Flaherty News — The Flaherty

Flaherty Seminar

ONWARD! 70th Seminar Registrations + Fellowship Applications NOW OPEN

The visual identity for this year’s Seminar is deeply inspired by the work of Bill Brand, whose colorful public artwork MASSTRANSISCOPE embodies the spirit of movement, transition, and collective experience — ideas that are at the core of this year’s theme, Onward! As Art Director, Maliyamungu Muhande led the creative vision, drawing from Brand’s dynamic use of motion and form to shape the seminar’s visual identity. Zīle Liepins, as Designer, translated this inspiration into a striking design that reflects Flaherty’s evolving conversations, layered histories, and commitment to radical cinema.
More details on this creative process and Flaherty’s collaboration with Bill Brand will be shared soon.

ONWARD! The 70th Flaherty Film Seminar
Registrations + Fellowship Applications
NOW OPEN

ONWARD! The 70th Seminar, curated collaboratively by Janaína Oliveira, Carlos A. Gutiérrez, and Richard Herskowitz will take place June 26th to 29th, 2025 in New York City and simultaneously in:

  • 🇹🇭 Salaya, ThailandThai Film Archive

  • 🇮🇳 New Delhi, IndiaKhoj International Artists’ Associationin partnership with Kaddukkas

  • 🇵🇱 Warsaw, PolandCultural Center for Modern Art - Ujazdowski Castle, in partnership with Faculty of Modern Languages - University of Warsaw and AMATOR Film and Education Association.

  • 🇵🇹 Porto, PortugalEscola Superior Artística do Porto + Batalha Centro de Cinema

  • 🇵🇹 Lisbon, PortugalFBAUL, in partnership with IPLUSO + IFILNOVA

  • 🇨🇴 Bogotá, ColombiaCinemateca de Bogotá, Instituto Distrital de las Artes - Idartes

  • 🇨🇦 Toronto, CanadaCinecycle, in partnership with CFMDC

  • 🇺🇸 Los Angeles, USAUSC School of Cinematic Arts, in partnership with Dornsife Center for Ethnographic Media Arts

The Seminar in New York City will open on Thursday June 26th at The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). The remainder of the public programs will be hosted at The New School on Friday June 27th and Saturday June 28th, and at Firehouse: DCTV’s Cinema for Documentary Film on Sunday June 29th. 

True to our longstanding notion of non-preconception, the film programs will not be announced in advance. Schedule details can be found on our website.

*There are a limited number of tickets in each location. We encourage you to register as soon as possible. Please remember that registration does not include accommodations or travel.

Are you interested in applying for one of our Fellowships? See more below.


Participants at the 1969 Seminar, programmed by Willard Van Dyke & D. Marie Grieco

ONWARD!
4 Days. 5 Public Programs. 9 Global Pods

In moments of great upheaval, can cinema provide fuel for a radical paradigm shift? What cultural momentum does the cinema offer us today? The very acts of making and watching non-fiction films are rooted deep in legacies of solidarity and resistance. How does this moment call on us to nourish those legacies and forge our own?

Onward! is a call to move through obstacles with collective action. Onward! is the call of the artist, the activist, the doula, the hopeful, the grieving - the people in the midst of painful transition. Onward! is animated both by the urgency of change, and the patience to know that liberation must come, will come. Onward! embraces the battlefield as the terrain of greater possibility. Freedom is an ongoing state of insistence that is carried forward in each act of making, questioning, resisting, remembering. Onward! is to stay the course and trust in the process of change.

Movement is not solitary. Onward! calls for collectivity, for curiosity, for entanglement, for hope, for solidarity across generations. Onward! is propelled by calls from the past, which too believed in the potency of the moment, and of all moments yet to come. Onward! celebrates coexisting and futurities.

Onward! is the irresistibility of resistance. 

Our format in 2025 — four days, five public programs — allows many more people to be present. An additional five programs, curated collaboratively with the seminar programmers alongside Jemma Desai, will be shared with the intensive Fellowship program, which runs concurrently June 25-29th.

The mini-seminar format echoes the Arden House Seminars that took place in New York City from 1971-1981, in direct response to President Nixon's request that “all funds for public broadcasting be cut immediately.” We are inspired by the creative coalescence of that moment, and wish to channel its' perseverance, organizing, and ingenuity into the present times.

Thank you to all the Elders and advisors who contributed their stories and ideas to our 70th Seminar design: Sally Berger, Bill Brand, John Bruce, Patti Bruck, Pablo de Ocampo, Jemma Desai, Jon Gartenberg, Jon-Sesrie Goff, Carlos Gutiérrez, Ed Halter, Richard Herskowitz, Steve Holmgren, Jason Livingston, Scott MacDonald, Louis Massiah, Janaína Oliveira, and Lynne Sachs, and, of course, Patty Zimmermann:


“The Flaherty does, in fact, have one enduring feature: argument. (...) Everyone seems to disagree about what The Flaherty was, is, or should be. These debates are never resolved, always opening up ideas and films to a yet to be imagined future. In the end, contentious, pitched arguments with like-minded people about cinema, politics, and art keep The Flaherty convulsing, vibrating, and pulsing with life. Never cemented to its legacies, never inert, The Flaherty can never be defined only by its history because, as Erik Barnouw declared, it has only one goal: ONWARD.”


Flaherty Global Pods

We are delighted to announce that from June 26 to 29, people in Salaya, New Delhi, Warsaw, Porto, Lisbon, Bogotá, Toronto, New York, and Los Angeles will be able to gather daily to watch Seminar programming and participate in discussions with other local participants at official Seminar Pods.

