Flaherty News — The Flaherty

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To Commune Online Experience in partnership with UnionDocs


Onsite registration is sold out – join our global audience online!

The Flaherty is delighted to be partnering with UnionDocs Center for Documentary Art to present the Online Experience for the 69th Flaherty Film Seminar, To Commune. This year’s film programs will be hosted on the UnionDocs Membership Channel, available around the world to registered Online Experience and Onsite Seminar Participants from June 27 through July 21, 2024.

The Online Experience of To Commune will launch concurrently with the Seminar in Thailand on June 27 with films becoming available online day by day as they are screened at the Thai Film Archive. For the Online Experience, we’ll offer two live online synchronised programs, on June 27 and 30, exclusively for online participants to gather and discuss ideas and films. Online discussions will be moderated by guest and fellow participants. 

The complete program of films will remain online and accessible until July 21 to registered participants all over the world, along with complementary materials offered by the artists and curators.

Registration for the Online Experience costs $100 USD per person and will remain open until July 21. Registration includes both live events. Please note that in-person discussions held in Thailand will not be streamed for the online program and some films may not be available online due to permissions and streaming rights. 


Live Online Programs

Opening Discussion: To Commune, An Offering
Thursday June 27, 2–4 pm EST (New York) | 7–9 pm BST (London) 

Join us on Zoom for our opening discussion exploring the theme of this year’s seminar in small discussion groups.  We know how much each of you has to offer to our gathering. Our group is large and everyone has different ways to contribute.

In honoring that, we invite all participants to bring an offering – something to share at invited moments or at a time you choose in smaller groups or one-to-one conversations. The form of the offering – an object, a phrase, a song, a gesture or something else – is up to you.

The offering might take the form of something that:

  • invites sharing (even if the sharing consists of questions or ruminations rather than neatly a formed presentation) 

  • resonates with the themes of our gathering (even mysteriously)

  • might be a seed for others (growing something within them)

Program 9 & Discussion
Sunday June 30, 9 am–12 pm EST (New York) 8–11 pm GMT (Bangkok) 

Log on to the UnionDocs Membership Channel and tune in for a synced viewing of Program 9 of the Flaherty Film Seminar, To Commune.  Following the viewing, all participants are welcome to join our zoom space for moderated post-film discussions. 


Stay Tuned!

Soon we’ll be sharing some exciting opportunities to gather informally to watch Seminar programs together around the world. If one is happening in your region, you’ll can sign up to commune in person!

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Welcome to our 2024 Seminar Fellows and Partners! 

Meet our 2024 Seminar Fellows 

Flaherty is thrilled to announce our 2024 Seminar Fellows! 27 Fellows will be joining us in Thailand this summer and 13 will be part of the Online Fellowship Experience. This year’s Fellowship program is proud to welcome Fellows from a wide range of geographical regions including Australia, Columbia, Cambodia, Thailand, and the U.K. among others! 

Each year, Flaherty works with generous Partners to support emerging professionals in documentary film to attend the Seminar and be part of a special Fellowship experience. Fellows are selected either by our sponsoring Partners or through our Open Call which ran from March 1 - March 29 this year.

Please welcome the 2024 Seminar Fellows! 

 

Anti-Archive
Daniel Mattes
Kavich Neang
Savunthara Seng

California College of the Arts
Boya Zhang
 

California Institute of the Arts
Trisha Bhattacharya
Linda Wei
Utkarsh*

Center For Asian American Media (CAAM) Sophia Rhee

Centre for Research and Education
in Arts and Media (CREAM)
Juanita Onzaga
Rugun Sirait

Colgate University
Yi Cui

Corrientes
Laura Dávila Argoty*
Ángela Jiménez Cano*

Flaherty Curatorial
Zaina Bseiso
Paola Buontempo*
Nicky Ni*

Flaherty Professional Development
Sophia Haid*
Ivey-Camille Manybeads Tso

LEF New England
Maxime Cavajani
Pauline Shongov

Fund for the Development of Cinema (FDC) Colombia
Ana Bravo Pérez

Northwestern University
bree gant
Xiaolu Wang

Palestine Ministry of Culture
Rana Abushkhaidem*
Ibrahim Handal*

Patricia Zimmermann Memorial
Devika Garish
 

Seminario El Público del Futuro
Edward Aroldo De Ybarra Murguia*
Fernando Vílchez Rodríguez*

Stanford University
Del Holton

Thai Film Archive
Chanasorn Chaikitiporn
Chayanin Tiangpitayagorn

University of California San Diego
Jun!yi Min*

University of Colorado Boulder
Emma Piper-Burket
Nandi Pointer

University of Melbourne
Shannon Owen

Waterman II Fund at the Philadelphia Foundation
Ireashia Bennett
Micah Magee
Nick Moncy*
Elham Sadeghian*
Chun Wang

*Online Fellows 

2024 Fellowship Open Call Selection Committee

The Fellowship Open Call applications were reviewed and selected by a committee of former Seminar Fellows. We are incredibly grateful for their time, expertise, and care!

