Immersive Imaging: Capturing 180 and 360 Footage
Monday, April 21, 2025 3:00–4:30 PM
Description
Dive into the world of immersive video with this introduction to 180° and 360° filming. Learn how to use specialized lenses and cameras to create dynamic virtual reality content, and explore techniques for editing and sharing immersive media. Perfect for beginners looking to push their creative boundaries.
More from Academics
- Apr 22–23Crafting Futures: Feminist Embodiments of Care, Resistance, and Relation (Part 1)Academics | Center for Women's Studies, The Lounge at East Hall
Join our WGSS Seniors in presenting their capstone projects during part one of this two-week Brown Bag series.Today, we will hear from Rediet Shiferahu, Verenice Perez, Aryanna Rebolloso, and Isabella Gregory.We gather not just to witness research — but to think, feel, and imagine together. From explorations of Black love in education, queer silence, and single motherhood by choice to inquiries into language justice, feminist foodways, border crossings, and artistic resistance—these bold projects bring theory to life through embodied, justice-rooted inquiry.Come to listen, break bread, question, and dream alongside us! - Apr 22All dayUniversity Libraries: National Poetry MonthAcademics | Case-Geyer Library
National Poetry Month, launched by the Academy of American Poets in 1996, is an annual celebration in April that aims to highlight the importance of poetry and poets in American culture, encouraging people to read, write, and share poetry.The University Libraries, in collaboration with The Upstate Institute and the Adirondack Center for Writing, will be circulating a poetry machine throughout the Village of Hamilton in April.Pay attention the next time you’re at Case-Geyer, Flour & Salt, MOMs, or the Hamilton Public Library. You might encounter the ACW’s Poetry Machine.The Poetry Machine is an old capsule machine, the kind you might spend two quarters to get a bouncy ball, sticky hand, or small plastic alien from in the vestibule of a convenience store. With our machine, you can get your very own poem (for free—no quarters necessary).Inside the Poetry Machine are 10 different poems. Each one features a unique style of poetry, including haiku, cento, epistolary, list, ode, ekphrasis, prose poem, how-to, erasure, and cut-up.If you want to "check out" more poetry, visit the poetry display on the third floor of Case-Geyer. - Apr 229:30 AMUnraveled: Labor and Meaning Behind WeavingAcademics | Alumni Hall, 2nd floor
This exhibition, curated by 10 students in the fall 2024 semester of MUSE 300: Museum Curating, features the themes of textiles and weaving. Showcasing works from the Longyear Museum of Anthropology’s basket and world textile collections, this exhibition explores the incredible amount of labor and skill that goes into creating woven art. The exhibition takes a comparative view of textiles from around the world, introducing the community significance of different designs and individual stylistic choices. The exhibition discusses how fiber art forms have changed as local and global markets develop, as well as the role that clothing can play in displays of nationalism and politics. Ultimately, Unraveled aims to inspire viewers to consider the benefits of hand-crafted works and foster an appreciation for the people behind the woven things we use and love each and every day.The exhibition features several new acquisitions, including three new works acquired from the Jalabil Maya women’s weaving collective during their artist residency last fall. It also features pieces on loan from our student curators, highlighting the significance of weaving and textile arts in their lives.Student Curators:Leila Bekaert ’25 Oscar Brown ‘26 Kegan Foley ‘26 Emma Herwig ‘25 Bri Liddell ‘25 Gloria Liu ‘26 Meg McClenahan ‘25 Anna Miksis ‘25 Blanca Rivas ‘25 Aleksia Taci ‘25 Professor/Curator: Rebecca Mendelsohn - Apr 2210:00 AMExhibition: A Thought Is A ThreadAcademics | Picker Art Gallery, Dana Arts Center, 2nd floor
A Thought Is A Thread: Contemporary Artists Reworking Textile TraditionsMetaphors using the language of textiles are part of everyday idiomatic English: we follow threads on social media; storytellers weave tales or spin fantastic yarns; friend groups might be close-knit and and we might tie ourselves in knots trying to navigate complex situations. The history of textiles is intimately tied to the development of human societies. Weaving is at the same time one of the earliest human technological advancements, the foundation upon which modern industrial nations were built, and the basis for the computing revolution.A Thought Is A Thread brings together works by leading artists who investigate what textiles can still reveal about people and their relationships to each other, to themselves, and to language, land, and the future. Artworks by Faig Ahmed, Sanford Biggers, Diedrick Brackens, Melissa Cody, Suzanne Husky, Joy Ray, and Jordan Nassar present intertwining narratives that both cherish and complicate the web of meanings that emerge when traditional textile arts are given contemporary expression.Debuting at our opening, Picker Art Gallery welcomes members of the Colgate community to partake in Yarnival, a collaborative art experience. Yarnival will be on view and available for participation during the exhibition run of A Thought is a Thread, through May 18, 2025, in the upper atrium of the Dana Arts Center. Please stay tuned to our social media channels and website for more details on how to participate.A Thought Is A Thread is partially supported by funding from The Friends of Picker Art Gallery. - Apr 224:15 PMNavigating Language-Literature-Culture DividesAcademics | Lawrence Hall, The Robert Ho Lecture Room,105