In addition to the official Seminar Pods, a series of smaller scale, self organized Gatherings will take place worldwide, with more details to be announced soon.

At each of our partner venues, groups of participants will gather for four days of in-depth engagement with Flaherty Seminar programs. Each Pod will screen the same films presented that day in New York City, fostering collective and dynamic discussions. Facilitated by local curators, artists, organizers, and discussion leaders, these conversations will be enriched by additional materials and prompts provided by the Seminar team. Some Pods will complement Seminar programs with regional film curation. 

This year’s Pods are made possible by the incredible partnerships with our Seminar Pod Partners: the Thai Film Archive, Khoj International Artists’ Association, Kaddukkas, Cultural Center for Modern Art - Ujazdowski Castle, Faculty of Modern Languages - University of Warsaw and AMATOR Film and Education Association., Escola Superior Artística do Porto + Batalha Centro de Cinema, FBAUL,  IPLUSO, IFILNOVA, Cinemateca de Bogotá, Instituto Distrital de las Artes - Idartes, CFMDC, Cinecycle, USC School of Cinematic Arts, in partnership with Dornsife Center for Ethnographic Media Arts

Registrations for Pods are open now - find a Pod near you and join! 


Seminar participants and Fellows at the lake. 1998 Flaherty Film Seminar programmed by Barbara Abrash & Linda Blackaby.

Fellowship

Applications for the 2025 Flaherty Fellowships are now open!

Each year, the Flaherty offers Fellowships to enable emerging and mid-career filmmakers, media professionals, and community leaders to attend the Flaherty Film Seminar. Rooted in a decades-old tradition of rigorous inquiry and open dialogue, the Flaherty Fellowship program offers an enriched Seminar experience through extended opportunities for reflection, connection, exchange, and creative exploration.

Visit the Fellowship page to learn more about the Fellowship opportunities and the eligibility criteria. The deadline to apply is Sunday, April 6.

Support for the 2025 Flaherty Fellowship program is generously provided by the LEF New England Foundation, the Waterman II Fund of the Philadelphia Foundation, the Kate Cashel Fund of The Community Foundation for the Greater Capital Region, California Institute of the Arts School of Film/Video, Duke University MFA|EDA, Cinematic Arts, and Vice-Provost of the Arts, The Film Study Center at Harvard University (FSC), Northwestern University Department of Art, Theory, Practice, University of California San Diego Visual Arts Department, Purin Pictures, Corrientes, The Nazaara Media Lab at Cornell University, California College of the Arts, Center for Documentary Media at the University of Colorado Boulder, Haverford College Department of Visual Studies, Shine Global, and The School of Media Studies at The New School.

The Flaherty thanks all our partners, who support the Seminar, Fellowship, Pods,
and our wider work as an independent organization.

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70th Flaherty Film Seminar: June 26-29 in NYC with Global Pods

70th Flaherty Film Seminar

Thursday, June 26 – Sunday, June 29, 2025
New York City, with Global Pods
and an Online Experience


This year’s Seminar will gather participants for four days in New York City, alongside a series of Global Pods and an Online Experience. To commemorate The Flaherty's 70th anniversary, the program will be curated collaboratively by past seminar programmers Janaína Oliveira (OPACITY, 2021), Carlos Gutiérrez (SOUTH OF THE OTHER, 2007, with Mahen Bonetti), and Richard Herskowitz (1987 Seminar, 1999 Seminar with Orlando Bagwell, and chair of the Flaherty's 50th Anniversary Committee). Venue details will be announced in March, alongside registration opening.

Jemma Desai will contribute programming to the 2025 Flaherty Fellowship program, which will run parallel to the seminar, June 25th - June 29th, and convening in person at Firehouse: DCTV’s Cinema for Documentary Film and online. A few sponsored fellowship spots are still available: if you or your institution would like to sponsor a fellowship, please see below.

We are eager to share the 70th seminar experience with you, wherever you may be. Whether you join us in NYC or in Pods around the globe, we invite you to join us! 

Stay Tuned! Registrations and Fellowship Applications open in March.

Until then, we invite you to read more:

"Commercial culture silences debate; The Flaherty liberates it and invigorates ideas. And that is a difficult, messy, uncomfortable, and disquieting experience that should never be sanitized. Each participant should find their way out of philosophical and artistic knots their own way – but always in consort with other like-minded seminarians. If the media art world thrives on romantic individualism, The Flaherty is just the opposite; it is a sort of collective intellectual and artistic sauna that cleanses the body and the soul.”

— The indomitable Patricia Zimmermann reflects on the Seminar’s 50th Edition. Read more.

Sponsored Fellowship Slots Still Available!

Each year, Flaherty is proud to collaborate with a wide range of institutional partners to support the Fellowship program. These partners can be academic institutions (recent partners include UC Boulder, CalArts, Duke, Harvard, Northwestern, University of Melbourne, University of Westminster) as well as arts organisations around the world (such as Anti-Archive, Black Public Media, CAAM, Corrientes, Palestine Ministry of Culture, Seminario El Público del Futuro.). 

For our 2025 Fellowship Program, a few slots are still available for institutions looking to sponsor one or more Fellows, in person in New York City, and/or online around the world.

Fellowship Partners help provide a unique experience for Fellows, connecting them with peers, artists, and programmers while facilitating career development through mentorship and specialized programming. 

The Flaherty offers four tiers of support for the 2025 Fellowship program, available for both in-person and online participation. Partners may either fund and select a Fellow from their organization to attend the Seminar or contribute directly to the Flaherty to support an Open Call Fellowship.