Brit Fryer, 2023 Flaherty Fellow
Wren Gardiner, 2021 Flaherty Fellow
Rami George, 2021 Flaherty Fellow
Chisato Hughes, 2023 Flaherty Fellow
Andrea Hoyos, 2023 Flaherty Fellow
Dylan Huw, 2023 Flaherty Fellow
Abby Lord, 2023 Flaherty Fellow
Moorisha Moodley, 2023 Flaherty Fellow
Nehal Vyas, 2022 Flaherty Fellow
Claudia Zamora-Valencia, 2023 Flaherty Fellow

Expanded 2024 Fellowship Partnerships 

With this year’s Seminar taking place at the Thai Film Archive, Flaherty is excited to welcome both existing and new US-based and International Fellowship Partners for the 69th Film Seminar!  Through their support, we are welcoming Fellows from all over the world! We want to thank each of them for providing our Fellows the opportunity to be part of this year’s Seminar and supporting Flaherty’s work.

International Fellowship Partners

Anti-Archive (Cambodia)
Centre for Research and Education in Arts and Media (CREAM) (United Kingdom)
Corrientes (Honduras/Colombia) 
Ministry of Cultures, Arts, and Knowledge of Colombia (Columbia)
Palestine Ministry of Culture (Palestine) 
Seminario El Público del Futuro (Mexico) 
Thai Film Archive (Thailand) 
University of Melbourne (Australia) 

U.S. Fellowship Partners* 

California College of the Arts  
California Institute of the Arts 
Center For Asian American Media
(CAAM) 
Colgate University 
Kate Cashel Fund George Stoney Fellowship 
LEF Foundation 
Northwestern University
Patricia Zimmermann Memorial Fellowship 
Stanford University
University of California San Diego 
University of Colorado Boulder
Waterman II Fund at the Philadelphia Foundation

*Some of our 2024 Fellowship Partners are under demands from their students and faculty to divest from all economic ties to the genocide in Gaza. Many of our past and present Fellows are currently participating in encampments on campuses. We support peaceful student and faculty protesters across the globe, and their calls for immediate and permanent ceasefire, and for war profiteers out of education (& the arts).


Our tremendous thanks to all our generous individual donors for making
the inaugural Patricia Zimmermann Memorial Fellowship possible.
 


2024 Seminar Supporters 

The 69th Flaherty Film Seminar is made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature.

This project is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts and Ford Foundation JustFilms


Community News

The Reel Deal
Friday May 31, 2 pm PT

Join Film Fatales for a webinar about funding unscripted feature films with representatives from Sundance, The Gotham, and Firelight Media.
LEARN MORE

Semaine de la Critique, Cannes

Valentina Homem’s (Flaherty Fellow, 2016) short film The Girl and The Pot will premiere at La Semaine de la Critique. In a dystopian world, a girl breaks her ceramic pot which holds a secret within, opening portals to a parallel universe in which the creation of a new world is finally possible.

LEARN MORE


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Seminar Dates & Location Announced & Double your Gift!



The 69th Annual Flaherty Film Seminar

To Commune

June 27–July 2
Thai Film Archive
Salaya, Thailand

Reconstruction of Sri Kung film studio facade with the “Floating Cinemathèque” behind. Image courtesy Thai Film Archive, Salaya.

The Seminar is going to Thailand!

The 69th Flaherty Film Seminar, To Commune, will take place at the Thai Film Archive near Bangkok from June 27 to July 2, 2024. 

Curated by May Adadol Ingawanij & Julian Ross, To Commune will gather ten prominent guest artists and 100+ Seminar participants from around the world, including up to 30 Fellows for six days of screenings, discussions, exhibitions, and performances.

The Flaherty is honored to partner with the team at the Thai Film Archives, comprising Director Chalida Uabumrungjit, and Deputy Directors Kong Rithdee and Sanchai Chotirosseranee. The Archive’s state-of-the-art venues and vibrant neighborhood will offer an ideal setting for encountering the seminar’s cinematic worlds and connecting with each other.

“The floating cinemathèque” was a core vision of the newly designed Thai Film Archive, combining Buddhist ideology and state-of-the art design. Image courtesy Thai Film Archive, Salaya.


The 2024 Seminar will reflect the programmers' desire to highlight how filmmakers, artists, and community organizers across Asia and the Global South inherit surprising legacies of historical efforts to commune. 

“How does cinema enable us to commune? We’re interested in the potential of groups gathering around a screen over a period of time. We approach documentary filmmaking as that which brings together bodies, minds, and spirits across different spaces, worlds, and temporalities. 

Beyond self-organizing and community-building, to commune is to communicate with mystical, animistic, and ritualistic capacities. 

Beyond affirming commonality, to commune is to connect with others and to be in touch with the unknowable. 

We turn to the fundamental value of cinema as an encounter with beings and worlds very different from our own. 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 & Julian Ross.

