Tag Archives for Oral History
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My ongoing work with the Whitney Museum, facilitating conversations and conducting oral histories in the Meatpacking District, was featured in the Whitney Museum Education Blog.
LMCC SPARC Senior Performance Project
Collaborating with director Julie Kline in an LMCC granted “Seniors Partnering with Artists Citywide” performance project.
What: Seniors and the City: Stories of New York
When: Residency is four months. Performances will be held Friday, June 15 at 7pm & Saturday, June 16 at 2pm
Where: Senior Center at Saint Peter’s Church
619 Lexington Avenue, New York, NY 10022
Radio: Paramedic Humor
Listen:
A brief piece about the weird and wacky humor of a NYC paramedic, James Dobson.
Credits
Interview: Repurposed sound from an oral history conducted by Gerry Albarelli for the 9/11 Oral History Project at Columbia University.
Produced by Sarah Loose and Liza Zapol, for Radio Off the Dial.
Quote
Sometimes we tell our humor and people don’t get it. They’re like, “That ain’t too funny.” And to us it’s funny.
Featured on The Metropolitan Museum Website
My Multimedia Project, September 11, 2011 at The Metropolitan Museum, was featured on the homepage of The Metropolitan Museum website for over a week, a site which gets 40,000,000 visitors a year!
Here’s what the website says:
Zapol’s film reveals the role of the Museum as a place for individuals to remember, to contemplate, to seek meaning and solace in works of art, and, ultimately, to come together.
Watch the piece by clicking here
September 11, 2011 at The Metropolitan Museum
At the Metropolitan Museum November 15, 2011 until January 22, 2012.
Opposite the 9/11 Peace Story Quilts, in the Uris Education Center
Memories of September 11, 2001, ten years later.
Interviews with visitors, educators, artist Faith Ringgold, and young artists.
Exploration of The 9/11 Peace Story Quilt (created by Faith Ringgold and the InterRelations Collaborative).
Credits
Direction & Interviews: Liza Zapol
Photography: Amanda Kowalski
Commissioned by: The Metropolitan Museum, New York City, 2011.
Quote
“The children came up with… something that was so beautiful and peaceful, out of something that was so ugly and violent.”
—Faith Ringgold
Holocaust Survivors in the Lower East Side
As Epstein Oral History Fellow with the Lower East Side Tenement Museum, I interviewed several Holocaust survivors who lived, or still live in the Lower East Side after emigrating to the United States. These oral histories are full of rich stories of how the survivors adjusted to their new homes, as well as how they were received in America.
Here, Isak Schachter remembers his first visit to Central Park.
Created in Affiliation with the Lower East Side Tenement Museum, 2011.
This interview is excerpted from one of several interviews for this project.
True Body Project at the Brooklyn Museum
Created a mother’s day performance drawn from Judy Chicago’s The Dinner Party and interviews with over 200 women in New York.
Credits
Produced by: Stacy Sims and Cameron Anderson, The True Body Project
Created by: Liza Zapol, Cameron Anderson, Maria Portman Kelly, Ilyana Kadushin
Performed by: Caroline Cho, Dawn Eshelman, Noni Fernandez, Rajeeyah Finnie, Ilyana Kadushin, Maria Portman Kelly, Marie Marsham, Elka Rodriguez, Aparna Reddy-Sargent, and Liza Zapol
Photography: Gili Getz
Commissioned by: The Brooklyn Museum of Art, The True Body Project
Quote
“I hunger for something that can’t crave my appetite!”





