2023 Flaherty NYC


MAKA
Many Eyed Vessel

November 17–19

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

 

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 throughlines and threads, creating a collectively woven container. Nets carry the things that sustain us, with this program, we seek to nourish from within.

– 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 25th Season reimagines Flaherty NYC by weaving works by 2022 seminar guest artists João Vieira Torres*, New Red Order and Colectivo Los Ingrávidos together with films and other offerings by Azucena Losana, Beatriz Santiago Muñoz, Christopher Makoto Yogi, Colectivo Silencio, Colectivo Yi Hagamos Lumbre, Dan Taulapapa McMullin*, Demian DinéYazhi´, Ha’aheo Auwae-Dekker*, Jemma Desai*, Jeremy Dutcher, Karrabing Collective, Larissa Sansour & Søren Lind, Meagan Byrne, Miko Revereza, Poh Lin Lee, Sanaz Azari

* attending in person

Bringing together artists from 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.

MAKA: Many Eyed Vessel takes place at Metrograph (Nov 17), DCTV (Nov 18-19), and online.


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.

We are grateful to work with the lovely teams at Metrograph and DCTV, and to our program partners at Humanities New York and the NYC Department of Cultural Affairs. Thank you also to the Consulate General of Brazil in New York.


 

Schedule

  • 1–2:30 pm ET Online

    Encountering Edges: Programmer Introduction and Narrative Practice with Poh Lin Lee

  • Metrograph | Opening Night Screening
    5–7:30 pm ET

    Nowhere Near

    A discussion with the programmers will follow the screening.

  • DCTV

    11 am | Space Opening, Coffee and Mingling

    12 pm | Exhibition Introduction: Remembering Our Futures, Now

    1-5 pm | Remembering Our Futures, Now open to the Public

    5 pm | Film Program 1: Offerings for the Seen & Unseen

    6:30–7:30 pm | Seminar Discussion: SEEN/UNSEEN with Dan Taulapapa McMullin, João Vieira Torres and Ha’aheo Auwae-Dekker

  • DCTV

    10 am | Space Opening, Coffee and Mingling

    11 am | Film Program 2: THE TONGUE IS AN ISLAND

    12:30–1:30 pm | Seminar Discussion: THE TONGUE IS AN ISLAND - language and identity with João Vieira Torres and Ha’aheo Auwae-Dekker, moderated by Simone Barros (2022 Duke Fellow)

    3 pm | Film Program 3: CONJUROS Y OFRENDAS PARA UN FUTURO INCIERTO

    4:30–6 pm | Seminar Discussion (Hybrid): COLLECTIVE OFFERINGS with Colectivo Yi, Colectivo Silencio and more to be announced soon!

    6–7:30 pm | Closing Reception


Programs

Encountering Edges

Wednesday, Nov 15, 1–2:30 pm
Online

Programmer Introduction + Narrative Practice with Poh Lin Lee (Narrative Imaginings). Available to MAKA registrants and 2022 Seminar Participants


Opening Night: Nowhere Near

Miko Revereza, 2023; 95 min
Friday, Nov 17, 5 pm
Metrograph, 7 Ludlow Street

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.

The film will be preceded by a screening of New Red Order’s Endless Land Acknowledgement.
The program will be followed by a discussion with Miko Reverenza and the series programmers.


Mini Seminar
Sat & Sun, Nov 18 & 19
DCTV, 87 Lafayette Street

The weekend will take the form of a seminar hosted at DCTV.
Offerings will include film programs, multi-media exhibitions, discussions, and social gatherings. Film programs will be followed by hour-long seminar-style discussions.


Film Program 1: Offerings for the Seen & Unseen

Film still courtesy Christopher Makoto Yogi

Saturday, Nov 17, 5 pm
DCTV

How are the images of the unseen made visible? How does the visible communicate with the invisible? We have lit the incense left at the altar. The smoke pillows in the air. Did my breath move its direction or did something unseen touch it? 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.