Although the Seminar is most often held in the US, it has taken place in multiple locations worldwide, including Puerto Rico (1961) and Latvia (1990). We are thrilled to continue this legacy in Thailand in 2024! Participants are invited to attend the seminar in Thailand, or join our asynchronous Seminar Pods in up to 15 locations worldwide. We’ll announce more details and open registration in the new year.

Save the date–June 27-July 2, 2024! 


João Vieira Torres and Dan Taulapapa McMullin in conversation during MAKA: Many Eyed Vessel

Thank you FNYC 25!

Thank you to all who were a part of our 25th Edition of Flaherty NYC, MAKA: Many Eyed Vessel. We gathered in downtown Manhattan for three magical days of collective offerings curated by Flaherty Fellows Emily Abi-Kheirs, Ha'aheo Auwae-Dekker, Isabel Rojas, and Raven Two Feathers. 

We worked with the cinematic form to conjure our ancestors and commune with ghosts, examine notions of identity, homeland, and language. We invoked spells and counterspells to envision new, contingent futures collectively. We are grateful to Emily, Ha’aheo, Isabel, and Raven for their labor and care; to filmmakers João Vieira Torres and Dan Taulapapa McMullin for joining us in person; and to all the practitioners, artists, and collectives who offered their work to bring us together. Gratitude to our partners who made the program possible through their support – especially DCTV and Metrograph for providing spaces to gather, and to every single person who attended – online or in person, for one day or all – who formed the net and knots that made MAKA what it was. 

We invite you to revisit the program on our website and to read about the programmers’ process and intentions in their interview with Eddy Frumkin for Documentary Magazine.


Please Give, and Double Your Gift
All end-of-year donations will be matched!

Exceeded all expectations by providing more joy than I imagined might have been possible. The bonding with fellows and staff was a lovely surprise [...] a lot of learning happened in a short amount of time, resulting in deeply valued exchanges.
–2023 Seminar Fellow

2023 has been a terrific year for The Flaherty in many regards. Our last three Seminars brought together the largest and most diverse cohorts since The Flaherty’s founding in 1954. We shared the work of almost forty artists and collectives from all continents. Over 1,300 online and in-person participants attended from 45+ US states and 40+ countries. Our hybrid and pod Seminar expansion brought together people across a dozen timezones.

Our past informs our future. In 2024, we commit to being responsive to new audiences while holding true to our roots in radical and fearless experimentation. We will foster curation as craft; uphold our programmers’ process and visions; de-center the in-person Seminar away from a US context; and encourage multigenerational and international attendance. We will continue to experiment iteratively with hybridity and Seminar Pods to expand the reach of our programs and bridge international, multilingual, and multicultural conversations.

Your support is indispensable for the future of the Flaherty Film Seminar. Community donations directly enable us to create innovative cinema experiences, propel artists, reach audiences, provide mentorship through our Fellowship program, and expand global Seminar Pods tailored for accessibility and decentralization.

Double your contributions! Until December 31st, all donations will be matched by an anonymous donor — up to a total amount of $10,000. Help us meet our goal of $20,000 by end of year.

All donations are tax deductible


A wholehearted thank you to our departing trustees
Nicholas Elliott, jeanelle augustin, Jason Livingston

We extend deep gratitude to our departing board members, Jason Livingston (served 2017-2023), Nicholas Elliott (served 2017-2023), and jeanelle augustin (served 2022-23) for their service. All three served on the Executive Committee – Livingston and Elliott as Secretary, augustin as Vice-President – during times of significant institutional transition and growth. We thank them  for their wisdom, vision, and heart.


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NOVEMBER 2023: FNYC25 | Refusing to look away

 

A letter from Samara Grace Chadwick
Executive Director of the Flaherty

 
 

A still from Jeremy Dutcher’s music video for Mehcinut (2019) featuring filmmaker Alanis Obomsawin (1996 & 2022 Seminar Guest Artist), asinnajaq (2022 FNYC Season 24 curator), and many other Indigenous activists and artists. Read more about Dutcher’s Table of Excellence. On his debut album, Wolastoqiyik Lintuwakonawa, Jeremy Dutcher sings alongside century-old wax cylinder recordings of Wolastoqiyik people performing their traditional songs. We are delighted to include the full album in MAKA: Many Eyed Vessel. We recommended you listen— perhaps even while reading.

 

We are horrified by the violence taking place in Palestine and Israel and condemn the ethnic cleansing of Gaza. We stand with people around the world fighting for their rights to home, safety, and dignity — as well as their right to narrative sovereignty. Ceasefire now.

So much is at stake in the future being written, so much trauma inscribed in generations to come. Trauma that is apparently palatable, to some, perhaps because we have seen it before. The tactics are so familiar because they enabled the inception of our current settler states. In their midst, we have learned to be either voiceless or fragmented in our outrage. We have learned to look away.

Beauty is not uncomplicated. It is the ability to see everything; to confront everything.
Dionne Brand (Nomenclature, 2022)

I have been thinking about power. About narratives of belonging and how these stories circulate, curdle and coalesce in ways that can ignite both our deepest humanity and our darkest brutality. I have been thinking about the role of documentary in our notions of who deserves land, dignity, our time, our compassion. We all know how ferociously credence has been given to a settler aspiration to home, at the expense of the people to whom these lands have always been home.

