Visual Connections New York 2014
Where | New York, United States |
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Date | Wednesday, October 22, 2014 |
Venue | The Altman Building |
Address | 135 West 18th Street, New York, NY 10011 (map) |
Useful links
Session program
Keynote Q&A Session 10am-noon
360° view of copyright, trends and technology in visual licensing today
Target audience: Image buyers looking to update on the state of the industry
The morning’s panel of picture professionals and pioneers examined what’s new and notable in the world of image/footage licensing. Their collective expertise covers all bases: legal, business and technical.
Questions asked to date
- Please speak to the legal ramifications of posting stock photography on social media sites when their T&C explicitly states that they own reproduction and resale rights of any images posted to a user's account.
- Any tips for experienced still image researchers for researching and permissioning footage and/or music - what are the similarities and differences?
Footage Q&A Session 3-4:15pm Free
Best practices for finding & licensing video
Target audience: Image/footage buyers looking for an introduction or refresher on all things footage.
If your background is in researching or buying stills, or if you’re new to licensing stock media, this session is a great way get up to speed with using footage. Our panel of experts will be able to answer any questions you may have.
Guest Speaker: Alex Center 5:30-6:15pm Free
Stay Thirsty, Stay Foolish
This is a critical time in the connection between design and business. People don’t just appreciate good design; they expect it. Great design helps us connect and communicate with people all over the world. But why do some brands connect with people while others don’t?
People use stories to communicate, explore, persuade and inspire. Visual storytelling enables brands to educate, entertain and establish an emotional connection with consumers. This is essential in an overcrowded marketplace, where it is harder than ever for brands to make that connection.
Alex Center will share how his experience working on the vitaminwater brand has taught him that storytelling, consumer collaboration, user experience design, brand personality and tapping into culture are some of the ways to design for people, not products.
How do I register for a session?
To attend any of the sessions, please register for the image expo. You will then see the option to buy tickets (for yourself and colleagues) for the Keynote Q&A Session. There is no need to register for the Footage Q&A Session or Guest Speaker.
Owing to limited space, the expo and sessions are strictly limited to professional image buyers. Please do not try to register if you are a photographer or student.
How do I submit a question?
To have the greatest chance of having your question answered at the Keynote Q&A Session, please submit it online beforehand (the sooner the better, so our panel can do their homework!) When you register for the session (see above), you will see a box at the bottom of the last page where you can enter your question. You can add or change your question after registering by clicking on the link in your registration confirmation email or by going back into the registration system and clicking on the link ‘Register for session.’
Our panelists for the Keynote Q&A Session
Nancy Wolff, a partner at Cowan DeBaets Abrahams & Sheppard LLP in New York City and PACA Counsel, specializes in copyright, trademark, rights of privacy/publicity and digital media law. Nancy offers full legal support to a wide range of traditional and digital media clients. She is currently Vice President of the Copyright Society of the USA and Co-Chair of the ABA subcommittee on Copyright Legislation. She is a frequent speaker throughout the United States and Europe on copyright, technology and licensing. In 2007 she published her book entitled The Professional Photographer’s Legal Handbook with Allworth Press and PACA. She was awarded the 2007 ASPP Picture Professional of the Year.
Paul Melcher is the founder and Editor in Chief of Kaptur. He was named one of the “100 most important people in photography” by American Photo Magazine and has more than twenty years of photo and technology experience at top agencies such as Corbis and Gamma Press, and innovative tech companies like Stipple and DigitalRailroad.
Karen Beard is founder and creative director of Shestock, an agency which delivers honest, highly-curated, exclusive stock and assignments with the artist’s vision as the essential starting point. Karen is also a professional photographer with close to 20 years’ experience executing commercial photo shoots and running related businesses.
Nuno Silva is Director of Content at 500px Prime, the innovative commercial licensing division of 500px, and an accomplished professional photographer and graphic designer. He was a founder of the Stocksy United co-operative and, before that, worked at iStockPhoto. He has been a guest judge for the Sony World Photography Awards.
