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The following page is a three column layout with a header that contains a quicklinks jump menu and the search CSUN function. Page sections are identified with headers. The footer contains update, contact and emergency information.

Mike Curb College logo, collage of pictures includes cello, stage door sign, scene from a play, illustration from Art Gallery showing, and a picture of three dancers.

 

College Resources

OFFICE OF THE DEAN

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Academic Programs

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Student Resources

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College Vision

The College of Arts, Media, and Communication is inspired by the shared belief that art is communication, that communication is an art, and that art and communication are essential pillars for building and maintaining community.

Click here to view the College Strategic Plan 08-09

Calendar

Cover for the Fall 2009 Calendar

Click here to download the Fall 09 Performance and Exhibition Calendar

Art Galleries

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The ART GALLERIES at California State University, Northridge, are the major art exhibition space in the San Fernando Valley. Click here to learn more.

 

KCSN-FM

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Arts & Roots Radio, is a non–profit, member–supported public radio station broadcasting live from the campus of California State University, Northridge. VISIT KCSN.ORG

 

Plaza del Sol

Photograph of the Plaza de Sol stage taken from the back row of the theater.

Powered by a commitment to educate, enlighten and entertain, ArtsNorthridge and the Plaza del Sol Performance Hall has helped establish California State University, Northridge as a hub for culture and performing arts in the region. Click here to learn more.

CSUN Cinematheque

Photograph of the Armer Theater taken from the back row.
The CSUN Cinematheque is an innovative year-round film screening program housed in the Alan and Elaine Armer Theater, a state-of-the-art 130 seat motion picture theater on the CSUN campus. Click here to learn more.

Valley Performing Arts Center

Valley Performing Arts Center logo

"The Imagine the Arts Center is destined to define the region architecturally as well as culturally – weaving the Valley into the broader fabric of L.A. city and county's unique and powerful growing cultural identity." Visit the IMAGINE THE ARTS Facility Website


 

WHAT'S HAPPENING IN THE COLLEGE

Sculpture BRUTE WASTEComing to the Art Gallery...

Robert Williams -- Conceptual Realism in the Service of the Hypothetical
Opening Reception: Sat, Feb 20 --- 6-9 pm
Artist Personal Tour: Monday, Feb 22 --- 10 am

Hans & Thordis Burkhardt Foundation Artist Lecture
Wed. March 10 --- 7 pm
Book signing following lecture.
(Gallery will be open until 9 pm )

All events will take place in the Main Gallery.

Robert Williams new body of work, "Conceptual Realism in the Service of the Hypothetical" includes paintings, prints and, for the first time, sculptures. Known as an "artist's artist," Mr. Williams' work travels from the underground comic world of the sixties, through the founding of the popular art magazine, Juxtapoz, to his current body of work exploring the next step into abstract thought.

*about the artwork pictured--

Brute Waste
(This An Irresistable Impulse To Leave No Sanctum Unspoiled)
2009
Acrylic enamel auto paint on fiber glass with steel armature
102" x 42" x 48"
Robert Williams


Coming to the Theatre...

POLAROID STORIES

By Naomi Iizuka
Presented by special arrangement with Dramatic Publishing Company of Stockwood, Illinois

Inspired in part by Ovid's Metamorphoses, an abandoned pier on the outermost edge of a city becomes a way stop for dreamers, dealers and desperadoes, a no-man's land where runaways seek camaraderie, refuge and escape. Powerful and explosive, mixing poetry and profanity

Studio Theatre lab, Nordhoff Hall 113

Feb 5-7, 10-14, 2010

  • Fri & Sat 7:30 pm
  • Sun 2 pm
  • Wed & Thur 7:30 pm

*all schedules are subject to change

Box Office 818-677-2488

 

RECENT HIGHLIGHTS

CSUNmobile Launches

The Mike Curb College of Arts, Media and Communication has launched a mobile application for the iPhone. CSUNMobile is a source for news and information about California State University, Northridge both on and off campus.

The free application is produced by student media for the campus community and available through Apple's App Store. CSUNmobile provides students, faculty and staff with everything from interactive maps, calendar of events, Daily Sundial headlines, stories and multimedia, access to listen to KCSN, sports, jobs, housing and much more.

Easily share any campus news and information with friends, family and classmates with the push of a button.

Stay tuned for future updates for other smartphones and for new features, including local community events, deals and specials, ability to find friends on campus, and other tools and content.


Director Don Petrie Brings Hollywood Magic to CSUN as Artist-in-Residence

Media Contact: Carmen Ramos Chandler
carmen.chandler@csun.edu
(818) 677-2130

(NORTHRIDGE, Calif., Sep. 18th, 2009) ―

Director Donald Petrie on setFor Cal State Northridge student Angelique Lettich, the opportunity to work with internationally recognized movie director Don Petrie as she finishes her senior film project is “thrilling.”

