Events
Events by Month
February 2025

CCAM Wednesday Wisdom: From A to Z
Explore a hands-on, experimental approach to typography with Tomáš Hlava, CCAM Graphic Designer and MFA candidate in Graphic Design at Yale School of Art!
Note: For participants who would like to do the exercise in full, please have experience with Adobe Illustrator or Glyphs and bring your own computer.
This workshop will begin with a short talk by Tomáš, who will share his interest in typography and specific context—when a type or a letter, often not even designed by a type designer, derives from specific situation or physical circumstances.
Following the talk, you’ll have the opportunity to work with physical materials, such as clay, to explore and determine shapes from which you can design a few letters or even a complete set. The goal is not necessarily to leave the workshop with a complete alphabet, but rather with an idea or interest that can be expanded later.
Designed and taught by Tomáš Hlava (Yale School of Art, Graphic Design, 2025)
Create, discover, and explore—and be part of the CCAM community! Our Wednesday Wisdom workshops explore dynamic intersections of the arts and technology, and are designed and taught by our team, along with collaborators from both on and off campus. Come to CCAM on select Wednesday evenings between September and May for creativity, conversation, and a pizza dinner.

CCAM Film Advisor Office Hours: Meet the Showrunner with Dr. Neal Baer
Join us for a “Meet the Showrunner” event with Dr. Neal Baer, Yale professor, showrunner of “Law & Order: SVU,” and longtime writer and producer of “ER.” This event is a part of the CCAM Film Advisor Office Hours. Join us for these discussions with Susan Youssef and fellow leaders from the world of film!
Dr. Baer recently served as Executive Producer and Showrunner of the third season of “Designated Survivor,” starring Kiefer Sutherland, which premiered globally on Netflix in the summer of 2019. Prior to “Designated Survivor,” he was Executive Producer and Showrunner for the hit CBS series “Under the Dome” and Executive Producer and Showrunner of the CBS medical drama “A Gifted Man.”
From 2000 to 2011, Dr. Baer was Executive Producer and Showrunner of “Law & Order: SVU,” where he oversaw all aspects of producing and writing the show. During his tenure, the series won numerous awards, including the Shine Award, People’s Choice Award, Prism Award, Edgar Award, Sentinel for Health Award, and Media Access Award. Actors on the show won six Emmys and a Golden Globe, and the series consistently ranked among the top ten television dramas in national ratings.
Before his work on SVU, Dr. Baer was Executive Producer of the Peabody and Emmy Award-winning NBC series “ER.” A member of the original staff, he wrote and produced for the series over seven seasons and received five Emmy nominations as a producer.

CCAM Symposium: "Illuminations"
The CCAM Symposium: “Illuminations” brings together artists, scientists, and technologists at the Yale Center for Collaborative Arts and Media (CCAM) to explore the “bringing of light.”
The program of events in our Leeds Studio and an accompanying exhibition at the CCAM ISOVIST Gallery include art, performances, discussions, and more with collaborators from CCAM, Yale, and the world.
At the links below, see the full program for Wednesday, February 19, Thursday, February 20, and Friday, February 21 from 5:00pm to 9:00pm each day.
The word “illumination” carries diverse meanings across time, space, and cultures. It evokes everything from illuminated medieval manuscripts to Walter Benjamin’s critical essays. As an artistic medium and movement, light has shaped the development of many technologies—from fire and lightbulbs to glowing screens. Festivals around the world celebrate divine inspiration, and the concept of intellectual enlightenment has marked historical progress. To illuminate can mean to reveal the unknown, and to inspire us to envision the yet unimagined.
The CCAM Symposium: “Illuminations” delves into these and other themes, gathering a community around them. In this, we also draw inspiration from Pulsa, a collaborative group of artists who gathered at Yale in the 1960s to explore light, sound, and emerging technologies.
The CCAM Symposium: “Illuminations” is organized by Dana Karwas, Lauren Dubowski, Matthew Suttor, and Ross Wightman and is co-sponsored by the Yale Center for Collaborative Arts and Media (CCAM) and the Yale-HP Curricular Technology Grant.

