Education

Documenting America - Organizing Impactful Film Festivals - A project for Russia

On Friday, February 7, 2020, the Pueblo Regional Film Commission was honored to host a group of Russian film industry professionals in conjunction with the US State Department and the World Affairs Council Colorado Springs. For over 80 years, the highly competitive International Visitor Leadership Program at the State Department has been ranked as the elite professional program for visitors coming to the USA from around the world. Our guests included film festival organizers, professors of film, public relations and marketing experts from Moscow to Vladivostok (see bios below).

Our two hour morning program began with a lot of snow and smiles from our Russian guests who felt very much at home. We offered self-introductions around the room which was followed by the origin story of the Pueblo Regional Film Commission including the goals and objectives from film recruitment to workforce development. We also Illustrated how to organize and promote film festivals in a variety of venues, particularly documentary and independent film festivals. Pueblo is home to the 48 Hour Film Festival, SISFA Film Festival and MountainFilm. We also discussed the task of managing staff and volunteers for these special events.

We also touched upon a series of topics in the world of film including :

  • Understanding co-production during festivals

  • Management of community engagement at festivals, such as workshops and speaking events

  • Publicity, media coverage, media relations

  • Fundraising, advertising

  • Communication

  • Branding

  • American cinema history and theory at U.S. universities

  • Latest trends in documentary

Special thanks to Dustin Hodge and Tyler Shown for sharing their experiences as filmmakers here in Pueblo and beyond. The Pueblo Regional Film Commission thanks Jamie Bequette, International Visitor Program Manager, for developing the itinerary and for including Pueblo in its storytelling effort. At the conclusion of the event, all guests visited the 4th floor of the former meat packing plant for a group photo to commemorate the program.

For more information, click the links below.

International Visitor Leadership Program

Russian Visitor Biographies

Special thanks to Regan Foster of the Colorado Springs Independent for attending our event and submitting a story to The Wire. (Left: Cover art • Above: Tyler Shown of Jolly Mule Productions share his experience as a filmmaker with our guests.


New Pueblo Regional Film Commission Meets with Mayor of Pueblo

The Pueblo Regional Film Commission Development Team met with the Mayor at City Hall on January 22, 2020 to discuss the launch of this new commission and to secure support from the City of Pueblo. From left: Dustin Hodge, Cathy Valenzuela, Gregory H…

The Pueblo Regional Film Commission Development Team met with the Mayor at City Hall on January 22, 2020 to discuss the launch of this new commission and to secure support from the City of Pueblo. From left: Dustin Hodge, Cathy Valenzuela, Gregory Howell, Mara Alexandru, Mayor Nicholas Gradisar, Alan Lamberg, Tyler Shown, Sam Ebersole, Perry Perkins. Not shown is Laura Solano and Jeff Madeen.


The Pueblo Regional Film Commission aims to help foster the growth, sustainability, competitiveness and business attraction of Pueblo’s film, television and digital media industry. This in turn supports rural economic development, promotes tourism, employs Puebloans and brings diversity to our regional economy. The film industry directly employs skilled local workers, with many other businesses being impacted by production-induced spending, such as hotels, caterers and lumber companies.

The Pueblo Regional Film Commission is comprised of industry professionals with experience from Los Angeles to New York City and just about everywhere in between. The Commission enjoys the support of the Mayor’s Office and the Colorado Office of Film, Television and Media (COFTM).

The interest in filming here is at a pitch fever for many reasons, including the state's location diversity, its overall cost productions savings, its proximity to New Mexico and the professional support you'll receive from the Pueblo Regional Film Commission. We are here to help. Our team is well versed in these matters, and we’re happy to guide you through this process. Whether you are still considering Pueblo or have already decided to shoot here in Southern Colorado, you'll get red carpet treatment.

Valuable information about filming in Pueblo is available on our website. If you have further questions, just e-mail us or give us a call at 719.299.1492. To send us more detailed information about your project, please complete the Contact Form so we can better serve your needs.

Take One,

Pueblo Regional Film Commission

The International Light Painters Visit Pueblo

The Pueblo Regional Film Commission embraces innovation and creativity in the arts. Light painting takes digital media to a whole new level with a powerful mixture of visual and performing arts. Recently they descended upon Pueblo and explored the spaces at Watertower Place in the heart of the historic Grove neighborhood.

One of our primary objectives at Watertower Place is to encourage and foster a destination where art and engineering flourish. Recently, Watertower Place hosted Colorado Light Painting which is the largest group of its kind in the USA. Photographers, models, and painters from around the state descended on the former meat packing plant and created some powerful work which is too hard to explain with words alone.

The Origin of Light Painting

Light painting (also called light drawing) dates back to 1889 when Étienne-Jules Marey and Georges Demeny traced human motion in the first known light painting Pathological Walk From in Front.

The technique was used in Frank Gilbreth's work with his wife Lillian Moller Gilbreth in 1914, when the pair used small lights and the open shutter of a camera to track the motion of manufacturing and clerical workers.

Man Ray, in his 1935 series "Space Writing," was the first known art photographer to use the technique. He made a self-portrait with a time exposure and while the shutter was open, with a penlight he inscribed his name in cursive script in the space between him and the camera, overwriting the letters with more cryptic marks. Historian of photography Ellen Carey (*1952) describes her discovery of the artist's signature in this image while examining it in 2009.

