When 8-year-old filmmaker Celia Jensen decided to make a film about the demise of Seattle’s Gum Wall — with her father, Matt Jensen, capably assisting — she looked to the 91̽»¨for an expert to interview and found .
And though Ochsner is otherwise busy being a professor of architecture and associate dean for academic affairs in the , he was happy to help.
In the short film, Ochsner is interviewed in his Architecture Hall office. He tells Celia he thinks people come to the Gum Wall “to get a chance to do something that in any other location would be forbidden – and so it is as if you left your mark.”
Celia’s film, “The Secret Life of a Gum Wall,” will be shown as part of the “” group of films at the Seattle-based National Film Festival for Talented Youth.
Celia, now 9, has made and submitted other films, and in 2014 was the youngest filmmaker ever selected by the festival, which is for those under 21.
The screening will be at 1 p.m. Sunday, May 1, at the theater, at 511 Queen Anne Ave. North. It’s open to the public and are $10-$12.