CCAM Symposium: "Illuminations": Opening Event: "ReVerb Room" with Sarah Oppenheimer
Join us for a transposition of Sarah Oppenheimer’s “N-04008,” created at Atelier Calder in Saché, France in 2024. Participants will explore the reverberations of the artwork in a new space and time. A reconstructed sonic network will simultaneously perform an echo of the work at Atelier Calder and an exploration of emerging prototypes. Following this experiment, Oppenheimer will be joined in conversation by Vic Brooks and Pamela Jordan.
“ReVerb Room” is supported by the Yale Center for Collaborative Arts and Media (CCAM), with collaboration on technical production by Simon Jeger, Ross Wightman, Konrad Kaczmarek, Maggie Schnyer, Helen Liene Dreifelds, and the Yale Center for Engineering and Innovation Design (CEID). With special thanks to Atelier Calder and EFPL-CDH Enter the Hyper-Scientific for their invaluable contributions to this project.
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From Oppenheimer:
An artwork’s echo extends its physical footprint in space and time. Each re-telling is a process of translation and transposition. When an artwork is documented—through image, sound, language—its spatial and temporal limits expand to absorb contexts beyond its initial boundaries. The artwork changes form, and its contextual determinants shift in time and space.
“ReVerb Room” explores this complex teleportation. Using Sarah Oppenheimer’s N-04008 as a case study, the workshop will consider documentation as re-location.
Created at Atelier Calder in 2024, “N-04008” embodied material potential in an energetic circuit. A network of instruments was activated by human touch. Visitors set in motion a chain reaction: by pulling a cable, air was routed through a pneumatic system, raising and lowering linked instruments in distant locations. The instruments communicated with one another, extending human connections through the building’s boundaries and across spatial gaps. Visual and sonic reverberations created questions of agency and causal attribution.
As a multisensorial network, the technical dimensions of “N-04008” are profoundly social. Visitors become active participants in a choreography of spatial revelation, where the rhythms and timescales of living systems flow from body to building and back again.
How might this dynamic be documented?
***
Sarah Oppenheimer is an architectural manipulator whose work explores the emergent relations between human and non-human systems. Rhythms and timescales of living systems flow from body to building and back again. The viewer is transformed into an agent of spatial change. Oppenheimer lives and works in New York, USA and Rotterdam, NL, and is a Professor in the Practice at Yale School of Art. sarahoppenheimer.com
Vic Brooks is a curator and creative producer who develops films, exhibitions, performances, and programs. Her research centers on the production and presentation of time-based visual art, with particular focus on the technological infrastructures and architectural acoustics of the institutions that support them. She consults on new initiatives for the Calder Foundation, the Aspen Art Museum, and the Doris Duke Foundation’s Performing Arts Technologies Lab, and is developing feature films with Aria Dean, Sierra Pettengill, and Martine Syms. Her co-edited book “Tuning Calder’s Clouds,” on the Central University of Venezuela’s Aula Magna, is forthcoming with Athénée Press: Bogotá in 2025.
Pamela Jordan is a licensed architect (RA, LEED AP), heritage consultant, and writer who uses sound to disquiet our assumptions of built space and analyze and conserve historic built environments. She is the co-founder of the SHAARP network for interdisciplinary scholars and practitioners who incorporate the senses into their practices. Her work has featured in both academic publications and art institutions; she is also the co-editor of the forthcoming “New Sensory Approaches to the Past: Applied Methods in Sensory Heritage and Archaeology” (University of College London Press, 2025).

CCAM Symposium: “Illuminations” (Day 1)
Join us for Day 1 of the CCAM Symposium: “Illuminations!”
The events take place at CCAM (149 York Street, New Haven, CT 06511) in the Leeds Studio, unless otherwise noted.
5:00pm–5:15pm:
Symposium Opening with the CCAM Team
5:15pm–6:45pm:
“ReVerb Room”
* Sarah Oppenheimer, Professor in the Practice, Yale School of Art and CCAM Faculty Fellow
* Vic Brooks, Curator and Creative Producer
* Pam Jordan, Architect, Heritage Consultant, and Writer
Join us for a transposition of Sarah Oppenheimer’s “N-04008,” created at Atelier Calder in Saché, France in 2024. Participants will explore the reverberations of the artwork in a new space and time. A reconstructed sonic network will simultaneously perform an echo of the work at Atelier Calder and an exploration of emerging prototypes. Following this experiment, Oppenheimer will be joined in conversation by Vic Brooks and Pamela Jordan.
“ReVerb Room” is supported by the Yale Center for Collaborative Arts and Media (CCAM), with collaboration on technical production by Simon Jeger, Ross Wightman, Konrad Kaczmarek, Maggie Schnyer, Helen Liene Dreifelds, and the Yale Center for Engineering and Innovation Design (CEID). With special thanks to Atelier Calder and EFPL-CDH Enter the Hyper-Scientific for their invaluable contributions to this project.
7:00pm–7:15pm:
Byte (short, featured project presentation) by Chaitanya Harshita Nedunuri Kahn, Design Strategist and CCAM Ultra Space Research Fellow
7:15pm–8:00pm:
Demo & Discussion of a documentary virtual recreation using Simulcam and stylization
* Setareh Samandari, VFX Artist and Director, Co-Founder at Interdimensional VFX
* Habib Zargarpour, VFX Artist, Virtual Production Supervisor at Interdimensional VFX
8:00pm–8:30pm (CCAM Lobby):
Reception by Queen of Tarts Catering