Professors Ramakrishnan and Sklyar will discuss a contextualized approach to language learning informed by the interconnectedness of language, literature/texts, and culture. Such a contextualized approach allows for flexibility in the foci and depth of student and faculty engagement, as cultures evolve and hybridize over time and with the movement of people. This is part of a larger Roundtable Discussion held at the AATF Conference in San Diego, in July 2024 with students Kaitlin Maratea, '25, and Lucy Brewer, '26. Mahadevi Ramakrishnan, Senior Lecturer in French, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures Aleksandr Sklyar, Senior Lecturer in University Studies. Refreshments provided. All are welcome. - Apr 224:30 PMFree Speech in an Age of RageAcademics | Little Hall, Golden Auditorium
Please join us to engage with Jonathan Turley on the subject of free speech at a time when it is under attack both in the United States and abroad. How can free speech survive a global movement to criminalize speech, particularly in the West? What is the meaning and the future of free speech in higher education? Turley has been at the forefront of the effort to restore free speech as a human right.The Center for Freedom and Western Civilization welcomes Jonathan Turley, J.B. and Maurice C. Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law at George Washington University Law School, for a lecture and discussion on “Free Speech in an Age of Rage.” Register via Zoom to join the event virtually.Professor Jonathan Turley is a nationally recognized legal scholar who has written extensively in areas ranging from constitutional law to legal theory to tort law. He has written over three dozen academic articles that have appeared in a variety of leading law journals at Cornell, Duke, Georgetown, Harvard, Northwestern, University of Chicago, and other schools.He is the author of the best-selling and award-winning book, The Indispensable Right: Free Speech in an Age of Rage (Simon & Schuster 2024). After a stint at Tulane Law School, Professor Turley joined the George Washington faculty in 1990 and, in 1998, was given the prestigious Shapiro Chair for Public Interest Law, the youngest chaired professor in the school’s history. In addition to his extensive publications, Professor Turley has served as counsel in some of the most notable cases in the last two decades, including the representation of whistleblowers, military personnel, former cabinet members, judges, members of Congress, and a wide range of other clients. He is also one of the few attorneys to successfully challenge both a federal and a state law.In 2010, Professor Turley represented Judge G. Thomas Porteous in his impeachment trial. The trial before all 100 U.S. Senators was only the 14th time in the history of the country that such a trial of a judge has reached the Senate floor. In November 2014, Turley served as lead counsel to the United States House of Representatives in its successful constitutional challenge to changes ordered by President Obama to the Affordable Care Act. He has also represented four former attorneys general and high-ranking members of all three branches of government. He has also served as lead counsel in some of the most famous espionage and national security cases in the last two decades, including the Area 51 litigation and the Daniel King espionage case. He was also lead counsel in the World Bank protest case, leading to the largest settlement in history for the one-day arrests of journalists and observers. Professor Turley testified over 100 times before the House and Senate on constitutional and statutory issues, including the Senate confirmation hearings of cabinet members and jurists like Justice Neil Gorsuch.He appeared as an expert witness in both the impeachment hearings of President Bill Clinton and Donald Trump. He also testified in the hearing on the basis for a Biden impeachment. In the Trump impeachment, he was the only witness called by the Republicans. In the hearing, Professor Turley opposed the proposed articles of impeachments on bribery, extortion, campaign finance violations or obstruction of justice as legally flawed. The committee ultimately rejected those articles and adopted the only two articles that Professor Turley said could be legitimately advanced: abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. However, Turley opposed impeachment on this record as incomplete and insufficient for submission to the Senate. Professor Turley’s scholarship was cited by both the House Managers and the White House counsel in their Senate trial, including the showing of videotaped remarks on the interpretation of the constitutional standard. In 2024, the Washingtonian featured Professor Turley as one of the most influential persons in public policy in its annual review.He is also a nationally recognized legal commentator. Professor Turley was ranked 38th in the top 100 most cited “public intellectuals” (and second most cited law professor) in the study by Judge Richard Posner. He has been repeatedly ranked in the nation’s top 500 lawyers in annual surveys. In prior years, he was ranked as one of the nation’s top ten lawyers in military law cases. He has been ranked among the world’s top lawyers and legal experts on various international surveys, as well as one of the 100 best-known law professors in history.Professor Turley was called the “dean of legal analysts” by the Washington Post who has worked for various networks and newspapers for over three decades. He is currently the legal analyst for Fox News. He has previously worked as a legal analyst for NBC, CBS, BBC, and Fox News. He is also a columnist for USA Today, The Hill, and other national newspapers. Professor Turley’s columns on legal and policy issues appear regularly in national publications with hundreds of articles in such newspapers as the New York Times, Washington Post, USA Today, Los Angeles Times and Wall Street Journal. His award-winning blog is routinely ranked among the most popular legal blogs. His blog has received various awards and, in 2013, the ABA Journal inducted the Turley Blog (Res Ipsa) into its Hall of Fame. Professor Turley has also received various free speech and columnist awards.Professor Turley received his B.A. at the University of Chicago and his J.D. at Northwestern. In 2008, he was given an honorary Doctorate of Law from John Marshall Law School for his contributions to civil liberties and the public interest.