third advertisement features a sound collage of quotes extolling the university's merits.
Three 1997 advertisements for IU South Bend. The first shows an animated character with a red box for a torso attempting to cross a busy street. A vehicle runs over the logo, leaving tire marks on the logo's back that are consistent with IUSB's official logo (a red rectangle with four closely spaced diagonal black lines at the center). After recovering from the accident, the animated character walks jauntily to the promised land of IU South Bend. The second advertisement, titled "Chancellor Perrin" on the production slate, shows new Chancellor Kenneth Perrin pledging to improve the university and inviting viewer feedback via phone or email. The third advertisement, titled "Education Opens Doors" on the production slate, is an animated sequence showing a first-person view of an entity approaching a gradually opening door meant to represent the promise of an education at IU South Bend.
Geometric slashes of white accent a spattered abstract image of yellows, golds and blues. In the foreground an animated wire swings in a narrow arc. In the audio, a mixture of indistinct, abstracted voices provides a background for the sound of a single snare drum – the audio mirrors the video. A final element of graffiti text carries implications of (perhaps) narrative, commentary, character, causality – or nothing at all. –Michael Lasater
Annunciation is a video object operating within the aesthetic of painting. Each panel's background cycles through images sampled from an original digital abstract composition. One sees this composition in fragments across time controlled by an algorithm derived from 12-tone musical composition in which no fragment is repeated until all are shown. The motion background plays against and through the static black/white paired elements in the foreground, making them appear somewhat unstable. In the audio a noise sound floor supports a repeated claves + voice pair mirroring the motion + static structure of the video. The composition chases György Ligeti’s idea of using time to hold on to time, suspending its disappearance, confining it in the always present moment. –Michael Lasater
From introduction: "Indiana University at South Bend and the Indiana Committee for the Humanities offer reflections about architecture and the human past, present and future. How does our own architecture serve as a doorway to ourselves?" Features footage of South Bend neighborhoods and interviews with residents.
An illustrated lecture on the semiotics of clothes, written, narrated and directed by Gloria Kaufman, who models a variety of outfits at the close of the program to demonstrate her arguments.
Tyler Davis interviews Brenda Buck, a custodian at Indiana University South Bend and officer in AFSCME (American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees) Council 962.
This oral history was conducted through COVID-19 Stories, an oral history project seeking to document the experiences of members of the Indiana University South Bend community and residents of the River Park neighborhood (where the majority of the IU South Bend campus is located). Oral history narrators were asked to talk about their lives during the COVID-19 pandemic starting in the spring of 2020, including the pandemic's impact on their home and work lives. They were also welcome to talk about their relationship to social and racial justice protest movements in the wake of the death of George Floyd in May 2020.