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PlatteForum’s
Creative Residencies!
 
MILE HIGH STORIES
Digital Storytelling
Daniel Weinshenker, Hugh Graham, Tim Roessler
Creative Residents Hugh Graham, Tim Roessler and Daniel Weinshenker (Mile High Stories), collaborated with middle school students from PS 1 to create individual DVD films. While in residence, they each created their own films, Hugh “Julesburg”, Tim “Union Dues and Keith” and Daniel “Chuck’s and Built to Scale”. They also built an audio recording booth and invited the public to record their own audio narratives of what “Home” means. The resulting audio was wildly diverse and will be compiled into a future project. Their films along with the student films can be viewed at www.milehighstories.com/video.html

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Film Still - Julesburg - Hugh

Film Still - Chucks - Dan |
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Film Still - Built To Scale - Dan

Film Still - Union Dues - Tim

Film Still - Keith - Tim |
Artist Statement
People used to share stories on porches, across back
fences, at the barbershop or over coffee. We still
tell our stories, but because of any number of reasons
– television, jobs, long commutes – we
tell them less often, and take advantage of fewer
opportunities to share them. Now digital media provides
both the chance to tell stories easily, flexibly and
with all the power of music and movement, together
with the opportunity to share these stories through
a medium that many people can access at any time –
the Internet. Mile High Stories will help citizens
of Denver construct a narrative quilt available to
the community and the world beyond. A piece of public
art. A living history. A place to make new connections
and nurture them. The Mile High Stories team of artists
(Daniel Weinshenker, Hugh Graham, and Tim Roessler)
will use the residency at PlatteForum to work with
a diverse group of Denver-area residents to create
a series of personal narratives and mini-documentaries
reflecting on life in the Mile High City. The artists
will produce their own digital narratives and reflections
on life in Denver, and will conduct a workshop with
students from Denver’s PS1 School, encouraging
them to create their own digital stories as well.
The stories created through the workshop will be presented
as a video loop in gallery installation. The gallery
space will show numerous ‘low-tech’ stories,
consisting of still pictures and accompanying text
created by a range of students and community members.
The gallery experience will also include a ‘Story
Booth,’ allowing gallery visitors to record
their own audio stories; these will then be edited,
combined with photos, and presented on the Mile High
Stories website.
Artist Bio
Daniel Weinshenker has
been telling stories and teaching others to tell stories
for more than ten years professionally. He taught creative
writing for three years while working on his MA at CU
Boulder and then spent the next few years in marketing
and advertising, helping companies deliver their messages.
For the past few years he’s been working with
the Center for Digital Storytelling in Berkeley. He
teaches workshops all over the country and recently
opened up the first branch of the center here in Denver.
Through this center he educates artists, teachers, and
Denver citizens on how to become literate in digital
storytelling techniques and software, and document the
stories of the people who live here. He has also worked
with youth through ArtStreet for the past two years.
Hugh Graham
is a facilitator, writer, and interactive designer
working with clients such as Universal Studios, US
West/Qwest, Janus, Aspen Ski Company, the Limited
Express, Maytag, Virgin, the Colorado Rockies, among
others. He develops and implements innovative and
effective strategies, with a focus on the use of scenarios,
stories, and prototypes in the creative process. In
addition to his work in interactive content development,
he has extensive experience in film, video, music
and theater, including projects for MGM/Universal,
Paramount, Viacom, the Guthrie Theater, and the Walker
Art Center. An award winning performance and video
artist, including awards from the Denver Mayor’s
Office of Art Culture and Film and the Colorado Council
for the Arts, Hugh focuses on the use of story to
engage, entertain, and educate. Hugh is currently
a member of the board of directors of the American
Institute of Graphic Arts Colorado Chapter, and is
a frequent public speaker on subjects including interdisciplinary
design and digital storytelling.
With 15 years in the communications
industry, Tim Roessler has extensive
experience in content, branding and creative strategy
as it applies to traditional and new media. As vice
president and creative director for iXL, a global
consulting and services company, he led the creative
teams developing powerful strategies for such international
clients as Virgin Cars, Virgin Energy, Budget Rent
A Car, and Express (a division of the Limited, Inc.)
As an Internet executive, he became known as an expert
in the uses of storytelling for media design, and
in the creation of multi-channel narratives. In 1994,
Tim co-founded and was the creative director of ccg
online. There, he created and wrote award-winning
websites for the Aspen Skiing Company, Nikko Hotels,
Alamo Rent A Car, Universal Studios Florida and the
Colorado Rockies Baseball Club.
| PlatteForum’s Creative Residency Program builds on the tradition of artist residency programs around the world and is unique to Denver. The program offers the public an opportunity to see a body of work being developed by an artist, and then experience the culmination of that work in exhibitions and performances. Each residency incorporates an intensive workshop for under-served youth, which builds on the artist’s forms and for concepts. The artists share their passions for the creative process with the youth. This collaboration is the cornerstone of our learning programs. |
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