Film still courtesy Colectivo Los Ingrávidos

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

Discussion with Dan Taulapapa McMullin and João Vieira Torres; moderated by Ha’aheo Auwae-Dekker.

  • The Sun Quartet, Part 1: Sunstone
    Colectivo Los Ingrávidos | México | 8 min | 2017

    Suddenly, this rain
    Christopher Makoto Yogi | Hawai’i | 1 min | 2019

    TORÉ
    João Vieira Torres, Tanawi Xucuru Kariri | Brazil/France| 16 min | 2015

    Sinalela
    Dan Taulapapa McMullin | Samoa/United States | 4 min | 2001

    Wutharr, Saltwater Dreams
    Karrabing Film Collective | Australia | 29 min | 2016

    ___

    INTERMISSION
    ___

    Tonalli
    Colectivo Los Ingrávidos | México | 16 min | 2021

    Crianças Fantasmas | Ghost Children
    João Vieira Torres | Brazil/France | 16 min | 2016

    Suddenly, Honolulu
    Christopher Makoto Yogi | Hawai’i | 3 min | 2016

    al Mukhtabar | In Vitro
    Larissa Sansour/Søren Lind | Palestine/Denmark/UK | 28 min | 2019

 

Film Program 2: The Tongue is an Island

Film still courtesy Ha’aheo Auwae-Dekker

Sunday, Nov 19, 11 am
DCTV

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. Are we rooted to “home”? Shipwrecked to a dislocated sense of identity? How do we find our “birth sands” and turn them into glass?

Still courtesy of João Vieira Torres

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

Discussion will focus on language and identity. With Ha’aheo Auwae-Dekker and João Vieira Torres; moderated by Simone Barros (2022 Duke University Online Fellow).

  • The Tongue is an Island
    Ha’aheo Auwae-Dekker | Hawai`i | 7 min | 2023

    Ici, Là-Bas et Lisboa | Here, There, and Lisboa
    João Vieira Torres | France / Brazil | 18 min | 2012

    I Comme Iran | I for Iran
    Sanaz Azari | Belgium | 50 min | 2014

 

Film Program 3:
Conjuros Y Ofrendas Para Un Futuro Contingente

Film still courtesy Beatriz Santiago Muñoz

Sunday, Nov 19, 3:00 pm
DCTV

Vamos a sentarnos aquí, cerca de nuestras palabras, y lejos de ellos.  
Vamos a recoger los pedazos de nuestro cuerpo, a lavarlo y a curarlo.
Vamos a susurrar lo que nos duele. Después seremos un conjuro.
– Fruto, Daniela Rea Gómez. Ed. Antílope, 2023

Este programa se preparó al modo de una ofrenda. Convoca a recordar, reconocer y agradecer a nuestros antepasados con afecto. Está habitado por películas que anhelan sobrevivir en la oscuridad. Cuando el sistema demanda arrojarse al miedo y dice que no hay esperanza en el futuro, éstas historias, imágenes y sonidos invitan a repensar el tiempo, acercándonos a un lugar sagrado para alimentar el cuerpo y el alma, y reanimarnos con la lumbre.

Conjuro de fuerza colectiva hacia un tiempo/espacio/territorio en el que somos capaces de expresar, en nuestras propias formas y lenguas, cómo queremos vivir.  

We will sit here, close to our words, and far from them.
We will gather the pieces of our body, wash it, and heal it.
We will whisper what hurts us. Afterward, we will become a spell.
– Fruto, Daniela Rea Gómez. Ed. Antílope, 2023

This program was prepared as an offering. It 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.

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.

Still courtesy Azucena Losana

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

Discussion: Collective Offerings
With Colectivo Yi, Colectivo Silencio, and more. Participating via Zoom with live Spanish-to-English interpretation.