If you are part of an institution that has the funds to support a 2025 Flaherty Fellow, please complete this Fellowship Partner Interest Form by Friday February 28th. Thank you!

Yearning

In summer 2023 The Flaherty announced an unprecedented one-off programmer-in-residence model, working with Jemma Desai over two years towards a seminar proposal for 2025 tentatively titled Yearning:

What might happen if we used the phenomenology of yearning to appraise our cultural production infrastructure? Not yearning to belong to what we have, but yearning to be longing: to embody a desire for something else? (…)

We have learned a great deal from our ongoing work with Jemma. At this time we long for more space and gentleness to allow the process to continue unfurl. And so it is with love for what’s still to come that we announce the postponement of Jemma Desai’s seminar until 2026*, while acknowledging the many ways our process with her has contributed to the design of the 70th annual seminar we will present in 2025.

*in full knowledge that 2026 is very much unknown, for so many of us, at this time.

Thank you to all our partners: Ford Foundation, NYSCA, NYC Department of Cultural Affairs, DCTV, William H. Donner Family Foundation, Wave Farm MAAF for Organizations, and more to be announced soon!

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April 2024: 69th Seminar Art by Nipan Oranniwesna, Programmers, New Fellowship Fund


 
 

The Flaherty is pleased to share this year’s Seminar poster with artwork by Nipan Oranniwesna. Living and working in Bangkok, Oranniwesna’s mediums range from painting, sculpture, mixed media, site-specific installation, photography, and video works. His practice delves into personal and collective memories, dealing poetically with spaces, urban cartography and the geo-body of nation/state—ideas that intersect and explore this year’s Seminar theme, To Commune, through visual language. 


Seminar Registration is Open
…with Scaled Ticket Pricing!

Seminar Registration rates are scaled and different based on your location. For those living outside of the U.S. or Canada, rates range from $250 USD to $550 USD. For those living within the US or Canada, rates range from $750 to $1500 USD. The higher rates in each range are meant for those who have institutional support. For those paying out of pocket, we encourage you to choose a lower rate that is affordable for you.


May Adadol Ingawanij and Julian Ross

The Flaherty is excited to be working with programmers May Adadol Ingawanij and Julian Ross for the 69th Flaherty Film Seminar, To Commune.  It is through their vision that the Seminar found its way to the Thai Film Archive this year and we are so grateful for this partnership in 2024! In addition to co-programming this year’s seminar, May and Julian are also collaborators for their ongoing curatorial project Animinstic Apparatus, exploring affinities between contemporary Southeast Asian artists’ moving image and animistic practices. We are honoured to welcome May and Julian to continue their ongoing creative exchange as programmers for this year’s Seminar. 

“We’re thrilled to be working with the Flaherty and the Thai Film Archive on relocating the Seminar to a region that’s so rich in multitudes and home to so many of the most dynamic contemporary filmmakers and artists. The Flaherty’s model of championing nonfiction cinema through fostering sustained collective dialogues is a source of immense curiosity for filmmakers, artists, cinephiles and thinkers around the world. Holding the Seminar in Thailand opens up the possibility of attendance for many people for whom the gathering would otherwise be inaccessible. We’re hugely energised by the openness of spirit of colleagues at the Thai Film Archive and the Flaherty. To make alliances across such different contexts, and to bring the trust to try something new together, feels like the kind of optimism necessary for withstanding the times. We’re really looking forward to returning to Thailand to spend time with everyone at the Seminar, thinking and dreaming together with cinema.”

– May Adadol Ingawanij and Julian Ross

May Adadol Ingawanij | เม อาดาดล อิงคะวณิช is a writer, curator, and teacher. She is Professor of Cinematic Arts at the University of Westminster where she co-directs the Centre for Research and Education in Arts and Media. May publishes regularly in English and Thai for a wide range of publications. Her recent and ongoing curatorial projects include Legacies, and Animistic Apparatus.

Julian Ross is a researcher, curator and writer based in Amsterdam. He is an Assistant Professor at Leiden University Centre for the Arts in Society, a film program advisor for IDFA, and co-organiser of Doc Fortnight at The Museum of Modern Art, New York, with Sophie Cavoulacos. He is co-director of the interdisciplinary research centre ReCNTR and editorial board member of Collaborative Cataloging Japan.


Patty Zimmermann at the 1994 Flaherty Film Seminar; contact sheet

Patty Zimmermann Memorial Fellowship Fund
in partnership with Visible Evidence

We are thrilled to announce that The Flaherty and Visible Evidence are partnering to co-create a new Fellowship Fund in honor of the late and great Patty Zimmermann (1956-2023). Together, our two organizations are fundraising for a Patricia Zimmermann Professional Development Fellowship Fund, with the proceeds to be divided equally between The Flaherty Seminar and the Visible Evidence Conference.

Read The Flaherty’s Memorial to Patty Zimmermann

A tremendous thank you to our 54 donors so far. Please join us now in making any donation – large or small – to make the Patricia Zimmermann Fellowship Fund a reality. ONWARDS!


Community News

bam.org

RETROSPECTIVE

Pearl Bowser
April 19-20-21

Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM)
30 Lafayette Ave, Brooklyn, NY

The Boom Is Really An Echo: Selections from the Pearl Bowser Media Collection features rare films highlighting Bowser’s deep connections to Brooklyn as a home, a location for Black activism, and a space for creativity, cultural expression, and community celebration.

