‘Chasing Ice’ Filmmaker to Discuss His Gripping Glacial Photography and Debut Unseen Footage at Macky Auditorium, April 1

Filmmaker and adventurer James Balog will share his stirring and beautiful glacial photography revealing changes in climate at a free event at 7 p.m., Monday, April 1 in the University of Colorado Boulder’s Macky Auditorium.

The event, “A Conversation with James Balog on the Art of Chasing Ice,” is hosted by Earth Vision Trust and CU-Boulder’s Inside the Greenhouse, a multidimensional project that explores the nexus of environmental science and the arts and humanities.

Similarly, Balog and his work bridge art and science. Balog is the founder of the Extreme Ice Survey and the subject of the award-winning 2012 documentary film “Chasing Ice.” He is a Boulder-based photographer, but his work spans the globe documenting changing ecosystems through time-lapse photography stationed at 13 glaciers on four continents.

“I have spent my professional life exploring the intersection of humans and nature,” Balog said. “In ‘The Art of Chasing Ice,’ I am honored to present through words and images, the intrinsic beauty and fragility of ice, which motivated us to make the movie.

“As a graduate of CU, I am delighted to be collaborating with Inside the Greenhouse on debuting not only this artistic work but their new performance series,” he said.

During “The Art of Chasing Ice,” Balog will share his insights, images and never-seen-before footage while discussing his on-going work in a public interview with Beth Osnes, assistant professor of theatre and dance.

Osnes leads Inside the Greenhouse in partnership with Max Boykoff, assistant professor in the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) and the Environmental Studies Program, and Rebecca Safran, assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology. All three professors work closely with Marda Kirn of EcoArts.

“Inside the Greenhouse was inspired by the Inside the Actors Studio model, but instead of probing the acting processes, we aim to draw out process, motivation and creative communications surrounding engagement with climate change,” Osnes said.

Inside the Greenhouse seeks to deepen the public understanding of how issues of climate change are communicated by creating artifacts— art, film, television programming— that convey climate change. The centerpiece of the project will feature highlights from the conversation with Balog and students’ creative work.

“Merely conveying information about climate change does not change behavior. We are interested in creative forms of communication that can bring out the relevance of the issues at the personal level,” Boykoff said.

“We want to engage students and the public in conversations about climate change, but one of our primary goals was to bring a high-profile leader in climate issues to campus to inspire both students and the larger Boulder community.”

Safran added: “James Balog is the perfect artist to feature in this first project, because he is bringing the reality of climate change front and center through images that are impossible to ignore. By bringing us to parts of the world where climate change is most visible, we see undeniable proof that our world is changing—rapidly.”

Balog’s work began with a 2005 National Geographic assignment to photograph retreating glaciers, which inspired him to preserve the vivid, visual evidence of climate change. Currently the Extreme Ice Survey employs 28 time-lapse cameras running in the Rocky Mountains, Greenland, Iceland, Alaska, Glacier National Park and at Mount Everest to continually document the beauty of ice and the rapid retreat of the world’s glaciers.

For more information about “A Conversation with James Balog on the Art of Chasing Ice,” parking and other details visit http://events.learnmoreaboutclimate.org/ice/. Parking around Macky Auditorium is limited. Community members are encouraged to plan ahead. For more on the Inside the Greenhouse project visit http://www.insidethegreenhouse.net.

“The Art of Chasing Ice” is sponsored by the CU-Boulder Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research (INSTAAR) and Learn More About Climate, an initiative that seeks to extend CU-Boulder climate science expertise to educators, policymakers and citizens. Additional sponsors include CIRES, the National Snow and Ice Data Center, the CU-Boulder Office for University Outreach, the CU-Boulder Environmental Center and Flatirons Bank.

The Results Are In! The 10 Most Popular Shows of 2012 Are…

The results of the poll of the 10 most popular shows of 2012 at Macky Auditorium are in. Some staple shows remain in the list while others have dropped. The competition was fierce, to say the least.

