- When
- Wed., Nov. 15, 2017, 7â9:30 p.m.
- Where
- Art Theater
- Tickets
- Free, registration recommended
Join Carnegie Museum of Art and the University of Pittsburgh for a screening of the film Containment. A Q&A with filmmaker Peter Galison follows.
About the Film
Can we contain some of the deadliest, most long-lasting substances ever produced? Left over from the Cold War are a hundred million gallons of radioactive sludge, covering vast radioactive lands. Governments around the world, desperate to protect future generations, have begun imagining society 10,000 years from now in order to create monuments that will speak across the time. Part observational essay filmed in weapons plants, Fukushima and deep undergroundâand part graphic novelâContainment(external link) weaves between an uneasy present and an imaginative, troubled far future, exploring the idea that over millennia, nothing stays put.
About Filmmaker Peter Galison
Peter Galison is a Pellegrino University Professor of the History of Science and of Physics at Harvard University. Galisonâs previous film on the moral-political debates over the H-bomb, Ultimate Weapon: The H-bomb Dilemma (with Pamela Hogan, 2002) has been shown frequently on the History Channel and is widely used in academic courses. In 1997, he was awarded a John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Fellowship; won a 1998 Pfizer Award for Image and Logic as the best book that year in the History of Science; and in 1999 received the Max Planck and Humboldt Stiftung Prize. His books include How Experiments End (1987), Einsteinâs Clocks, PoincarĂ©âs Maps (2003), and Objectivity (with L. Daston, 2007) and he has worked extensively with de-classified material in his studies of physics in the Cold War. Galisonâs work also features artistic collaborations, including partnering with South African artist William Kentridge on a multi-screen installation, The Refusal of Time.