Photographer Barbara Morgan began making light paintings in 1935-1941. Her 1941 photomontage Pure Energy and Neurotic Man incorporates light drawing and realises her stated aim; "that if I should ever seriously photograph, it would be...the flux of things. I wanted then, and still do, to express the ‘thing’ as part of total flow." In making innovative photographs of dancers, including Martha Graham and Erick Hawkins she would have them move while holding lights.

In 1949 Pablo Picasso was visited by Gjon Mili, a photographer and lighting innovator, who introduced Picasso to his photographs of ice skaters with lights attached to their skates. Immediately Picasso started making images in the air with a small flashlight in a dark room. This series of photos became known as Picasso's "light drawings." Of these photos, the most celebrated and famous is known as Picasso draws a Centaur.

Peter Keetman (1916–2005), who studied photography in Munich from 1935 to 1937, was the 1949 co-founder of FotoForm (together with Otto Steinert, Toni Schneiders et al.), a group with great impact on the new photography in the 50s and 60s in Germany and abroad. He produced a series Schwingungsfigur (oscillating figures) of complex linear meshes, often with moiré effects, using a point-source light on a pendulum.

During the 1970s and 80's Eric Staller used this technology for numerous photo projects that were called "Light Drawings". Light paintings up to 1976 are classified as light drawings.

In 1977 Dean Chamberlain extended the technique using handheld lights to selectively illuminate and/or colour parts of the subject or scene with his image Polyethylene Bags On Chaise Longue at The Rochester Institute of Technology. Dean Chamberlain was the first artist to dedicate his entire body of work to the light painting art form. The artist photographer Jacques Pugin made several series of images with the light drawing technique in 1979. Now, with modern light painting, one uses more frequently choreography and performance to photograph and organize.

In the 1970s and early 1980s, Steve Mann invented, designed, built, and used various wearable computers to visualize real-world phenomena such as sound waves, radio waves, and sight fields by light painting using computational photography.

Since the 1980s, Vicki DaSilva has been working exclusively in light painting and light graffiti. In 1980, DaSilva started making deliberate text light graffiti works, the first being "Cash". She continued these light graffiti photographs throughout the 1980s and eventually started using 4 foot fluorescent bulbs hooked up to pulley systems to create sheets of light. In the early 2000s she began making work with 8 foot fluorescent lamps, holding the lamp vertically and walking through spaces with it.

From the late 1980s Tokihiro Satō's photographs combine light, time and space in recording his movements in a series beginning with his “photo respirations” where his use of an 8 x 10-inch view camera fitted with a strong neutral-density filter to achieve lengthy exposures lasting one to three hours provide the opportunity for him to move through the landscape. When shooting in daylight, with a mirror he flashed light from the sun into the camera lens, resulting in points of light and flares that punctuate the image and track his movements, though his presence is not seen directly. For nocturnal or interior views he “draws” with a small torch.

Light painting as an artform enjoyed a surge in popularity in the 21st century, partly due to the increasing availability of dSLR cameras and mobile phone cameras enabling immediate feedback for adjustments of lights and exposure; advances in portable light sources such as LEDs; and the advent of media sharing websites by which practitioners can exchange images and ideas.

In March 2007, JanLeonardo coined the term light art performance photography (LAPP) which emphasises the performative aspect that is evident earlier in Satō's work, and used it to describe the creation of new figures and structures only with light. Following the original Greek meaning of Photography (Greek φῶς, phos, genetive: φωτός, photos, "light" (of the luminary), "brightness" and γράφειν, graphein, "drawing", "carve", "create", "write") it is a symbiosis of light art and photography. The main difference from other light painting or light writing, it has been claimed, is the role of the background in the photo.[clarification needed] Locations in the natural landscape or amongst buildings, such as industrial ruins, are carefully researched for distinctive backgrounds for each composition and LED-lamps are often used for contrasting cold and warm light to emphasise the existing structures. Collaboration is usually required in the performance of the work, with one person creating light figures and structures while the other operates the camera. In collaboration with Jörg Miedza, JanLeonardo founded the project LAPP-PRO.de that further developed the technique until in 2011, the pair disassociated. LAPP has grown internationally since its inception.

Light Painting at Watertower Place

Artist Paul Burns. (see works below) led the first group of light painting creatives at Watertower Place. Since then Watertower Place has hosted a variety of painters who continue to expand our understanding of the art form and the many applications that can be considered to achieve a heightened understanding of creativity and self-awareness.

In Pueblo we want creatives to thrive. Over the past year Watertower Place has enjoyed the amazing company of light painters who have taken over massive areas of the the former meat packing plant to showcase their amazing artistic and technical spirit. One of the light painters who visited Pueblo from the Boulder area is Margarita Rubiera and she recently released this video Welcome to Lucid Flow. Lucid Flow is more than just a photo or video booth. It is an interactive experience designed to empower you to become the creative through the making of your own unique light painting video and final image in a space adaptable to your event’s needs. To learn more about this powerful art form and to contact Margarita directy about light painting visit her website.