  • Bucan tu rhachhidu’ | Deja lo que te espanta | Leave what scares you
    Luna Maran – Colectivo Yi, Hagamos Lumbre | Zapotec communities, Mexico | 28 min | 2023

    La cabeza mató a todos | The Head that Killed Everyone
    Beatriz Santiago Muñoz | Puerto Rico | 7 min | 2014

    El polvo ya no nubla nuestros ojos | After The Dust
    Colectivo Silencio | Perú | 25 min | 2022

    Ofrenda
    Azucena Losana | Otomí communities, Mexico / Argentina | 4 min | 2023

    Xiuhtecuhtli
    Colectivo Los Ingrávidos | México | 16 min | 2023


Exhibition: Remembering Our Futures, Now

Image courtesy Jeremy Dutcher

Remembering our futures, now is a multimedia exhibition bringing together artists from various tribal nations through a plains medicine wheel inspired movement through the exhibition space. We explore all forms of time in the exhibition space and concurrent emotions revolving around the effects of colonization and re-indigenization. The at times conflicting emotions around reckoning with colonization, with the current tools at our disposal, is all brought into one space. In doing so, 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).

Note: there are many different interpretations of the medicine wheel, with correlating animal, plant, and aspects of humanity (spirit, mental, physical, emotional), orientation of the wheel, and even color, changing depending on who you talk to.  Here are two different versions to reference.



Registration

Full program registration is $75. FNYC Season 25 registration includes:

  • Access to all online events and in-person programming including four in-person film programs (including Opening Night), all discussions, and all online offerings. 

  • An invitation to our opening night dinner at House of Joy.

  • Access to the exhibition Remembering Our Futures, Now at DCTV November 18–19 

  • Coffee, drinks, and snacks throughout the weekend at DCTV (PLEASE NOTE: Breakfast, lunch, and dinner will not be provided unless otherwise noted.) 

Weekend only registration is $60 and includes all programs except opening night.

We are now single tickets to all the screenings! Purchase tickets to the Opening Night screening at Metrograph, for tickets to the remaining programs, please click the link above!


Programmers

 

Emily Abi-Kheirs

Emily Abi-Kheirs

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 Programming Manager at GBH and Program Director at Salem Film Fest. She is a LEF New England Flaherty Film Seminar fellow.

Haʻaheo Auwae-Dekker

Haʻaheo Auwae-Dekker

Haʻaheo Auwae-Dekker (they/them) 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

Isabel Rojas

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

Raven Two Feathers

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. 


Artists


Azucena Losana

Born and raised in Mexico City, Azucena Losana lives and works in Mexico City and Buenos Aires. Losana holds a Multimedia Arts Degree from the National Arts University in Argentina, the Diploma of Audiovisual Preservation and Restoration (DIPRA) from the Film Archive and the National Image of Argentina (CINAIN), and Claudio Caldini’s experimental film workshop. She? works in experimental film, installation, and video.

Beatriz Santiago Muñoz

Born in San Juan, Puerto Rico, in 1972, Santiago Muñoz is a film and video maker. The uncontrived, observational style of her art aligns it with the sensibility of documentary film while also blurring the boundaries between fact and fiction. Despite its ostensible simplicity, her work stems from intensive research, observation, and documentation, and she is deeply concerned with the tension between the documentarian’s desire for truth and the artist’s aesthetic concerns. For her, the camera as a tool that can both reveal and fabricate reality.

She completed her BA in humanities at the University of Chicago in 1993 and received her MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1997.

Christopher Makoto Yogi

Christopher Makoto Yogi is a filmmaker from Honolulu, Hawai‘i whose films include the features I Was A Simple Man (2021), August At Akiko’s (2018). His work is currently available to stream on the Criterion Channel.

Colectivo Los Ingrávidos

Colectivo Los Ingrávidos is a Mexican film collective founded in 2012 to dismantle the commercial and corporate audiovisual grammar and its embedded ideology. The collective is inspired by the historical avant-gardes and their commitment to using both form and content against alienating realities. Their methods combine digital and analog mediums, interventions on archival materials, agitprop, mythology, social protests, and documentary poetry. Their radical experimentations on documentary and cinematographic devices produce images, both visual and auditory that are political possibilities in their own right.

