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Founded by writer, producer, and consultant, Kate McCallum, BRIDGE ARTS MEDIA LLC is a Los Angeles based transmedia arts, entertainment and media production and consulting company dedicated to developing, creating and producing print and media properties specifically designed for cross-venue development and application. BRIDGE ARTS MEDIA LLC specializes in new media, audio and music content, visual music content, books and print media, emerging artforms, and traditional -- documentary, fiction and non-fiction TV and feature film properties that inform and inspire. New to our offerings is the development and production of multi-media content for the exciting new global venues of dome theatres and planetariums. We have formed a strategic alliance with Spherical Media, Inc. and Vortex Immersion Media, Inc. to co-create new media content. BRIDGE ARTS MEDIA LLC offers consulting and producing services to individuals and companies who wish to utilize innovative stategic guidance in bringing their own projects to realization, as well offers management support to a select group of artists. Mission BRIDGE ARTS MEDIA develops and produces content which explores the power of innovation, creativity and imagination, the strength of the human spirit, and the magic inherent in storytelling, the arts and mass communications. All projects created under BRIDGE ARTS MEDIA uphold and honor the values and visions of the artists, writers and content creators who come together to express their unique talents, gifts and passions toward the expansion and transformation of human potential. About the Bridge Arts Media Art Logo and design from an original print by artist Darryl Sapien... Artists' Statement: "In the 1970's I became interested in signs of all kinds, but especially those we consider the most commonplace. Of course traffic signs fit easily into that category. I was fascinated by how we scarcely question the iconography of the highway sign or the derivation of the non-verbal symbols used to communicate such information. Consequently, I began to alter the imagery, at first just a small bit to see how much I could change the reading of the sign with just a little tweak, but later on I altered the sign drastically. This piece falls into the latter category. In these later pieces I tried to juxtapose mundane or routine interpretations with others of a more archetypal nature. Much of my work over the decades is concerned with elevating the cliche to an archetype or, if you will, the transfiguration of the commonplace." Darryl Sapien, San Francisco, 2005 www.sapienfinearts.com
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