I have been thinking of the ways this institution and our founders, Robert and Frances Flaherty, have contributed to the notion that indigenous people need to be “humanised“. As with land, property, and laws, the contours of these stories of home were set by the newly arrived: the settlers (often terrible listeners), whose own humanity consistently exhibited such fatal flaws.

Robert Flaherty went to the North as a mineralogical prospector. He was searching for something of value. What he found was not minerals but a people, the Inuit. The prospects were good; his method still applied. He mapped, charted, extracted, and brought what he had ‘found’ back to where it had ‘value': monetary. A fur trading company financed the film; they (rightfully) understood it to be advertisement for its wares. A century later, this is still how most documentary films are made, and shown. We understand the value of cinema from the comfort of our seats, but rarely come to know the scars left behind by the excavation. We rarely note the ways our cultural values can be flattered, swayed, and atrophied by the enticing worlds onscreen.

Robert and Frances Flaherty’s filmography outlines the efforts of empire: Moana (1926) was made with Hollywood money in the newly annexed American Samoa; Elephant Boy (1937) was filmed with British money in India under British rule. A commission from Standard Oil brought us Louisiana Story (1948) alongside expanded drilling in the Gulf of Mexico. Each film presents an enchanting, if infantilizing, glimpse into a people whose long standing way of life and home was about to be irrevocably changed by the very forces commissioning the film. Each film remains silent about this intentional erasure. Flaherty relegated the people in his films to a fantasy space of peaceful — or rather, pacified — coexistence with the colonial coup at play.

It is not by accident that the colonial industries funded Flaherty’s endeavours: they saw the value in controlling the narratives of the lands they were seeking to exploit. The script of colonialism continues to run deep. I can’t help but notice the many elements of today’s news cycle that continue to reiterate ideas etched long ago by people like The Flahertys whose humanity was, at times, only as deep as their funders’ pocketbooks.

Allakariallak, the man who portrayed Nanook, died a year after Nanook of the North premiered — not the first documentary film, but by all means the first commercially successful one. Flaherty would tell reporters that ‘Nanook’ had died of starvation on a hunting trip, a careful PR move highlighting the hostile environment he had braved while making the film. The elders of Inukjuak told another story: Allakariallak had died of "white man's disease" – tuberculosis, brought most certainly by the fur traders, if not by Flaherty himself. Maggie Nujarluktuk, who portrayed Nanook’s fictional wife in the film, mothered Flaherty’s child, Josephie Flaherty, on Christmas day 1921. Josephie never met his father, and his generation was then subjected to the brutal relocation measures set in place by the the Canadian government: families were separated and brutally relocated, lifestyles obliterated, sled dogs killed, a way of life effectively and irrevocably erased. While a generation of settler Canadian children watched Nanook in their classrooms, generations of indigenous children were stolen from their homes in the Sixties Scoop which lasted well into the 1990s. The Flahertys toured on with the film, never speaking to these great inhumanities.

Beauty is not uncomplicated; people are not uncomplicated. After Robert’s death, Frances Flaherty channeled most of her resources into a space for gathering and for critique. The home she bought for herself was converted into a screening space and hosted the first seminars. An avowedly white space at first, the seminar’s prerogative has nonetheless long been to invite a constant challenge of its blind spots. Since the fifties, it has brought revolutionary people together, across difference, to upend entrenched notions of people, place, and story.

It is our hope that you are receiving this newsletter because you have experienced this potential for transformation in some way. Coming together to debate and question is fundamental to our ability to navigate the complexities of our world with curiosity and love. To truly see.

We are a film seminar. We see cinema as a catalyst for the conversations and communities we all long to have.

Last week, Opacity programmer Janaína Oliveira offered a Manifesto for this Beautiful World. She spoke about the root of curation – as a word, curare, and as a practice – in care. She invoked Tina Campt’s speech at the Loophole of Retreat

Care is comfort, compassion and sustenance delivered even in the face of inevitable failure. Care is a demonstration and instantiation of attachment and relation.
Care is also a refusal. It is a refusal to be insensitive to the pain or suffering of others. It is refusal to look away or look past the precarity of those in need.

We refuse to look away. The atrocities of the past month defy all humanity, we are mourning and aghast at the violent disconnect between the agendas of the powerful and the suffering of the people. We look to one another — to the resilience of those who are embodying love and resistance, community and solidarity. Our grief is borderless, our calls for ceasefire united. Thank you to all who are in the streets, and to all who in their daily practices are aching to manifest a new world, one where violence is obliterated, children are free to be children, and the genocides in Palestine, Congo, Sudan will cease.

Yes, it is hard to conjure repair when such gratuitous death is taking place in real time. Yes, an invitation to a film screening may very well feel incongruous, meaningless. How hard it is to conjure meaning when so much is so devastating and broken. It is a modest offering in the dark times, but we invite you to come, watch, listen.