Colectivo Silencio 

Fernando Vilchez Rodríguez, Lady Vinces Cruz, Carla Amaro Carreño, César Vargas Pérez, Mayra Villavicencio Príncipe, Walther Maradiegue Montaño, Ana Karina Barandiaran Urday, Martín López Sono, Veronica Ferrari Gálvez, Náyarith Gastulo Ladines, Luis Tirado Ordoñez, Christian Fernando Ñeco Bornaz

Colectivo Silencio is a group of young artists and activists who live and work in different cities in Peru. Their work arose from discussions on political cinema, enriched by the identity and territorial diversity of each other.

Colectivo Yi, Hagamos Lumbre

Carolina María Vázquez García, Casandra Casasola, Cela Cruz Ramírez, Eleazar García, Elena Pardo, Erick Baeza, Eva Melina Ruiz González, Gloria Martínez Villanueva, Jenny García, Julio López Fernández, Luna Marán, Marco Salaverría, Nereyda Pérez Vázquez, Nicolas Rojas Sánchez, Odin Acosta, Pablo Márquez, Pablo Morales García, Rosalinda Dionisio Sánchez, Selene Galindo

A group of storytellers decided to join the fires to walk together with a feminist approach, a community perspective, and the aim of supporting processes of defense of the territory. The paths of Yi Hagamos Lumbre are not in a straight line, nor are they paved—it is the time to open the gap, learn to plow the land and cultivate our ears as windows, to build memory and new horizons.

Its headquarters are in the beautiful community of Guelatao de Juárez. From this Zapotec land the space for conversation, creation and dissent is opened. The kitchen, dialogue, and walks are spaces that lead the collaborators to creative activities. The important thing is the walk, the enjoyment, the discovery—we are not the same as at the beginning of the trip.

The creation of image, sound, and text allow us to re-think ourselves, remember, and dream of possible futures. Meetings, meals, and campfires, are often the starting point for new conversations. This creative, multidisciplinary, mutant, temporary, and diverse community has over 24 years of experience in film and audiovisual production with a social impact. The collaborators arrive, walk, sow, harvest, undertake other paths. Some will return with the new spring, others will continue to feed the conversation.

We have learned by tealling stories like the feature documentary Uncle Yim, 2019 (selected in Ambulante, BBC REEL); Rooster Powder, 2021; The Revolt, 2022; The end of the first times, 2024; Through Tola, 2023; Cicadas, 2024; Tuyuku (Ahuehuete), 2019 (Ojo Award for Mexican Documentary Short Film at the 18th FICM), and Ñuu kanda (People in Motion), 2020. They have produced content for the BBC, Lila Downs, Estemam, Sara Curruchic, Andrés Calamaro and have participated in projects with Itinerant Audiovisual Camp, Here Cinema, Agenda Guelatao, Cine Too, Bechi Loi.

Dan Taulapapa McMullin

Dan Taulapapa McMullin is an artist and poet from Sāmoa i Sasa’e (American Samoa). Their artist book The Healer’s Wound: A Queer Theirstory of Polynesia (2022) was published by Pu’uhonua Society and Tropic Editions of Honolulu in the Hawai’i Triennial, with a second edition publishing in 2024. They are currently working on a novel.

Demian DinéYazhi´

Demian DinéYazhi’(Diné) is a transdisciplinary artist who uses social interventions to interrupt colonial power structures. Their blog Heterogeneoushomosexual contemplates “Radical Indigenous Queer Feminist Art” and how a marginalized body navigates and resists assimilation. DinéYazhi’s practice includes curation, zine production, public interactions, as well as writing and poetry. DinéYazhi’ graduated with a BFA in Intermedia Arts from PNCA in 2014 and is the founder of Radical Indigenous Survivance & Empowerment (R.I.S.E.) an activist initiative for education and preservation of Indigenous art and culture. They grew up in Gallup, New Mexico, and is currently based in Portland, Oregon.

