VIVO Media Arts Centre Archive > Video Communication Vox Populi

PROGRAM 2: VOX POPULI [2020 ARCHIVE]

VOX POPULI: Descriptions and Video Stills

Due to licensing restrictions, videos are no longer available for viewing.

Portable Video in Vancouver

Richard WARD
Canada, 1975, B&W, 28 min (6 min excerpt)

Featuring interviews with the NFB’s Chris Pinney and Metro Media’s Gloria Keiler, Portable Video in Vancouver examines the potentials and realities surrounding handheld VTR (Video Tape Recorder) technology as an accessible means for the production of alternative media. 

Skid Row

Terry KELTER (Metro Media)
Canada, 1973, B&W, 31 min (9 min)

Incorporating interviews with residents, local social planners, and members of the health department, Terry Kelter’s Skid Row gives an in-depth examination of the issues surrounding health and housing for those living in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside.

Graveyard and a Beggar 

Mihato TAURA (Video Earth Tokyo)
Japan, 1975, B&W, 12 min

Borrowing a camera from Video Earth Tokyo founder Ko NAKAJIMA, in Graveyard and a Beggar Mihato TAURA approaches and attempts to engage with a woman living on the street near Tokyo’s Aoyama Cemetery, evincing the shared social concerns in both Canadian and Japanese alternative video while revealing questions about the ethics of the form.

Digitization made possible by a grant from Collaborative Cataloging Japan and XFR Collective. Courtesy Collaborative Cataloging Japan. 

Transient Men

Diane LEMIRE
Canada, 1971, B&W, 30 min (6 min excerpt)

Produced for community television, Diane LEMIRE’s Transient Men opens with a conflict between police and a vagrant man before documenting a meeting at a church support group for the same extended group, offering space for some of society’s most marginalized to tell their own story. 

The Action Committee for Unemployed Youth Demonstration 1970

Metro Media/Vancouver Inner-City Service Program
Canada, 1970, B&W, 35 min (4 min excerpt)

Produced through citizen journalism collective Metro Media The Action Committee for Unemployed Youth Demonstration 1970 captures speakers and the impressions of onlookers at a protest held on the steps of the Vancouver Art Gallery.

The Face of Kamagasaki

Jun OKAZAKI and Emi SEGAWA (Video Communication System: TV MOI Japan, 1980, Colour, 22 min

Produced by students Jun OKAZAKI and Emi SEGAWA, The Faces of Kamagasaki offers a multi-faceted documentary examination of day-workers and residents in the notorious Osaskan slum, grounded in a voice-over by Canadian video artist Byron Black.