“From the heavy debris of loss, together we emerge.” 

Wolastoqiyik musician Jeremy Dutcher, quotes this poem by Qwo-li Driskill as the inspiration for his latest album, Motewolonuwok (2023). We are absolutely honoured to include Dutcher’s music in the exhibition Exhibition: Remembering Our Futures, Now, curated by Raven Two Feathers, which opens the MAKA: Many Eyed Vessel mini-seminar at DCTV, November 17-19.

MAKA: Many Eyed Vessel is an alchemy. It is “a collective spell towards a time/space/territory in which we are capable of expressing, in our own forms and languages, how we want to live.” Together we will engage with the works of artists Azucena Losana, Beatriz Santiago Muñoz, Christopher Makoto Yogi, Colectivo Los Ingrávidos, Colectivo Silencio, Colectivo Yi Hagamos Lumbre, Dan Taulapapa McMullin, Demian DinéYazhi', Ha’aheo Auwae-Dekker, Jemma Desai, João Vieira Torres, Karrabing Film Collective, Larissa Sansour & Søren Lind, Meagan Byrne, Miko Revereza, New Red Order, Poh Lin Lee, and Sanaz Azari. Together their works will ignite and inspire conversations, conversations many of us yearn to be having.

MAKA: Many Eyed Vessel engages questions of the moment, questions of ancestry, home, and futurity — questions Palestinian filmmaker Larissa Sansour in her formidable work In Vitro (2019), part of Janaína’s Opacity Seminar (2021) and also part of Program 1 Seen/Unseen in FNYC Season 25: 

How do past traumas shape our sense of self? What do we do with memories of a place that no longer exists? How do we define a national identity? What other modes of belonging might we create in the face of colonial and climate catastrophe?


Thank you to our four capacious curators, Emily Abi-Kheirs, Ha’aheo Auwae-Dekker, Isabel Rojas, and Raven Two Feathers for the staggering heart they brought to this process. Thank you to the many artists coming together for this mini-seminar experience, for sharing the light that burns deep within their work.

From the heavy debris of loss, together we emerge. I invite you to join us next week to speak — and moreover, to listen — in whatever form feels right for you: 

  • Nov 15–19 | For the entire event, including an online session Wednesday, November 15 & a meal together after the Metrograph screening on Friday, November 17. 

  • Nov 18–19 | For the weekend at DCTV. 

  • NEW | For any single screening + discussion. 

You’ll find more details below.

Take care,
Samara

 

Flaherty NYC Season 25
MAKA: Many Eyed Vessel

Nov 17-18 -19 in NYC

+ additional offerings online

Programmed by
Emily Abi-Kheirs | Ha’aheo Auwae-Dekker | Isabel Rojas | Raven Two Feathers

Featuring works from artists around the world, this program is a curated response to the 2022 Flaherty Seminar, Continents of Drifting Clouds and the stirring reverberations that followed.

With the intentions of nourishment, MAKA: Many Eyed Vessel reckons with the themes of its predecessor while navigating institutional spaces through its offerings of reflection, interconnection, and the future.

 

Opening Night
Nowhere Near
Fri Nov 17, 5 pm

Miko Revereza, Philippines | 2023 | 95 min | English, Tagalog
Metrograph, 7 Ludlow Street
Followed by a discussion in the cinema and a meal nearby for all registered participants.


Mini Seminar
Saturday & Sunday, November 18 & 19
DCTV, 87 Lafayette Street


Film Program 1
Seen/Unseen

This program arose from wanting to understand how the spiritual and ancestral made themselves present or disappear from our lives. These films offer one bridge to our collective experience of envisioning our different realities and spaces, and how pieces of the world are made visible/invisible. The past, the present, and the future collide into one: the path to envisioning.

With offerings by João Vieira Torres (France/Brazil), Christopher Makoto Yogi (Japan/Hawai’i), Dan Taulapapa McMullin (Samoa), Colectivo Los Ingrávidos (México), and Larissa Sansour & Søren Lind (Palestine/Denmark), and Karrabing Film Collective.


Film Program 2
The Tongue is an Island

In Ōlelo Hawaiʻi, one hānau means the sands of my birth, this is the place one would call your homeland. Amidst our understanding of place, The Tongue is an Island emerges from an innate need to grasp where we come from and how we fit into the places we call home. These films offer a glimpse into the expansive understanding of what it means to inhabit a space.

With offerings by Ha’aheo Auwae-Dekker (Kanaka Maoli), João Vieira Torres (France/Brazil), and Sanaz Azari (Iran).


Film Program 3
Conjuros Y Ofrendas Para Un Futuro Incierto

This program calls upon us to remember, recognize, and express gratitude to our ancestors with affection. It is inhabited by films that yearn to survive in the darkness. When the system demands that we surrender to fear and claims there is no hope for the future, these stories, images, and sounds invite us to rethink time, bringing us closer to a sacred place to nourish the body and soul, and rekindle our spirits with the light.