Pearl Bowser (1931-2023) worked closely with The Flaherty for over fifteen years, as the organizer (alongside Madeline Anderson) of the Flaherty Black and Third World Filmmakers Mini-Seminar (1975), as Board President (1986-1989) and as Programmer of the groundbreaking 35th Flaherty Film Seminar 1989.

Read The Flaherty’s Tribute to Pearl Bowser in our October Newsletter


Onyeka Igwe, still from The names have changed, including my own and truths have been altered

THANK YOU

Onyeka Igwe with Imani Nikyah Dennison 
Flaherty/Colgate Global Filmmaker in Residence

Thank you to Colgate’s Film and Media Studies program for hosting last night’s screening and discussion with Colgate/Flaherty Global Distinguished Filmmaker in Residence Onyeka Igwe and Flaherty Curatorial Fellow (2023) Imani Nikyah Dennison.

LEARN MORE


Rose Lowder, still from La Source de la Loire  

OPEN CALL

Doc’s Kingdom 2024
Call for Programmers

Doc’s Kingdom – International Seminar on Documentary Film is accepting proposals from programmers for its 2024 edition, to be held in Odemira, Portugal, November 19–23. Film and moving image programmers from all nationalities who have participated in a previous edition of Doc’s Kingdom are invited to apply by April 30, midnight (GMT).

LEARN MORE

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REGISTRATION IS OPEN for the 69th Film Seminar in Thailand!

 
 

To Commune
69th Flaherty Film Seminar
Thai Film Archive, Salaya, Thailand
June 27–July 2, 2024


Register for the 69th Flaherty Film Seminar today!

This year’s Seminar offers scaled ticket pricing. There is a limited number of tickets at each level—we encourage you to register as soon as possible. Please remember that your registration fee does NOT include your accommodations or travel . 

After you complete registration, please visit our Hotel and Travel page for guidance on booking accommodations in Salaya. We also encourage you to read through our updated 2024 Seminar FAQs to help you prepare for your trip! 


Apply for a Fellowship

Are you interested in applying for one of our funded onsite or online Fellowships? Applications are open until March 29, 2024!


Community News

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS | DEADLINE: MARCH 25

Camden International Film Festival

Calling doc filmmakers! The Camden International Film Festival is accepting submissions for the 20th Edition of the festival! We’re looking for the next generation of nonfiction filmmakers. Submit now to be a part of this transformative festival experience in stunning coastal Maine.
APPLICATION DEADLINE  March 25, 2024


FUNDRAISER

Film Fatales Online Auction
March 5–19, 2024

This Women’s Herstory Month, join us in uplifting Film Fatales, an intersectional and action-oriented arts nonprofit and advocacy organization championing underserved filmmakers of all marginalized genders. Their online auction will feature incredible opportunities from today’s top filmmakers.

Bid at Charity Buzz!


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Get ready for the 69th Seminar in THAILAND!

 
 

To Commune
69th Flaherty Film Seminar
Thai Film Archive, Salaya, Thailand
June 27–July 2, 2024

Seminar Registration Opens March 1!

We at the Thai Film Archive are excited to collaborate with the Flaherty team in hosting the 2024 Flaherty Seminar, the first time this esteemed event will take place in Thailand. This is a huge opportunity for us to welcome international participants to come together to watch films and do what we all love the most—discuss cinema and expand our horizons. Our motto is Cinema Enlightens. We hope to share an enlightening week with all of you in late June.

—Director Chalida Uabumrungjit & Deputy Directors Kong Rithdee and Sanchai Chotirosseranee, Thai Film Archive 


2024 Seminar FAQs

We look forward to welcoming participants from around the world to Thailand for a unique Flaherty Film Seminar! In tandem, we are excited to once again offer an online Seminar experience for those who can’t make it to Thailand. Registration opens March 1. Get ready with this head start on what to expect and how to prepare. Check out our Frequently Asked Questions for information about registration, what’s included, what you need to plan, and details about Salaya, Thailand.

We‘ll be sharing lodging options and travel recommendations within Thailand, and locally in Salaya after registration opens.


Photographs of Patty Zimmermann at the 1994 Flaherty Film Seminar; contact sheet

Patty Zimmermann’s Life and Legacy
March 16, noon ET | Online 

Join us for a celebration of our extraordinary, exuberant, indefatigable friend and colleague Patty Zimmermann (1955–2023). This virtual gathering will be an informal, grassroots, and participatory celebration where all attendees are invited to join in and share brief stories and tributes about our brilliant and beloved colleague.

An influential member of The Flaherty community for decades, Patty Zimmermann was a beloved programmer, mentor, and board member. One of the many contributions she made to the organization over the years was co-authoring The Flaherty: Decades in the Cause of Independent Cinema (2017) and Flash Flaherty: Tales from a Film Seminar (2021) (both alongside Scott MacDonald), two books that honor The Flaherty’s history and legacy and demonstrate how the relationships that have grown out of our annual seminar have been instrumental in transforming American media history.

We are ever grateful for her spirit, creativity, and presence in film and in our community. We welcome you to read these incredible tributes to Patty from The Flaherty community.

AFTER REGISTRATION, YOU WILL RECEIVE A ZOOM LINK TO JOIN THE EVENT


Community News

 

Image courtesy Kimi Takesue

THE FLAHERTY RECOMMENDS

Kimi Takesue's Onlookers
February 16-23, 2024
Metrograph & Metrograph at Home

Onlookers, a visually striking, immersive meditation on travel and tourism in Laos and how we all exist as observers, opened in New York City at Metrograph on February 16. The final screening is TOMORROW February 22 at Metrograph.

Metrograph at Home is featuring a streaming showcase of Takesue’s films including Onlookers, Where are you taking me?, and 95 and 6 to go until March 23, 2024.