Darrell Perry creates photography for all media, as an editor, producer and researcher. He has led teams at the Wall Street Journal, CBS, ImageDirect and Mulryan/Nash Advertising. Darrell shared in the Pulitzer Prize in Journalism for Breaking News Reporting for the coverage of the tragic events on and after September 11th, 2001.
Moderator
Ellen Herbert, owner of NEAT Production, is a producer/editor/art buyer on the West Coast for a wide array of clients, including the 2000 Democratic National Convention, High Wide & Handsome, deviantART and the Academy Award winning documentary The Children’s March. Her newest project is becoming a partner in the Genre Stock agency Novel Expression.
Our panelists for the Footage Q&A Session
Cathy Carapella is Vice President of Global ImageWorks, an independent stock footage library with an active Film Research & Rights Clearance department. Before that she was President of the US division of Diamond Time, an international copyright clearance company specialized in music supervision and licensing, film clip clearances, artist consents, DPD licensing, and sampling clearances. Cathy has been working in the field of music and media licensing since the early 1980s.
Max Segal became a founder in 2003 of the HBO Archives, which includes content from The March of Time documentaries (1935-67), HBO Entertainment News division, and high-end stock footage outtakes from HBO Films. Max started his career at HBO in 1989 as head of Rights and Clearances for the network’s Sports division and began producing features in 1991, winning the Sports Emmy Award in 2003 for his Inside the NFL feature story contributions. Max is currently Co-President of ACSIL.
Jim McDonnell is a visual researcher with 15 years’ experience in the documentary world, working with archival film and videotape. He has worked on projects for the VH1 RockDoc series, VH1 Behind the Music, PBS American Masters (including Hear My Train A Comin’ – about Jimi Hendrix), and independent TV and movie documentaries (including Alex Winter’s Downloaded – about Napster, Crossfire Hurricane – about The Rolling Stones, and Alex Gibney’s Mr. Dynamite: The Rise of James Brown).
Moderator
Matt White is a Managing Partner at Sutton Hoo Studios and Executive Director of ACSIL. He is an award-winning filmmaker of archive-inspired programs with over 25 years’ experience as an industry leader in the care and development of audio-visual archives. Matt established The WPA Film Library in 1986, and has held senior management positions at National Geographic and The Corporation for Public Broadcasting. He is currently co-producing Beatles Live! with with Apple Corps Ltd and director Ron Howard.
Our guest speaker
Alex Center is a Brooklyn-based designer who currently works for the global beverage leader, The Coca-Cola Company. He grew up in the town of Oceanside NY, home to the world’s second Nathan’s Famous Hot Dogs. He once worked as a designer for the New York Knicks with his childhood idol, John Starks, and his nemesis Isiah Thomas.
Over the years, he has designed packaging that has reached hands across the globe, created breakthrough marketing campaigns, launched innovative new products and once met rapper 50 Cent, who told him, “You must think you’re pretty special.” He got nervous and instantly started sweating.
In 2011 Alex was named one of the 200 Best Packaging Designers by Luerzers Archive. In 2012 he started sharing his story with speaking engagements at The Dieline Forum, HOW Design Live and as a guest on Debbie Millman’s famous Design Matters podcast. In 2014 Alex was named a Person To Watch by GDUSA Magazine, joining the likes of legendary past recipients Milton Glaser, Primo Angeli, George Lois and Saul Bass. Today he leads the design vision and strategy for global brands at Coca-Cola, which include vitaminwater, smartwater and Powerade.
In his personal time Alex enjoys rooting for New York sports teams that wear orange/blue, doing improv at the UCB Theatre, and searching for the freshest prosciutto in New York City.
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News & updates
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New website being rolled out
We’re delighted to be launching our new website design in time for Visual Connections New York 2017. Do check out the [a href="/blog/"]blog[/a]!