A big “thank you!” goes to everybody who participated and voted. Here is the list:

  1. Eddie Izzard
  2. Neil deGrasse Tyson
  3. Richard Dawkins
  4. Pilobolus
  5. Conference on World Affairs (#8 in 2011)
  6. TEDxBoulder (#10 in 2011)
  7. Boulder Philharmonic with Rony Barrak
  8. Holiday Festival (#1 in 2011)
  9. Canadian Brass Christmas
  10. Ailey II

Special mention goes to Boulder Philharmonic (Celebrating Takács) and Demetri Martin which almost made it to the list for just a few points.

What do you think? Is there another event in 2012 that should be instead in the list?

Richard Dawkins Lecture

Presented by the Richard Dawkins Foundation for Science and Reason

Monday, October 15 at 7:30 p.m.

Evolutionary biology icon Richard Dawkins (The God Delusion) has spent his career elucidating the wonders of science for adult readers. Now, he brings his message to a younger audience. In The Magic of Reality, richly illustrated by Dave McKean, Dawkins navigates between mythology and evidence-based understanding of the natural world to answer such questions as, “What is reality?” “Why do bad things happen?” “How and why did everything begin?” “Are we alone?” As Dawkins says, “In an age of wizards and vampires, children need to rediscover the wonder of the real world.”

Sean Faircloth will also be speaking. Book signings will follow the talks and books can be purchased at the event.

Tickets

Sold Out

Review: Neil deGrasse Tyson inspires at Macky

Neil deGrasse Tyson at Macky - Photo Robert DentonCU Independent’s Robert Denton reviews Dr. Tyson’s talk at Macky. “We have stopped innovating on the space frontier,” Tyson said. “Until I can look at a Saturn V rocket and not be amazed by it, we are behind.”

Read the whole article here.

Neil deGrasse Tyson to speak at CU Boulder

Neil deGrasse TysonThe CU Distinguished Speakers Board is proud to announce that renowned astrophysicist Dr. Neil deGrasse Tyson will be speaking at the University of Colorado’s Macky Auditorium Concert Hall  on February 15th, 2012. Dr. Tyson will be speaking on the collective expectations of humanity’s progress in space exploration and the geopolitical, cultural, and economic obstacles that must be overcome to achieve them. The talk will be followed by a half hour question and answer session with members of the audience.

Dr. Tyson is the current Director of the Hayden Planetarium at the Rose Center for Earth and Space, as well as a Research Associate at the American Museum of Natural History. Dr. Tyson is the host of NOVA scienceNOW on PBS, and will also be featured on the sequel to Carl Sagan’s award-winning television series, Cosmos: A Personal Voyage. Dr. Tyson earned his BA in Physics from Harvard University and his PhD in Astrophysics from Columbia University. A regular on The Daily Show, The Colbert Report, and Real Time with Bill Mahr, Dr. Tyson is well regarded in both the scientific community and popular culture for both his distinguished research career and his efforts to make science more interesting and accessible to the American public.

Doors are scheduled to open at 6:45pm, and the speech will begin at 7:30pm. Tickets are $2 for CU students with valid student ID and $15 dollars for community members. Student tickets can be purchased from the Distinguished Speakers Board table on the first floor of the University Memorial Center, Monday through Friday between 11:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. Community tickets can be purchased at macky.colorado.edu. For the hearing impaired, please contact cudsb@colorado.edu for tickets. Food and beverages, as well as backpacks, skateboards, cameras, and video recording equipment are prohibited from being brought into the auditorium.

Make sure you check out the facebook page for an opportunity to win two VIP tickets, two passes to the official reception, and a photo opportunity with Dr. Tyson: https://www.facebook.com/events/283192638401847/

Original post: http://cudsb.org/2012/01/22/neil-degrasse-tyson-coming-to-cu/

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