IN PERSON | 7 Ludlow Street, NYC
ONLINE | metrograph.com/at-home/

LEARN MORE
onlookersfilm.com
metrograph.com/onlookers


Still from Monisme, courtesy Chandra Knotts

SCREENING SERIES

Doc Fortnight 2024
Feb 22—March 7, 2024
The Museum of Modern Art

MoMA’s annual celebration of nonfiction cinema returns with a showcase of the most innovative, vital voices in documentary and hybrid filmmaking. In its 23rd year, Doc Fortnight’s wide-ranging slate continues to bring New York City audiences award-winning debuts, film-festival highlights from around the world, and adventurous new films by moving-image artists.

IN PERSON | 11 W 53rd St, New York, NY
LEARN MORE


Image courtesy Seminario El Público del Futuro FICUNAM

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS; DEADLINE FEB 25

Seminario El Público del Futuro FICUNAM
Mexico City, Mexico
April 10—May 18, 2024; Apply by Feb 25

Seminario El Público del Futuro invites projects and exhibition spaces from Mexico, Ibero-America (including Central America and the Caribbean), and Italy to collectively reflect, investigate, discuss, and imagine possible audiovisual exhibition and distribution models in line with current times. The Seminar will run April 10—May 18, 2024 and include weekly online meetings. For the first time, it will have two groups: one for emerging projects and another for established projects. Read more and apply today— Applications close February 25!

LEARN MORE


CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS; DEADLINE MAR 8

Extremely Shorts Film Festival 2024
May 31—June 1, 2024; Apply by March 8

Submit your film to Extremely Shorts, Aurora Picture Show’s eclectic festival of adventurous short films (3 min. max.) of all kinds. The 27th annual program will be selected by guest juror Lili Chin and presented in person and online in late May.

LEARN MORE


Image courtesy Chicago Filmmakers

SCREENING (CHICAGO)

Commodity Trading: Dies Irae
March 15, 7 pm at Chicago Filmmakers

Flaherty 2021 Filmmaker M. Woods premieres Commodity Trading: Dies Irae, their fourth feature film, for its first theatrical running, at Chicago Filmmakers.

A "bad trip" mapping the socio-political hyperreality and its nightmares, Commodity Trading: Dies Irae opens the door to the most potent drug available, The Numb Spiral, where you can manipulate the material of physical reality in a viral Nihilistic haze. Through interwoven 16mm hallucinations and multimedia collages, Woods weaves a narrative through Los Angeles as two lost souls look for the entrance to the Numb Spiral, where they are swallowed up.


IN PERSON: 1326 W. Hollywood Avenue, Chicago IL 60660)
LEARN MORE


WORKSHOP

Pitch It
March 22, 2024
2 pm PT

Join Film Fatales on for an online workshop, How to Create Impactful Decks and Pitches, led by Film Fatales member Jenny Deller.

RSVP
Get 25% OFF
with the code FilmFatalesPartner


Image courtesy Raven Two Feathers

CASTING CALL

Indigenous Genders
A documentary by Raven & Relatives

Feature-length documentary filmmakers seeking femme Indigenous person, mid 30–40s: non-cis, trans, non-binary, and/or Indigiqueer. Ideally living on lands near or east of the Mississippi River. The project explores finding joy through reflection and memory. LEARN MORE


Submit your community news

Did we miss your news? Recently our Community News portal was malfunctioning. If you submitted but didn't see your news listed, we apologize and hope you aren't discouraged. 
Our submission form has been repaired and we encourage you to share your news!


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The Flaherty welcomes Sheetal Prajapati as Interim Executive Director and Dessane Lopez Cassell as Board Vice President


 
 

Photograph by Luvia Lazio

Sheetal Prajapati joins The Flaherty as Interim Executive Director through July 2024

We are delighted to announce that Sheetal Prajapati will be joining The Flaherty as the Interim Executive Director through July 2024, while Executive Director Samara Chadwick is on maternity leave. We look forward to welcoming Samara back in May to transition back into her role and be part of the upcoming Seminar, To Commune (June 27 - July 2, 2024).

Sheetal has been working with Samara and the Board as a strategic consultant since January 2023, focusing on long-term planning and the articulation of the organization’s values, mission, and vision. We are thrilled she will bring this knowledge and experience to this interim role. During her term, Sheetal will work with The Flaherty Board, staff, partners, and artists to produce the 69th Flaherty Seminar in Thailand and maintain organizational operations.  

Sheetal comes to The Flaherty with two decades of experience as an arts administrator, educator, artist, and advisor working across the fields of art and public engagement. Through her agency Lohar Projects,  she offers advising and consulting services for artists, arts professionals, and cultural organizations to grow, change, and most importantly, thrive in communities. Concurrent with her consulting practice, Sheetal served as the Executive Director of Common Field from 2020-2022, overseeing its final two national artist convenings and stewarding an intentional sunsetting process as it closed. Previous to founding Lohar Projects in 2019, Sheetal served in leadership and engagement roles at Pioneer Works in Brooklyn, The Museum of Modern Art, the Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art at Northwestern University, and the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago.


