2022

Friday, February 18th

12:30pm

Arts + Design at BAMPFA: Visualizing the World ’22

For the fourth year in a row, students and alumni from Berkeley Journalism will present documentaries, photography, and innovative multimedia projects at a special, free Showcase produced and curated specifically for BAMPFA, “Visualizing the World.”

Kori Suzuki (‘23) will present a curated portfolio of his remarkable photojournalism; Brian Wollitz (’21) will screen his shortform video “The Titan Rises,” about an Oakland high school football team and the toll violence takes on inner-city athletes, and Kristen Hwang (‘21) will present her 2021 Student Academy Award-winning documentary “When They’re Gone,” about humanity’s fragile dependence on nature and the consequences of industrializing honey bees for crop pollination following a screening of the film.

Free and open to the public. Face masks covering nose and mouth (without valves) are required at all times. Capacity is currently limited to fifty percent.

Proof of Vaccination Required. Ticket holders are required to provide proof of vaccination—to the maximum extent for which they are eligible—for entry into the Barbro Osher Theater.

Presented in partnership with Berkeley Arts + Design as part of Arts + Design Fridays.

 

A young person with short dark hair gazes off to the side while standing near a coastal landscape with rocky cliffs and the ocean in the background. Wearing a dark jacket, they emanate an aura of contemplation akin to a Berkeley Journalism student capturing their surroundings, with soft light reflecting on their face from the partly cloudy sky above.Kori Suzuki (‘23) is a Japanese American reporter, audio producer and photographer. He is a first-year student at Berkeley Journalism and a former intern with The Washington Post’s audio team. His work focuses on climate change, race and equity and he is drawn to stories about how we are all complicated and multidimensional. His stories and images have appeared in The Washington Post, The Seattle Times and KQED. He is the recipient of the 2022 Dorothea Lange Fellowship at UC Berkeley.

Brian Wollitz (‘21) is a multimedia producer, videographer and filmmaker from Pacifica, California. His interests include producing stories at the intersection of sports and social issues, food, music, art, and culture. He specializes in documentary filmmaking, sports journalism and sports broadcast production work. His writing has been featured in The New York Times, The Times-Picayune | The New Orleans Advocate, The Rugby Journal, and OffBeat Magazine.

Kristen Hwang (‘21) reports on health care and policy for CalMatters. She is passionate about humanizing data-driven stories and examining the intersection of public health and social justice. Prior to joining CalMatters, Kristen earned a master’s degree in journalism and a master’s degree in public health from UC Berkeley. Her thesis film, “When They’re Gone,” received the Gold Medal in documentary film from the Student Academy Awards.

 

Arts + Design Fridays is organized and sponsored by UC Berkeley’s Office of Berkeley Arts + Design. The series is co-curated by the ASUC, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, Cal Performances, CREATE (Creative Residencies for Emerging Artists Teaching Empowerment), Department of Art Practice, Department of English, Department of Theater, Dance, and Performance Studies, Global Urban Humanities Initiative, Graduate School of Journalism, Human Technology Futures, and the Public Service Center. In-kind technical support and presentation offered by BAMPFA. For more information, visit artsdesign.berkeley.edu/fridays.

LOCATION

BAMPFA, the UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive

Get directions to BAMPFA, the UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive

SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS

Directions to BAMPFA: https://bampfa.org/visit/getting-here

Proof of Vaccination Required. Ticket holders are required to provide proof of vaccination—to the maximum extent for which they are eligible—for entry into the Barbro Osher Theater.
https://bampfa.org/visit/plan-your-visit

TICKET INFO

This is a FREE event.
Tax-deductible donations from the J-School community help make this possible.

No tickets required