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See five original films about Indiana created by five award-winning Indiana filmmakers in Indianapolis!
In 2019, five award-winning Indiana filmmakers were chosen by Indiana Humanities to create short documentaries examining the ways Hoosiers experience urban and rural identities today. The films—about a dance instructor in Gary dealing with the city’s disinvestment in arts education, about a rural community newspaper in Wayne County filling the gap caused by media consolidation, about a southern Indiana composting business that hires the formerly incarcerated to transform the land and their ... view more »
ADMISSION INFO
General admission is $5. Tickets will be sold at the door if seats are available.
Please note unclaimed seats will be forfeited to a stand-by line 5 minutes prior to the screening.
Phone: 3176381500
Email: cmauschbaugh@indianahumanities.org
Website: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/inseparable-film-tour-indianapolis-tickets-...
INDIVIDUAL DATES & TIMES*
Additional time info:
Doors open at 6:00 PM.
VIDEOS
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In 2019, five award-winning Indiana filmmakers were chosen by Indiana Humanities to create short documentaries examining the ways Hoosiers experience urban and rural identities today. The films—about a dance instructor in Gary dealing with disinvestment in arts education, about a rural community newspaper in Wayne County filling the gap caused by media consolidation, about a southern Indiana composting business that hires the formerly incarcerated to transform the land and their lives—complicate our ideas about who lives in Indiana and what they’re up to.
Featured filmmakers include Dan Rybicky and Ryan Gleeson of Chicago’s Kartemquin Films, Emmy nominee Pat Wisniewski and Tom Desch, Bloomington-based duo Mitch Teplitsky and Gabriel Lantz, and Chad Perdue.
Learn more about the films and RSVP for one of 10 stops around the state at IndianaHumanities.org/Films.
LOCATION
820 E 67th Street, Indianapolis, IN 46220
PARKING INFO
Parking is accessible in lots to the east and south of the Art Center as well as a small lot to the west near the Art Center’s auxiliary building, the Cultural Complex.