With offerings by Colectivo Yi Hagamos Lumbre (Zapotec communities Mexico), Beatriz Santiago Muñoz (Puerto Rico), Colectivo Silencio (Perú), Azucena Losana (Mexico/Argentina), and Colectivo Los Ingrávidos (México).


Exhibition
Remembering Our Futures, Now

A multimedia exhibition by artists from various tribal nations through plains medicine wheel-inspired movement, exploring all forms of time and concurrent emotions revolving around the effects of colonization and re-indigenization. We honor all parts of ourselves and the internal process it will take to deal with our current transitional period in history.

With offerings by Meagan Byrne (Cree, Metis), Jeremy Dutcher (Wolastoqiyik), Dan Taulapapa McMullin* (Samoa), and Demian DinéYazhi´(Diné).


Farewell to virtual.theflaherty.org

Over the last two years, hundreds of people from over fifty countries have gathered on our custom-built online platform at www.virtual.theflaherty.org. We watched films together, rested by the pond, conversed on the mushroom log, and sat by the fireplace to reflect on what we’d seen.We were gifted with an exceptional team and advisors who helped us build a unique online experience with a focus on serendipity, exchange, and agency. Our participants guided us to continuously improve the platform, increasing accessibility and available languages. We were excited about what was ahead.

The platform was built on OhYay, operated by Snap Industries in beta version. Last year, we learned that Snap was no longer prioritising the development of the platform. We joined forces with leaders of the hybrid movement at Columbia University, IDFA, Sundance to try to save the platform. We were able to run another successful seminar in 2023 with the platform functioning at a limited capacity. Ultimately, we recently learned that OhYay would sunset definitively—its last day was October 31st 2023. 

Thank you to our brilliant advisors, online participants, and fellows who helped us learn more about what The Flaherty Seminar has been, can be, and might yet become.

Thank you to our formidable hybrid team, lead by Juan Pedro Agurcia (Producer) and Michael Krisch (Creative Technologist, Brown Institute for Media Innovation),
with Ziv Schneider (Creative Technologist), Alexander Porter (Creative Director), Katsitsionni Fox (Creative Advisor), Tong Wu (Creative Technologist), Homer Mora (Reflection Space & Sound Design), Alexander Kislyakov (Image Modelling), Abby Lord (Production Coordinator), Joel Neville Anderson (Audio Coordinator), Felicity Palma, Anisa Hosseinnehzad, and Jules Rosskam (Online Fellowship Coordinators). And thank you to all our brilliant advisors, Online Participants and Fellows who helped us learn more about what The Flaherty Seminar has been, can be, and might yet become.

We’re working on wonderful new partnerships and will soon have news about the next iteration of The Flaherty Hybrid Experience. Through this all we are committed to accessibility, affordability, and to bringing together minds and spirits across different spaces, worlds and temporalities. Stay tuned!


Community News

Duke’s Center for Documentary Studies is accepting applications for the DocX Development Lab – Otherwise Histories, Otherwise Futures, a week-long convening of documentary artists, scholars, and non-traditional independent researchers.

 A cohort of 8-10 participants will gather at Duke April 4–12, 2024 to engage in dialogue, share their work, explore interdisciplinary collaboration, and receive feedback. The lab coincides with the 2024 Full Frame Documentary Film Festival.

In addition to travel and lodging support, each fellow will be awarded $10,000.
Applications are due by November 27.


unseen
Nov 17–23 at DCTV

United States | POV | Producers: Set Hernandez, Day Al-Mohamed, Félix Endara, Dorian Gomez-Pestaña
Directed by Set Hernandez (Flaherty Film Seminar 2022 NBC Original Voices Fellow).

Q&As at select showtimes.


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October 2023: FNYC Season 25

Flaherty NYC Season 25
Nov 17–18–19 in NYC

+ additional offerings online

JOIN US!

Opening Night
Friday, November 17, 5 pm

Featuring Miko Reverenza’s
Nowhere Near


ʻIke maka o ka wehe ʻupena.

With this Flaherty NYC program, we invite you to visualize the opening of a net. Like a net, each offering and film in this program acts as a knot. Each knot is tied together by the same through lines and threads, creating a collectively woven container. Nets carry the things that sustain us, with this program, we seek to nourish from within.

Featuring works from artists around the world, this program is a curated response to the 2022 Flaherty Seminar, Continents of Drifting Clouds, and the stirring reverberations that followed. With the intention of nourishment, MAKA: Many Eyed Vessel reckons with the themes of its predecessor while navigating institutional spaces through its offerings of reflection, interconnection, and the future.

— Emily Abi-Kheirs (2022 LEF Fellow), Ha'aheo Auwae-Dekker and Isabel Rojas (2022 Flaherty Curatorial Fellows), and Raven Two Feathers (2022 Professional Development Fellow).


MAKA: Many Eyed Vessel is a multi-part series that will run in NYC November 17–19 at Metrograph and DCTV.

