Dawson City: Frozen Time Screening
Wednesday, September 12, 2018, 6:30 - 8:30pm
The School of Art is pleased to present a screening of Dawson City: Frozen Time. Directed by Bill Morrison A'89, the film – a meditation on cinema’s past – pieces together the bizarre true history of a long-lost collection of 533 nitrate film prints from the early 1900s. A Q&A with Bill Morrison and Dean Essl will immediately follow the screening.
Located just south of the Arctic Circle, Dawson City was settled in 1896 and became the center of the Canadian Gold Rush that brought 100,000 prospectors to the area. It was also the final stop for a distribution chain that sent prints and newsreels to the Yukon. The films were seldom, if ever, returned. The now-famous Dawson City Collection was uncovered in 1978 when a bulldozer working its way through a parking lot dug up a horde of film cans. Morrison draws on these permafrost-protected, rare silent films and newsreels, pairing them with archival footage, interviews, historical photographs, and an enigmatic score by Sigur Rós collaborator and composer Alex Somers. Dawson City: Frozen Time depicts the unique history of this Canadian Gold Rush town by chronicling the life cycle of a singular film collection through its exile, burial, rediscovery, and salvation.
RSVP here.
Located in the Frederick P. Rose Auditorium, at 41 Cooper Square (on Third Avenue between 6th and 7th Streets)