Board Member Dessane Lopez Cassell facilitates a group discussion with filmmaker Sharlene Bamboat during the 68th Flaherty Film Seminar, Queer World-Mending, June 2023

Board Member Dessane Lopez Cassell elected Vice-President

The Flaherty Board of Directors has voted unanimously to appoint Dessane Lopez Cassell to the Executive Committee of the Board, in the role of Vice-President. Dessane, who joined The Flaherty Board in 2023,  is a New York-based editor, writer, and curator who focuses on film and visual art concerned with race, gender, labor, and decoloniality. Dessane’s writing has been published in the Los Angeles Times, Film Comment, Hyperallergic, and in books and catalogs from The Studio Museum, The Museum of Modern Art, and The Whitney Museum, among others. Additionally, Dessane has curated exhibitions and screenings at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, Metrograph,  the Studio Museum, Anthology Film Archives, and the Black Women’s Film Conference. Previously, she was Editor-in-Chief of Blackstar’s journal, Seen, and served on the programming team for their film festival from 2018 to 2023.  Dessane is also an alumni of The Flaherty both as a team member for the 2019, 2021, and 2022 Seminars, as a Fellow for the 2018 Seminar, and as a programmer for the Fall 2018 Flaherty NYC.

“Dessane brings a unique perspective and insight that will be invaluable to the organization in the coming years. We all see her as a key stakeholder and partner in stewarding the Flaherty through some of the exciting evolution we’ll go through over the next years.”
— Board President Pablo de Ocampo

The 69th Flaherty Film Seminar in Thailand 

“ Our curatorial approach seeks to explore the tensions and the sparks of efforts to commune. Not to gather to recognize an identity or a common concern, but to make relations on grounds of radical differentiation. “
— May Adadol Ingawanij and Julian Ross, 2024 Seminar Programmers

The 69th Flaherty Film Seminar: To Commune, programmed by May Adadol Ingawanij and Julian Ross, will be presented at the Thai Film Archive in Salaya, Thailand June 27–July 2, 2024. We look forward to welcoming an expanded international audience to Thailand to gather, watch, and learn together.

In February we’ll be sharing more information about the Seminar experience in Thailand with registration and fellowship applications opening soon after!


Share your news

We want to know what you’re up to.
Submit community news and listings to a future Flaherty newsletter.


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OFFERINGS


Emily Abi-Kheirs, Ha'aheo Auwae-Dekker, Isabel Rojas, Raven Two Feathers

Announcing Flaherty NYC Season 25!
November 17–19, 2023 in NYC and Online


The Flaherty is delighted to announce our upcoming Season of Flaherty NYC.
The series is programmed by Emily Abi-Kheirs (2022 LEF Fellow), Ha'aheo Auwae-Dekker (2022 Curatorial Fellow), Isabel Rojas (2022 Curatorial Fellow), and Raven Two Feathers (2022 Professional Development Fellow).

This year, the series takes the form of an offering, in a collectively-curated response to the 2022 Flaherty Film Seminar Continents of Drifting Clouds programmed by Almudena Escobar-López and Sky Hopinka.

The 25th Season of Flaherty NYC will open on Friday November 17th and run in a mini-seminar format over the weekend of November 18-19 in person in New York City, alongside hybrid and online programs. Artists and program details will be announced in our October Newsletter.

We are especially interested in sharing this program and our process with community leaders, artists, and educators. If you and your collaborators/students would like to take part via an institutional partnership or otherwise, please contact samara@theflaherty.org for more details.

A sincere thank you to our curatorial advisors and guides: Almudena Escobar-López and Sky Hopinka, 2022 Professional Development Fellow Angeline Gragasin, Poh Lin Lee of Narrative Imaginings, and our program partners at Humanities New York and the NYC Department of Cultural Affairs.

About the Programmers

Emily Abi-Kheirs (she/her) is a Boston-based independent documentary producer and programmer. In 2022, she was recognized as a Documentary New Leader by DOC NYC for her work to create a more inclusive and equitable documentary field through intentional community building and creative collaboration. Previously, she was the Manager of Filmmaker Services at Women Make Movies where she supported women and female-identifying filmmakers. She began her career at WORLD Channel. She is currently the Program Director for Salem Film Fest. She is a LEF New England Flaherty Film Seminar fellow and an IDA Getting Real Fellow. She is currently producing Untitled Altered States Film, directed by Julie Mallozzi. She graduated from Emerson College with a B.A. in Documentary Production.

Haʻaheo Auwae-Dekker (they/them) is a proud Kanaka Maoli artist, filmmaker, and storyteller from Waimea on Moku O Keawe, the Big Island of Hawaiʻi. As a storyteller, Haʻaheo is driven to create art that amplifies voices through embracing vulnerability. As a young Hawaiian who has lived in diaspora, their art has been a means of reconnecting while creating art that reflects an increasingly universal experience. Their work has shown them the power of Indigenous storytelling. They have participated in film festivals including the Hawaiʻi International Film Festival, Wairoa Māori Film Festival, and the National Film Festival for Talented Youth (NFFTY). They are a Flaherty Film Seminar Curatorial Fellow and an invited artist to the UnionDocs workshop Entangled Bonds: Working with Family in Documentary Film. In 2023, they were a participating artist in MoMA’s Doc Fortnight. Currently, they work with Nia Tero as an Associate Producer for their Storytelling Team. They graduated from Seattle University with a BA in Film Studies.

Isabel Rojas (she/her) is a cultural manager, audiovisual media programmer, and curator from Oaxaca, México with an interest in educational and pedagogical practices. She is dedicated to research, teaching, management, and the production of cultural projects aimed at audience design and development.  She serves as the Artistic Director of the Seminario El Público del Futuro (The Future Audience Seminar) at the International Film Festival of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (FICUNAM). She is co-founder and programmer at OaxacaCine (2011-2023). She holds a degree in Cultural Management and Sustainable Development from the Autonomous University of Benito Juárez in Oaxaca (UABJO).  She is a Berlinale Talent (Audience Design 2023) and a Flaherty Film Seminar Curatorial Fellow (2022). She creates spaces for dialogue and the collective construction of knowledge in her practice, building experimental projects that blend coexistence, study, and research.   