 

Opening Night will be hosted by Metrograph at 7 Ludlow Street on Friday November 17 at 5pm with a screening of Miko Reverenza’s breathtaking new feature, Nowhere Near (2023). The film will be followed by a discussion and reception.

On Saturday and Sunday November 18-19, FNYC will take on a mini-seminar format at DCTV, 87 Lafayette Street. Offerings will include film programs, multi-media exhibitions, discussions, workshops, and other forms of gathering.

 

Details on tickets + hybrid and online program coming soon.


Nowhere Near
by Miko Revereza
Friday, November 17,
5 pm
Metrograph

Nowhere Near by Miko Revereza
Philippines | 2023 | 95 min | English, Tagalog
The screening will be followed by a discussion with the filmmaker and programmers and an opening reception in Metrograph’s gorgeous upstairs bar.

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“With Nowhere Near — the culmination of several years of shooting, editing, relocation, and reflection — acclaimed experimental filmmaker Miko Revereza forges a personal and profound portrait of immigration, disillusionment, and the elusiveness of home.”

Read more in Reverse Shot


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

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. She is currently the Program Director for Salem Film Fest. She is a LEF New England Flaherty Film Seminar fellow.

Haʻaheo Auwae-Dekker (they/them) Haʻaheo Auwae-Dekker is a proud Kanaka ʻŌiwi 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 — their work has shown them the power of Indigenous storytelling. They were a Flaherty Film Seminar Curatorial Fellow in 2022.

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 is 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 was a Flaherty Film Seminar Curatorial Fellow in 2022. 

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 the Pacific. They recently premiered at ImagineNATIVE with A Drive to Top Surgery, a 360-video slice-of-life experience. 

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About Flaherty NYC

Flaherty NYC is the sister series of the Flaherty Film Seminar. It takes place twice a year, in the spring and fall. The series invites curators to assemble programs on a particular theme, featuring innovative, engaging, challenging, and groundbreaking films. The screenings are followed by discussions, often with the filmmakers, about the work and the curatorial topic.

We are especially interested in sharing this program and our process with community leaders, artists, and educators. If you would like to be involved, please contact info@theflaherty.org

A sincere thank you to our curatorial advisors and guides: Almudena Escobar-López and Sky Hopinka, 2022 Professional Development Fellow Angeline Gragasin, and Poh Lin Lee of Narrative Imaginings.

Thank you to the lovely teams at Metrograph and DCTV, and to funders at Humanities New York and NYC Department of Cultural Affairs.


Community News

Many Lumens Returns

BlackStar Projects’ signature podcast Many Lumens returns this fall with a star-studded crew of changemakers. Host Maori Karmael Holmes (2014 Flaherty Fellow and 2016 FNYC Co-Programmer) kicks things off on October 11 with a conversation with Lisa Cortés and Bethann Hardison. The duo is celebrating the theatrical release of Invisible Beauty, a feature documentary about Hardison’s pioneering journey as a Black model, modeling agent, and activist. Stay tuned for upcoming episodes, dropping every Wednesday, with writer Fariha Róisín, actress Danielle Deadwyler, musician Jason Moran, and chefs Omar Tate and Cybille St. Aude-Tate.

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Seminars 68 | 69 | 70

The staff and board of The Flaherty are filled with gratitude and inspiration after the 68th Flaherty Film Seminar (June 17–23, 2023 at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, NY).

We look forward to Seminars 69 and 70 with enthusiasm, and are delighted to announce the programmers for our next TWO editions!

As we move into a new season, we part with a valued long-time team member, Sarie Horowitz, who has been at the Flaherty since 2011.

warm | tinged with eroticism | challenging | intensive | thrilling | joyful | transformative | a thoughtful week of conversations | facilitated with a lot of care | edifying | humbling | energizing | engaging | fancy | porous | surprising | Queer People | provocative | interesting | revitalizing | generous | inspiring | loving | invigorating discussion | community | tender | deeply reflective | emotional | exciting | arousing | enlivening | productive | difficult | rigorous | expansive | enriching | exhausting | honestly…so much fun!


Photography by Bleue Liverpool

A Thrilling 68th Flaherty Film Seminar

The 68th Annual Flaherty Film Seminar, Queer World-Mending, concluded Monday July 31st, with the closing of our online asynchronous platform.

We were honored to welcome artists Sharlene Bamboat & Alexis Kyle Mitchell, Emily Vey Duke & Cooper Battersby, Theo Jean Cuthand, Shu Lea Cheang, John Greyson, Madsen Minax, James Richards, Roee Rosen, Amina Ross, Wu Tsang in our midst, as well as a host of elders whose presences were felt at every turn: Chantal Akerman, Barbara Hammer, Pat Hearn and Shelley Lake, George Kuchar, Curt McDowell, Gunvor Nelson, Edward Owens, Marlon Riggs, Beryl Sokoloff, Leslie Thornton and Ron Vawter, and Paul Wong.

