The Fabric of Celluloid: A Conversation with Dr. Alla Gadassik

Schedule

Sat Aug 01 2026 at 01:00 pm to 03:00 pm

UTC-07:00
Location

Museum of Craft and Design | San Francisco, CA

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A surprising look at cinema’s material history.
About this Event

The history of film is usually told through cinema’s machines and screens, but its material story also runs through the textile workshop.

Celluloid is best known as the medium of analog cinema and animation, but it began as the material of another craft. Synthesized from cellulose originally derived from cotton, this early plastic stiffened shirt collars and replaced ivory in fashion goods and decorative objects before it carried photosensitive emulsion. Early cinema mechanics drew from a textile lineage: the Lumière Brothers’ Cinématographe used the claw of a sewing machine to thread ribbons of film.

Join us on Saturday, August 1, for an engaging talk with Dr. Alla Gadassik, a noted researcher, curator, writer, and associate professor at Emily Carr University of Art + Design in Vancouver, BC, specializing in animation and media art.

This presentation features celluloid as a material that has always straddled moving images and craft. It traces the surprising connections between cinema and textile-based making through the work of artists who make that material kinship visible.

In Len Lye's cameraless animation, the filmstrip becomes a pliant length of fabric, dyed and stenciled into patterns that pulse on screen. In classical animation, the hand-inked and hand-painted cel reveals the delicate and gendered manual labor often likened to embroidery that underpinned popular cartoons. Among contemporary artists, including several featured in Video Craft, celluloid film is quilted, woven, and sewn into pieced tapestries and projected screens.

The history of celluloid reminds us of the tangible fiber of analog moving images: an art form crafted from woven ribbons and patient handwork, from which the substance of cinema is spun.



Above Images:
Len Lye, Color Cry (filmstrips), 1952–53. Installation view from Old Brain, New Media, Govett- Brewster Art Gallery, 2006. Courtesy of the Len Lye Foundation and Govett-Brewster Art Gallery | Len Lye Centre.
Kelly Egan, ATHYRIUM FILIX-FEMINA (detail), 2016. 182.88cm x 228.6cm; 4 mins 18 sec. acetate and polyester film, splicing tape, fishing line, moving image. © and courtesy the artist.

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Where is it happening?

Museum of Craft and Design, 2569 3rd Street, San Francisco, United States

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