Raven Two Feathers (he/him/they/them; Cherokee, Seneca, Cayuga, Comanche) is a Two Spirit, Emmy award-winning creator based in Seattle, WA. Originally from New Mexico, they spent their childhood moving, exploring Indigenous cultures across the continent and Pacific. They returned to New Mexico to attend Santa Fe University of Art & Design, graduating magna cum laude with a BFA in Film Production. They recently premiered at ImagineNATIVE with A Drive to Top Surgery, a 360 video slice-of-life experience. They grow their practice through the people they meet, and the stories that guide them.


Patty Zimmermann at the 1994 Flaherty Film Seminar she co-programmed with Erik Barnouw and L. Somi Roy; contact sheet

Onward, Patty Zimmermann!

With the news of Patty Zimmermann’s sudden passing last month, our community has been awash in tides of grief, and grateful recollection and reconnection. Our small team at The Flaherty has been deeply humbled and moved by the outpouring of love for her. Patty was a connecting force across her many practices, and certainly within The Flaherty realm—as a Board Member, Seminar Programmer, co-author of The Flaherty: Decades in the Cause of Independent Cinema (2017) and Flash Flaherty: Tales from a Film Seminar (2021), and a vigorous advocate and mentor.

Before I was announced as the Executive Director of the Flaherty, I was a quiet surreptitious attendee of the Flash Flaherty launches — what a gift to be offered such a heartfelt and complex glimpse into the people who have helped shape this organization over the decades. In our first zoom call together a few weeks later, Patty regaled me with advice and encouragement. I could sense her knack for people—she vigorously, fearlessly, and intuitively equipped so many of us with the tools we needed to succeed in our various radical, wild, creative visions.

Patty—You have lit up so many of our lives. Thank you for your brilliance and unwavering curiosity.

Thank you to all who have been part of the surge of reconnections and memories over the past weeks, and especially to Carlos Gutiérrez, Josetxo Cerdan Los Arcos, Helen De Michiel, John Knecht, Laura U. Marks, Linda Lilienfeld, Lynne Sachs, Richard Herskowitz, Steven Montgomery, and Su Friedrich, whose heartfelt and gorgeous tributes to Patty you can read in the section linked below.

Samara Chadwick
Executive Director

 

Patty was a beacon and a shout.
A provocateur, an intellectual, an activist. 
A sparkler. A synthesizer. An enactivist.
Unbounded energy and piercing insight.
A brilliant scholar, a force for goodness, an unforgettable person.


Participate in a Groundbreaking New Study

We invite you to take part in a groundbreaking new study to better understand the relationships between documentary makers and participants.

Over the past months, The Flaherty has been honored to work alongside partner organizations Brown Girls Doc Mafia, Documentary Accountability Working Group, Documentary Producers Alliance, FWD-Doc, Nia Tero, and Youth FX: NeXt Doc, in an ITVS-lead study to develop a deeper understanding of how documentary filmmakers work with the individuals and communities whose stories they share on screen.

The online survey invites filmmaker practitioners and documentary participants to share their experiences. Thanks to your critical insights, we can better identify how the documentary ecosystem can support the work of filmmakers and film participants. Help us ensure that this unprecedented documentary research takes place.

The survey is open until September 29.

 

What to know before participating:

You must live or work in the United States. Films can be set internationally.
Films can be any length. 
The survey is available in English only. 
The survey takes an approximately 15 minutes to complete.
The survey is compatible with most third-party screen readers. 
You can complete the survey via telephone or an ASL-supported video call.


Patricio Guzmán, Dreaming of Utopia: 50 Years of Revolutionary Hope and Memory | September 7—15, 2023

Anthology Film Archives, Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM), and the IFC Center
Presented by Icarus Films and Cinema Tropical

Master documentarian Patricio Guzmán (b. 1941) has documented the tumultuous political history of his native Chile for over fifty years. Through the democratically elected socialist government of President Salvador Allende in the early 70s, the US-backed coup led by General Augusto Pinochet, and the more recent social uprising that opened the door for the rewriting of a new constitution, Guzmán has served as a witness and chronicler of the history of this South American nation.

His commitment to filming the lived history of his country for more than 50 years is unprecedented in world cinema. September 11, 2023 marks the 50th anniversary of the 1973 coup led by General Pinochet and his army, which drastically changed the history of Chile and Latin America.

To mark the occasion, Icarus Films and Cinema Tropical present a special film series in New York City, celebrating the long career of the influential and lauded Chilean director. Included new restorations of his 1972 debut feature The First Year and his three-part epic The Battle of Chile.

LEARN MORE


Job Opportunity: Assistant Professor of Media and Film Studies, Skidmore College

The Film and Media Program at Skidmore College is hiring an Assistant Professor of Media and Film Studies. Applications are currently being accepted for the position, with an expected start date in September 2024. More information is available on the Skidmore Human Resources website.

APPLY


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Registration for the 68th Flaherty Seminar opens March 1!

Steve Reinke, Untitled (detail), Needlepoint, 2017 | Floss on plastic backing, 18.1 x 9.3 cm | Courtesy the artist and gallery Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin


Queer World-Mending
Programmed by Jon Davies & Steve Reinke
June 17–23 2023
Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, NY

“Better a mended sock than a torn one – not so with subjectivity.” –Hegel

The world – wounded, wasting, wheezing – needs mending. But our feral subjectivities, our libidos, need to remain torn, agape, asunder. So how can we mend the wounded world if we are open wounds ourselves? Sexuality is a force that cuts through histories and identities, and offers an embodied approach to thinking. Perhaps queer desire, through its very non-productive fucked-upness can mend the world better than more stable, normative approaches.