Over five hundred people from around the world took part in this year’s programming – as Fellows, Seminar Participants, Pod Participants, or Online Attendees. We brought together creators, critics, and scholars in Argentina, Australia, Canada, Chile, China, Colombia, Croatia, France, Germany, Greece, Honduras, India, Ireland, Israel, México, Norway, Paraguay, Perú, Portugal, Puerto Rico, Slovenia, Spain, South Korea, Sweden, the Netherlands, Turkey, United Kingdom, and the United States.

Thank you to all who joined and supported this year’s seminar, to every member of the Flaherty Team, and the gracious folks at Skidmore who welcomed us so warmly on their verdant campus.

Read Mend the World: The 2023 Flaherty Seminar by Caden Mark Gardner, in the Film Comment Letter, July 31, 2023.


In this Blue Moon month,
The Flaherty is delighted to announce the programmers for the next two Seminars

May Adadol Ingawanij; Julian Ross photographed by Merel Hegenbart; Jemma Desai photographed by Christa Holka

May Adadol Ingawanij and Julian Ross will program
the 69th Flaherty Film Seminar To Commune in 2024

How does cinema enable us to commune? We’re interested in the potential of groups gathering around a screen over a period of time. We approach documentary filmmaking as that which brings together bodies, minds and spirits across different spaces, worlds and temporalities. […]

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 & Julian Ross, August 2023

TO COMMUNE: READ MORE

May Adadol Ingawanij | เม อาดาดล อิงคะวณิช is a writer, curator, and teacher. She works on Southeast Asian contemporary art; de-westernized and de-centred histories and genealogies of cinematic arts; avant-garde legacies in Southeast Asia; forms of future-making in contemporary Global South artistic and curatorial practices; aesthetics and circulation of artists’ moving image, art and independent films belonging to or connected with Southeast Asia. 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 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-organizer of Doc Fortnight at The Museum of Modern Art, New York, with Sophie Cavoulacos. He was a programmer at International Film Festival Rotterdam (2015-22), Locarno Film Festival (2019-20) and guest programmer at Singapore International Film Festival (2021). His curatorial work has been presented at Tate Modern, Art Institute of Chicago, e-flux Video & Film, Kunsthal Rotterdam, Eye Filmmuseum, Tokyo Photographic Art Museum, Harvard Film Archive and British Film Institute. He is co-director of the interdisciplinary research centre ReCNTR and editorial board member of Collaborative Cataloging Japan. He is co-curator of Animistic Apparatus with May Adadol Ingawanij, with whom he will co-programme the 69th Flaherty Seminar.


Jemma Desai Joins the Board of Directors as Programmer-in-Residence of the 70th Flaherty Film Seminar Yearning in 2025

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? How might both understanding more clearly our own desires as well as attending closely to the ways that reformism, managerial moderation and ‘professional practices’ contain the work that is possible lead us to more congruent and committed ways of working? —Jemma Desai, August 2023

YEARNING: READ MORE

In an effort to lift the veil between the leadership of The Flaherty, our history, and our programs, The Flaherty is honoured to work with curator, researcher, and writer Jemma Desai over the next two years. Her engagement with our board, staff, and the archives will culminate in her curation of the 70th seminar, tying our long history together with possible visions for the future.

Jemma Desai is a writer, educator and somatic facilitator based in London. Her practice engages film and other art forms through research, writing, performance, as well as informally organized settings for deep study. She has previously worked with the BFI and British Council, and is the creator of "This work isn't for Us” a multidisciplinary and auto-ethnographic research project on institutional racism in the UK arts sector. She was co-chair of LUX, a UK based international arts agency that supports and promotes artists’ moving image between 2017-22, the Head of Programming at Berwick Film & Media Arts Festival in 2021 is and is on the programming committee at Blackstar Film Festival in Philadelphia.  She is a practice based PhD candidate at Central School of Speech and Drama thinking through the liberatory possibilities of abolitionist praxis to cultural production with a thesis entitled "what do we want from each other after we have told our stories?" She regularly writes, teaches and speaks on her research interests in a variety of academic and non-academic contexts.


Photographed by Scott Rudd at a 60th Flaherty Film Seminar screening in 2014

A heartfelt thank you Sarie Horowitz

The Flaherty Board of Directors and team send flowers and gratitude to Sarie Horowitz as we part ways. We wish her great success in her future endeavours. Sarie joined The Flaherty as seasonal seminar staff in 2011, working closely with Executive Director Mary Kerr. In her thirteen years working at our organization, she helped implement a dozen seminars and two dozen FNYC seasons, rising to the role of Program Director in 2019.

Sarie has been a gift to the Flaherty community. She has nurtured generations of dedicated staff, worked closely with programmers and artists, and is beloved for her perennial kindness, care, and warmth.


Call for Entries: MacDowell Residency
March 1 – August 31, 2024, Peterborough, NH
Apply by September 10

Apply for a MacDowell Fellowship! Filmmakers of all genres, in addition to artists across six additional disciplines, are eligible for MacDowell residency Fellowships. There are no residency fees, and need-based stipends and travel reimbursement grants are available to all artists awarded Fellowships. Deadline: September 10.

APPLY



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