Ha’aheo Auwae-Dekker 

Haʻaheo Auwae-Dekker (they/them) 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.

João Vieira Torres 

João Vieira Torres is a French-Brazilian artist/filmmaker born in Recife, Brazil. He lives and works between France and Brazil. He obtained a Master degree in Photography and Video Art from the École Nationale Supérieure des Arts Décoratifs in Paris, followed by a post-graduate residency at Le Fresnoy-Studio National des Arts Contemporains (2010-12) and continued his research in the PHD program Document et Art Contemporain at the École Superieur Européenne de l’Image. 

Vieira Torres uses various forms of artistic expression: photography, cinema, video art, and performance. One of the main axes of their work is the issue of “foreignness” and forms of instability and perspectives breaking points that originate it. He has shown his work at: Venice Biennale College (IT) / DocLisboa (PT) / New York Film Festival (US) / Kinoforum São Paulo (BR) / CentrePompidou(FR) / Palais de Tokyo (FR) / Edinburgh International Film Festival (UK) / Art of the Real Lincoln Center (US) / Ann Arbor Film Fest (US) / FIDMarseille(FR) / Olhar de Cinema (BR) / Rencontres Int. du Documentaire de Montréal (CA) / Rencontres Internationales Paris/Berlin (FR/DE) / Museu da Imagem e do som de São Paulo (BR) / Anthology Film Archives(US) / MIS São Paulo (BR) / LABoral (ESP) / IndieLisboa(PT) / Tampere Short Film Fest (FI) / Uniondocs New York (US) / Vilnius CAC(LT).

Jeremy Dutcher

Jeremy Dutcher is a Two-Spirit song carrier, composer, activist, and ethnomusicologist from Tobique First Nation in Eastern Canada. He gained international acclaim for his album Wolastoqiyik Lintuwakonawa, which earned him the 2018 Polaris Music Prize and Indigenous Music Album of the Year at the 2019 JUNO Awards. His musical style blends the songs of his community with neoclassical, jazz, and pop influences, and has led him to collaborate with such iconic artists as Beverly Glenn Copeland and Yo-Yo Ma. Dutcher’s work has taken him to the world’s great concert halls, NPR’s Tiny Desk, and the judges’ table of Canada’s Drag Race.

Meagan Byrne

Meagan Byrne is an Âpihtawikosisân (Métis, Ontario) game designer born and raised in Hamilton, Ontario. Her designs incorporate narrative, game mechanics, sound and traditional art and are deeply rooted in Indigenous Futurisms, language and Indigenous feminist theory. She uses her games to explore questions of cultural belonging, the Indigenization of media and the future of Indigenous language and culture.

Meagan has received a B.A. of English Literature (2009) from McMaster University and a B.A. of Game Design (2017) from the Sheridan College Institute of Technology and Advanced Learning. Meagan was the first Digital + Interactive Coordinator at the imagineNATIVE Media Festival and is the current owner/lead designer of Achimostawinan Games, an Indigenous-run and staffed indie game studio.

Miko Revereza

Miko Revereza (b. 1988. Manila, Philippines) is a filmmaker raised in California. DROGA! (2014), DISINTEGRATION 93-96 (2017), No data plan (2018), Distancing (2019) and El Lado Quieto (2021) have widely screened at festivals such as Locarno Film Festival, International Film Festival Rotterdam, NYFF Projections, IDFA, and Film Society of Lincoln Center’s Art of the Real. His debut feature film, No Data Plan is recognized with such honors as the Sheffield Doc Fest Art Award and San Diego Asian Film Festival Emerging Filmmaker Award, as well as being listed in BFI Sight & Sound Magazine’s 50 Best Films of 2019, Hyperallergic’s Top 12 Documentary and Experimental Films of 2019 and CNN Philippines Best Filipino Films of 2019. Revereza is listed as Filmmaker Magazine’s 2018 25 New Faces of Independent Cinema, a 2019 Flaherty Seminar featured filmmaker, MFA graduate at Bard College Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts and recipient of the 2021 Vilcek Prize in Filmmaking.