CCAM Symposium: "Illuminations" (Day 2)
Join us for Day 2 of the CCAM Symposium: “Illuminations!”
The events take place at CCAM (149 York Street, New Haven, CT 06511) in the Leeds Studio, unless otherwise noted.
4:00pm–5:00pm:
Arts Library Pop-Up with Caroline Scheving, 2024/25 Kress Fellow in Art Librarianship, Yale University Library
5:00pm–5:15pm:
Byte by Sally Snowman, U.S. Coast Guard Lighthouse Keeper (2003–2023)
5:15pm–5:45pm:
Submersible Experience
* Alison Sweeney, Associate Professor, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Physics, Yale University
5:45pm–7:00pm:
Panel: “Illumination, Darkness, and Non-Human Organisms”
* Matthew Suttor, CCAM Program Manager and Senior Lecturer, Theater, Dance, and Performance Studies
* Alison Sweeney, Associate Professor, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Physics, Yale University
* Priya Natarajan, Joseph S. and Sophia S. Fruton Professor of Astronomy and Professor of Physics, Yale University
* Richard Prum, William Robertson Coe Professor of Ornithology, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Curator, Peabody Museum, Yale University
7:15pm–7:30pm:
Byte by Joseph Zinter, Managing Director, Yale Center for Engineering Innovation and Design (CEID)
7:30pm–8:30pm:
Performances (Film, Video, Projection, Spatial Audio, Music):
* Violin duet composed by Matthew Suttor, performed by Keeley Brooks, Yale College Class of 2025, and Nathaniel Strothkamp, Yale College Class of 2026
* “Scattered Light” by Joshua Mastel and Nico Cadena, Artists
* Solo voice by AZ, Associate Professor, Department of Music, Yale University
* “Sonic Lanterns” by Konrad Kaczmarek, Associate Professor-Adjunct, Department of Music, Yale University; performed by the Yale Laptop Ensemble
* “Raster Fieldwork” by Ross Wightman, CCAM Technical Manager and Curator, CCAM Sound Art Series and Lecturer, Yale School of Art; and Matt Wellins, Artist
8:30pm–9:00pm (CCAM Lobby):
Reception by Queen of Tarts Catering

CCAM Symposium: “Illuminations” (Day 3)
Join us for Day 3 of the CCAM Symposium: “Illuminations!”
The events take place at CCAM (149 York Street, New Haven, CT 06511) in the Leeds Studio, unless otherwise noted.
5:00pm–5:15pm:
Byte by Ravi Kumar Kopparapu, Planetary Scientist, Planetary Environments Laboratory, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
5:15pm–6:30pm:
Panel: “Illuminating the Mysterious and Unexplainable”
* Elise Morrison, Assistant Professor, Theater, Dance, and Performance Studies, Yale University
* Francesco Casetti, Sterling Professor of Humanities and Film and Media Studies, Yale University
* Eeva-Liisa Pelkonen, Assistant Dean and Professor, Yale School of Architecture
* Al Powers, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine
6:45pm–7:20pm:
“Time Lapse Illuminations”: A Performance Demo & Discussion
* Jody Sperling, Choreographer and Founder/Artistic Director, Time Lapse Dance
* Maki Kitahara, Performer, Time Lapse Dance
* Andrea Trager, Performer, Time Lapse Dance
NYC-based dancer-choreographer Jody Sperling creates new work in the idiom of the early 20th-century dancer, designer, and technologist Loïe Fuller—who, among other unique contributions, pioneered new approaches to theatrical lighting. This event features Sperling with Maki Kitahara and Andrea Trager, two dancers from her company, Time Lapse Dance. After a brief introduction to Jody’s practice, the three will present a movement exploration swirling expansive silk costumes into dynamic screens for projection.
Using kinesphere-expanding costumes, Sperling’s work explores the body’s relationship to the larger environment. It has taken her around the world, including on a polar science mission as the first choreographer-in-residence aboard a U.S. Coast Guard icebreaker, where she danced on Arctic sea ice. Sperling is currently developing her practice of “ecokinetics,” which cultivates the relationship between the moving body and environmental systems while providing strategies for climate-engaged artmaking.
7:30pm–7:45pm:
Byte by Balarama Heller, Artist
7:45pm–8:00pm:
Symposium Closing with the CCAM Team & Opening of the “Illuminations” Exhibition at the CCAM ISOVIST Gallery, with works by:
* Bohan Chen and Deming Haines, M.Arch Students, Yale School of Architecture
* Lauren Dubowski, CCAM Interim Director
* Balarama Heller, Artist
* Dana Karwas, CCAM Director and Critic, Yale School of Architecture
* Jacqui Kenny, Artist
* Zach Lieberman and Iskra Velitchkova, Artists
* Pulsa Group (1966–1973)
* Gabriel Winer, Artist and CCAM Machine as Medium Fellow
* Alfred Wong, CCAM Ultra Space Research Fellow
8:00pm–8:30pm (CCAM Lobby):
Reception by Queen of Tarts Catering