For Petrie, director of such international hits as “Grumpy Old Men,” “Miss Congeniality” and “My Life in Ruins,” the opportunity to return to his alma mater this fall as “artist in residence” in the Department of Cinema and Television Arts and work with future filmmakers was one he could not pass up.

“For one thing, it’s an opportunity to stay up to date on the latest trends and even new technologies. For instance, these kids are more attuned to the computer/digital world than I have ever been,” Petrie said. “But I am also here because it presents me an opportunity to work with the students.

“I know from when I was [at CSUN] as a student a long, long time ago, that students in state schools are much more driven because they are having to work two jobs in order to just have the wherewithal to attend college. They are very committed to getting their education and getting everything they can out of their education,” he said. “These kids want to learn and are eager to learn, and hopefully I have something to teach them.”

Cinema and television arts professor Nate Thomas, head of CSUN’s film program, said Petrie, who graduated from Northridge with a degree in theater in the 1970s, will be working directly with the students selected to take part in CSUN’s annual Senior Film Showcase, which takes place every spring.

“We originally asked him to work with the student directors, but he wants to work with all the students involved in the senior film projects, from the directors to the producers, writers and the crew. He is really taking it to another level,” Thomas said.

Thomas said the program was “lucky” to have someone of Petrie’s caliber, “one of the top A-list directors when it comes to romantic comedies,” willing to spend at least one day a week working with the student filmmakers.

“At other universities, artists in residence may spend a hour or two a week working with the students,” Thomas said. “But not Don; he’s spending hours each week with the kids, getting to know them and their work personally, and really sharing his experiences in the movie business. They are learning so much that goes way beyond what we can teach them in the classroom. An opportunity like this, to learn from an acclaimed veteran filmmaker like him, comes once in a lifetime if at all.”

Lettich, whom Petrie is mentoring through the creation of her senior film project, “Schwartza,” called working with the veteran director “one of the most thrilling, inspiring and scariest experiences I’ve ever had.

“We could sit around and watch movies and discuss directors all day. But what Mr. Petrie is doing is way beyond that,” she said. “Mr. Petrie is approachable. He talks to you like you are in the business, not like you are a student. He is such a respected director and has so much experience. And yet he relates to the students so well. We know we can talk to him and we know we will learn so much from him.”

Petrie brushed aside the accolades, saying that what he is learning from the students-insights on trends and technology-as well as their enthusiasm for filmmaking more than makes up for the time he is giving.

“Besides,” he said with a laugh, “I’m not working on a project at the moment.”

Petrie said he hopes to draw from all his experiences as a filmmaker in his lessons with the students.

“I can hopefully given them a glimpse of the realities of working in the business before they go off and get in the middle of it,” he said. “It’s one thing to make a film within the walls of academe, but it’s another to take a meeting with a studio rep and pitch themselves and their project. That’s what I hope to teach them, the nitty gritty of the movie business.”

Among his topics are what directors look for in and how to audition actors, how to pitch a project to studio heads, and how to “take a meeting.” He also hopes to hold a workshop for theater students later this semester on how to audition for a director. The key to all this, he said, “is communication.”

“These students can have all the technical expertise, talent and training, but if they don’t know how to communicate it to the studio people, who are often more business people than artists, they may not get the job,” Petrie said. “I’d like to see these kids get the job.”


Great News during trying economic times -- Hollywood Foreign Press Association Grants CTVA $86,000

(Aug. 11, 2009) The Department of Cinema and Television Arts Film Production Option received $60,000 for production fellowships for senior film project students for the 2009- 2010 academic year from the prestigious Hollywood Foreign Press Association known internationally for their Golden Globe Awards. Another $26,000 was awarded to help mount the Annual Senior Film Showcase slated for May 2010 and to upgrade the ADR/Foley facility. The directors of the senior film projects have the distinction of being named "Hollywood Foreign Press Fellows" a distinction usually reserved for graduate students. Golden Globe nominee Evan Rachel Wood announced the award to CSUN at the HFPA's Annual Installation and Grants Luncheon held August 11th at the Beverly Hills Hotel.  Other celebrities in attendance included Warren Beatty, Rose McGowan, Jordana Brewster, Hugh Dancy, Carla Gugino, Rex Lee, Eva Longoria Parker, Dylan McDermott, Chris Pine, Jason Reitman Emmy Rossum, and Kerry Washington.  Professor Nate Thomas, Film Production Option Head, and Karen Kearns, Associate Dean of the Mike Curb College of Arts, Media, and Communication, represented CSUN at the event. The  CTVA Department has a long standing relationship with the HFPA which started in 1996. Senior film production students also edit in the Hollywood Foreign Press Association Senior Film Edit Suite and will prepare sound design Fall ‘09 in the state-of-the-art Hollywood Foreign Press Association Film Sound Mix Studio recently upgraded by the HFPA.