New Red Order 

Adam Khalil, a member of the Ojibway tribe, is a filmmaker and artist from Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, whose practice attempts to subvert traditional forms of image-making through humor, relation, and transgression. Khalil is a core contributor to New Red Order and a co-founder of COUSINS Collective. His work has been exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art, Sundance Film Festival, Walker Arts Center, Lincoln Center, Tate Modern, HKW, Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, Toronto Biennial 2019, and Whitney Biennial 2019. Khalil is the recipient of various fellowships and grants, including a 2021 Creative Capital Award, 2021 Herb Alpert Award, Sundance Art of Nonfiction, Jerome Artist Fellowship, Cinereach and the Gates Millennium Scholarship.

Jackson Polys is a multi-disciplinary artist belonging to Tlingit territory, living and working between what are currently called Alaska and New York. He is a core contributor to New Red Order, a public secret society who co-produce video, performance, and installation works that confront desires for indigeneity, settler colonial tendencies, and obstacles to Indigenous growth and agency. His individual and collaborative works have appeared at the Alaska State Museum, Anchorage Museum, Artists Space, HKW Berlin, Images Festival, Kunsthal Charlottenborg, MIT, Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, Museum of Modern Art, New York Film Festival, Sundance Film Festival, Toronto Biennial of Art, Walker Arts Center, and the Whitney Museum of American Art.

Zack Khalil is a filmmaker and artist from Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, currently based in Brooklyn, New York.  His work centers Indigenous narratives in the present—and looks towards the future—through the use of innovative nonfiction forms. He is a core contributor to New Red Order, a public-secret society which calls attraction toward indigeneity into question, yet promotes this desire, and enjoins potential non-Indigenous accomplices to participate in the co-examination and expansion of Indigenous agency. His work has been exhibited at Artists Space, Haus der Kulturen der Welt Berlin, Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, Museum of Modern Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, Lincoln Center, Walker Arts Center, Kunsthal Charlottenborg, New York Film Festival, and the Sundance Film Festival.

Sanaz Azari

Sanaz Azari was born in Isfahan (Iran) in 1981. She grew up and lives in Brussels where, after studying photography, she graduated from the scenography workshop of the École nationale supérieure des arts visuels de La Cambre.

Parallel to her studies, she followed intensive theatre courses for three years according to the Stanislavski method. After working on scenography, urban installations, and exhibitions, she directed her first documentary Salaam Isfahan which won the Audience Award at the Visions du réel festival in Nyon in 2010.


CALL TO ACTION

The programming collective elected to donate a portion of the Series’ production budget to support Native American community organizations working to honor Native people’s right to land, resources, culture, and autonomy. We invite you to take action and consider donating to one or both organizations listed below:

Donate to Lenni Lenapexkweyok, a collective of individual Lenape matriarchs who are working to increase Lenape presence in their homelands, immediately and long term. Reach out directly to the collective regarding further collaboration, supporting Lenape return, and/or giving land back at lennilenapexkweyok@gmail.com. Follow @lennilenapexkweyok on Instagram to get the latest.

Donate to the American Indian Community House (AICH), a not-for-profit organization working to improve and promote the well-being of the American Indian Community and to increase the visibility of American Indian cultures in an urban setting in order to cultivate awareness, understanding and respect.

 

 

About Flaherty NYC

Flaherty NYC takes place twice a year, in the spring and in the fall. The series invites curator/s to assemble programs on a particular theme, featuring innovative, engaging, challenging, and groundbreaking films.
The screenings are followed by discussions, often including the makers, about the work and the curatorial topic. This is the sister series of the Flaherty Film Seminar, and in 2023 we are excited to continue to expand beyond the physical venues in New York City to online audiences around the world.

 

 
 

General Support for The Flaherty provided by

 
 
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