image description
Penguins in the South Atlantic seen in the documentary 'Antarctic Voyage' screening Monday at Images Cinema.
image description
An albatross near South Georgia Island. The winter research expedition was the first in 30 years. Kevin Schreck was invited to create a documentary to make the trip's findings more accessible.
image description
Blue Antarctic ice.

Images Cinema to Screen Antarctic Documentary

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story

Sunrise over the Antarctic during southern winter from 'Antarctic Voyage.'
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Plenty of artists suffer for their work.
 
Not many have to go under the knife for it.
 
Documentary filmmaker Kevin Schreck screens his documentary "Antarctic Voyage" on Monday evening at Images Cinema.
 
The film follows environmental scientist Samantha Monier on a research expedition to the remote South Atlantic island of South Georgia.
 
It was a project years in the making and one for which Schreck had to go above and beyond.
 
"I had to endure surgery to qualify for this [voyage,]," Schreck said in a recent telephone conversation from his base in Brooklyn, N.Y.
 
"They want to make sure, with you being thousands of miles from a doctor or dentist or medical facility, that you're OK. They can't risk anything that is preventable or expected. … I had a wisdom tooth that was a millimeter or so out of place. I was fine with it. I probably could have lived for years and never had a problem with it. But the government was like, 'If that thing ruptures while you're at sea, it jeopardizes the whole mission, and I agreed."
 
Monier's work was sponsored by the National Science Foundation, which suggested that the researcher find a way to make the trip's findings more accessible to a larger audience than those who typically might read a scientific paper, Schreck said.
 
"It was Sam's idea to have a documentarian," he said.
 
Fortunately for her, she knew one, a college friend with a talent for filmmaking and a love for biology … even if the two had not always been connected.
 
"Growing up, I'd watch science and nature films on PBS or from the BBC with David Attenborough," Schreck said. "Things like that were incredibly inspiring to me.
 
"I knew I wanted to be a filmmaker since I was 10 years old. Going to college, I had this liberal arts approach of exploring lots of passions and biology, and I had always been interested in the natural world — probably at least as long as I was into making movies, maybe longer. I was thinking, 'Should I be a biology major?' "
 
Ultimately, he gravitated toward film after realizing that a career in making movies would leave the door open to pursue a host of passions.
 
Most of his career, it turned out, tended more toward biography than biology.
 
His 2015 documentary on animator Richard Williams, "Persistence of Vision," was screened in film festivals from Melbourne, Australia, to Oslo, Norway, to Boston. In 2018, he released "Tangent Realms," which examines contemporary Turkish artist C.M. Kösemen and was named Best Documentary by Cleveland's Indie Gathering International Film Festival.
 
HIs next release, a feature-length documentary on rapper/producer/Ph.D. candidate Enongo Lumumba-Kasongo, is seven years in the making, Schreck said.
 
But in between creating all those character studies, the opportunity arose to join Monier in her studies.
 
"I jumped at the chance," Schreck said.
 
Even if it meant going to one of the coldest places on Earth … in the dead of winter.
 
"What's significant about this research is there hasn't been research funded by the National Science Foundation or conducted by anyone from the United States about what wildlife is up to in the southern winter around that region … in 30 years," Schreck said. "A lot can happen in 30 years.
 
"Most research is done during the local summer time — for obvious reasons: It's more comfortable, wildlife is more active, they're breeding, you get a lot more daylight. But if you don't know what the wildlife is up to for half of the year for 30 years, you're missing half the story."
 
In the (southern) winter of 2023, Schreck set sail for four weeks in the South Atlantic to help tell that story as well as the story of the researchers.
 
"Even though I was inspired by nature films, I didn't want to emulate a style that's already there," he said. "I was making a film I wanted to see. Sometimes, these films don't focus on the scientist. Sometimes it's just the data, and they don't focus on the biography.
 
"I knew I wanted to really make it feel like an adventure — in an authentic way. I want to make it feel like the audience was there on this unique adventure. Getting to know the people involved is an important element of that."
 
Because space was limited on the research vessel, Schreck was a film crew of one, but that fit in with his process. On most projects, he has had maybe two or three other people along on locations, he said.
 
"Yes, it was a very lean operation, but that's kind of how I roll with these things," he said.
 
"Even though this shoot required the most of me physically and was on such a tight schedule by necessity, it was one of the easiest things I've edited. It was something I've always wanted to make, even though I didn't consciously think about it.
 
"I'm very lucky to be part of a very small club of people who have been able to make a creator-driven, artful film in the Antarctic, get paid to do it and have full creative control over it."
 
"Antarctic Voyage" screens at Images Cinema in Williamstown on Monday, April 14, at 7 p.m. Director Kevin Schreck will be on hand for a conversation after the film. Admission is "pay what you can."

Tags: documentary,   images,   natural history,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Williams College Art Museum Will Be a Lab for Sustainability

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff

Michael Evans and Tanja Srebotnjak of  the Zhilka Center for the Environment get into details about green standards. 
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The sustainable aspects of the new $175 million Williams College Museum of Art will influence the next generation of arts leaders. 
 
"Really building a learning laboratory for sustainable art museums for the future," said Pamela Franks, museum director, at Monday night's community forum.
 
"One of the really distinctive features of the Williams College Museum of Art is its long tradition and contribution to the field of arts leadership. So a student who's leading a tour today may be the director of a major museum tomorrow, and everything that the student learns over the time that they're here at Williams becomes a kind of possibility for impact moving forward."
 
The forum at the Williams Inn was the latest public update on the museum's progress and information on its various aspects, this time on its sustainability focus. 
 
When it opens in fall 2027, the single-story structure designed by Brooklyn-based firm SO–IL will be something of an epitome of the college's sustainability and conservation ethos, first formally adopted by the trustees in 2011.
 
Over nearly 20 years, construction and renovations on campus have focused on attaining energy efficiencies, with projects over $5 million required to reach the gold standard in Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, or LEED. The college has also sought the Living Building Challenge's Petal level in several cases. 
 
The museum is also looking to become an International Living Future Institute core building, of which only two now exist, and is focusing on Energy Use Intensity benchmarks, with the goal to operate with 70 percent less usage than a comparable 1990 museum. The structure will also be "zero ready" for solar, although it will powered through electricity not solar panels. 
 
View Full Story

More Williamstown Stories