It is hard to have any hope these days, now that so many of the flaming creatures are literally flaming creatures. As the world burns, one can barely determine which fires to put out, which to ignore, and which to fuel and fan. This program will join the living and the dead because the only way into the future is through the ashes of the past. Queer World-Mending will be a playground of desire, a laboratory for developing and performing new subjectivities. And if we can’t build a new house, we can at least change the wallpaper. Long live the new flesh!

Jon Davies, Steve Reinke

Join us!

The annual Flaherty Seminar is among the most significant non-fiction film events in the world. Filmmakers, scholars, students, curators, critics, archivists, and cinephiles gather for an immersive, week-long program of screenings, discussions, and multimedia works centered on a common theme. 

Through thoughtful co-creation and conversation, we explore the impact of the moving image. The Flaherty Seminar strives to elevate the human experience, expand consciousness, and encourage critical thought about the world. 

Join us! Registration will open March 1st and remain open until full. The registration link be available on our homepage theflaherty.org
You will:

  • Be asked to provide full or partial fee payment upon registration

  • Select rooms with AC or non-AC 

  • Be able to sign-up to volunteer during the seminar

The all-inclusive in-person Seminar registration fee includes lodging, meals, screenings and discussions, receptions, and additional special events. The fee does not include travel to and from Skidmore College. Arrive by 5 pm Saturday, depart at noon Friday.


Don’t delay – Registration is limited. In past years, in-person registration moved to the waitlist within a few weeks.

Rates

In-person: $1750, suggested fee | $1,500–$2,500, sliding scale

Virtual: $250, suggested fee | $250–$400, sliding scale

  • We are offering sliding scale registration on an honor system with the aim of creating an accessible and equitable experience. Please contribute a rate that reflects your financial capacity and relative privilege. 

  • The suggested fees would ensure that we can pay our staff equitable rates and cover rental and meal costs.

  • We especially encourage reduced rates for participants who are Indigenous to the land they call home, or have been historically dispossessed from their land, history, culture, and power, and experience precarity as a result. 

  • We ask that participants with the means, including those receiving institutional support, pay a minimum of $2000 in person and $400 online, thereby directly making registration more affordable for others.

Fellowship. All Fellowship recipients receive a fully funded registration, courtesy of either The Flaherty or our Fellowship Partners. The Flaherty Fellowship begins a day earlier than the full seminar, on Friday, June 16th.

Applications for the Fellowship open March 1st.

The Flaherty at Skidmore College

We are inspired by Skidmore’s many modular and accessible spaces, invigorated by the campus’ collaborative and interdisciplinary environments, and heartened by recent changes in leadership and the unionization of non-tenure track faculty.

We are eager to collaborate with the teams at the John B. Moore Documentary Studies Collaborative, the MDOCS Storytellers' Institute, the Tang Teaching Museum, and the Office of Conferences and Events teams on the upcoming seminar.

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Images: 2018 Seminar photographed by Robert M. GoodmanImage; 2017 Seminar photographed by Anne-Katrine Hansen; courtesy skidmore.edu


Flaherty Filmmaker Event

An Evening with Bill Basquin
Monday, February 13, 7 pm
The Museum of Modern Art

MoMA's Modern Mondays series hosts Flaherty NYC alum and Bay Area–based filmmaker Bill Basquin (Flaherty NYC Filmmaker 2019) for the New York premiere of his feature From Inside of Here (2020), which explores the relationship between body and landscape.

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Image (detail) courtesy the artist


The Flaherty Recommends

Attend the One Earth Film Festival
March 3-12, 2023
Virtual & In-person across the Chicagoland area

One Earth Film Festival returns March 3-12, 2023, for its 12th festival season with its annual launch party and 10 thoughtfully curated film events that will be streamed online, with about a dozen in-person screenings, including “View & Brew” events, in the greater Chicago area.

Image courtesy One Earth Film Festival

Register for the Greaves Filmmaker Seminar
March 16-18, 2023, Philadelphia

Registration is open for BlackStar’s 2023 William + Louise Greaves Filmmaker Seminar! The Seminar is a rare space that brings together Black, Brown, and Indigenous artists for workshops, panels, and deep conversations about their filmmaking practice – without having to manage the added burden of representation. This year acclaimed artist Cauleen Smith will be holding the keynote and the visionary Terence Nance will be presenting a director’s commentary. 

Photo by Mariam Dembele

Order SEEN 05
The Dreams Issue: Winter 2023

Seen is a journal of film and visual culture focused on Black, Brown, and Indigenous communities globally, published by BlackStar Projects twice each calendar year.

The Dreams Issue features Flaherty Filmmaker Cauleen Smith In Her Own Words, and Anaïs Duplan, Aurella Yussuf, Beandrea July, Clarkisha Kent, Deborah Anzinger, Dessane Lopez Cassell, Flordalis Espinal, Ifeanyi Awachie, Iris Torres-Gatherer, Isabel Ling, Jasmin Hernandez, Kambole Campbell, Kareem Reid, Kenny Rivero, Lakshmi Padmanabhan, Lizania Cruz, Lou Cornum, Rashida Bumbray, Rianna Jade Parker, Rohini Kejriwal, Widline Cadet, Xia Gordon.

Photo by Shanlynne Silvestre, Imagenfotografi


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