International Fellows

Kathryn W. Davis Fellowship for International Understanding Through Film

A tireless advocate for international relations, Kathryn Davis is resolute in her conviction that mutual understanding, respect, and lasting peace cannot be realized without genuine dialogue through the sharing of ideas, cultures, and dreams. Inspired by her lifelong efforts to create a more harmonious world, the Kathryn W. Davis Fellowship for International Understanding Through Film makes it possible for filmmakers, educators, and programmers from around the world to live, work, and teach on the JBFC campus. As ambassadors of their region, Fellows provide insight into the dynamics of their culture through film, media, and teaching.

Fellows have opportunities to screen their films, lead seminars on the cinema of their region, teach courses, provide professional development, and use the Media Arts Lab’s production facilities to work on personal projects. Previous Fellows have come from Burkina Faso, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Israel, Spain, Iran, and Romania. Fellowships are competitive and awarded through an application and interview process.

The Fellowships range from two to eight weeks in length. Established and emerging international artists working in all film genres (animation, documentary, video art, narrative, etc.) and disciplines (screenwriting, sound design, cinematography, etc.) are encouraged to apply. The Fellowship now extends to film curators and media educators engaged in groundbreaking work; they are also encouraged to apply.

For more information, please contact Managing Director Dominick Balletta at dballetta@burnsfilmcenter.org

 

Current Fellows

Photo: Russell Peborde

Lucio Gregoretti

Spring 2013

Lucio Gregoretti has written the music for approximately 100 plays and film scores, working with directors including Carlo Lizzani, Margarethe von Trotta, and Lina Wertmüller. He also has composed many operas and symphonic and chamber music pieces, receiving commissions from numerous organizations and international festivals. His music has been performed around the world.

We are thrilled that Mr. Gregoretti will be coming to the JBFC as our latest Fellow. During the month of March, he will attend screenings, present public programs, and work with students.

March 7, 7:15 
Francesca and Nunziata with Q&A: Lucio Gregoretti

March 20, 7:15
Italian Language Night: Amarcord with introduction by Lucio Gregoretti and reception.

March 9-10, 10:00-4:00
Creators' Co-op weekend workshop. Lucio Gregoretti will teach a master workshop on scoring for film.

   
Past Fellows  
Zhu Rikun

Wang Wo

Zhu Rikun, China
Wang Wo, China

Fall 2012

Zhu Rikun is one of the best known figures in Chinese independent cinema, an unwavering proponent of independence from the censorship and commerce of China’s mainstream movie business. In 2001 he founded Fanhall Studio, a production and distribution company whose goal was to stimulate the development of independent Chinese cinema. He produced many of the hardest-hitting Chinese films in recent years, including such major works as Xu Xin’s Karamay and Li Hongqi’s Winter Vacation. Zhu was the organizer of the Beijing Independent Film Festival and the Songzhuang Documentary Film Festival during a decade that saw a flourishing of Chinese independent film.

Zhu joined us as a film programmer and educator and also worked on postproduction with the filmmaker/artist Wang Wo, a close associate, who designed the Fanhall complex. Wang Wo has been teaching at the Li Xianting Film School, the first independent film school in China, since 2008.

 

Zhu Rikun curated the series Hidden China. 

   

Apichatpong Weerasethakul in UCCA, Beijing, 2011. Photo: Lv Haiqiang, courtesy of the photographer

Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Thailand
Spring 2012
Apichatpong Weerasethakul is an internationally acclaimed Thai filmmaker and visual artist. A native of Bangkok, Weerasethakul was trained in architecture before turning to filmmaking in the 1990s. His award-winning work has been shown to great acclaim around the world.
Read his full bio here (pdf).

During his residency, Weerasethakul used the Media Arts Lab to do all the postproduction on a pair of short films, Mekong Hotel and Ashes, both of which were screened at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival. 

May 3 - 8
The Unlimited Possibilities of Cinema: Selected by Apichatpong Weerasethakul
The films that influenced Weerasethakul the most—an unexpected mix of indisputable classics and delightful obscurities.

The JBFC's Andrew Jupin spoke with Apichatpong Weerasethakul on our JBFC Podcast before his arrival in Pleasantville. Apichatpong discussed his filmmaking philosophy, the strict censorship laws in Thailand, the new work he'll be finishing here at the Media Arts Lab, and the element that flows through all his work: dreams.

 

   

Mihai Chirilov, Romania
Fall 2011
Mihai Chirilov is a highly influential Romanian film critic and artistic director of the Transylvania International Film Festival, which he cofounded in 2002 and guided to worldwide prominence. Chirilov is a key figure in the renaissance of Romanian cinema, which earns praise and prizes at film festivals around the world. He has been the curator of the Romanian Film Festival at New York’s Tribeca Cinemas since its inception in 2006, and has served on several international film festival juries. As the International Programmer-in-Residence, Chirilov curated the “Tales from the Golden Age: New Romanian Cinema” series.

The JBFC's Andrew Jupin sat down with Mihai recently to discuss the circumstances surrounding the Romanian cinema revolution, Romania's ever-growing presence in the global film community, and the rise of the Transylvania International Film Festival on our JBFC Podcast.

 

   
Yolanda Pividal Yolanda Pividal, Spain
Summer 2011
Yolanda Pividal is an independent documentary filmmaker, journalist, and TV producer from Spain. She has won three Emmy Awards and produced and edited short documentaries for the CUNY TV television series “Nueva York.” She spent the summer of 2011 at the JBFC editing her first feature documentary film, Fighting Kites, and teaching "Unscripted: Adventures in Nonfiction," a three-week documentary-making course for 16-18 year olds. Look for

Fighting Kites on a JBFC screen in Fall, 2011!
   
Bahman Farmanara, Iran
Spring 2010
Born in Tehran, Bahman Farmanara is one of the founding figures of the Iranian New Wave of the 1970s. As well as being an acclaimed director, he is an influential screenwriter, producer, and distributor who is responsible for bringing many key international films to our shores. During his stay as the JBFC International Filmmaker-in-Residence, he presented six of his own works and a selection of documentaries about his homeland. 
"Experiencing Iranian Culture through a Master's Films" - New York Times February 28, 2010
   

Ido Haar, Israel
Fall/Winter 2009
"I make documentaries because I believe that the most exciting, crazy, tragic, and comic stories are hidden in real life."  -Ido Haar
Ido Haar, is a graduate of Jerusalem’s famous Sam Spiegel Film and Television School. His films follow a vérité, observational style. He was drawn to filmmaking after a stint in the Israeli army.
During Haar's stay at the JBFC, we screened two of his films, 9 Star Hotel and Melting Siberia.
Interview with Ido Haar on the JBFC's YouTube channel

   

Namik Kabil, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Summer 2009
“The war in Bosnia changed me personally to the extent that sometimes I can hardly recognize myself at all. I have become obsessed with the mystery of the human spirit.” -Namik Kabil
Namik Kabil was born in Trebinje, in southern Bosnia. When his country separated from Yugoslavia in 1992 and war broke out, he was able to escape, eventually spending a decade in the US as a refugee. He returned to his homeland because, he says, “I wanted to hear the unspoken truth about the war and make movies about it.” Now based in Sarajevo, he works as a scriptwriter and director and is also deeply involved with Kriterion Cinema, an art house theater run by students of all ethnic and religious backgrounds that fosters cross-cultural dialogue and understanding. During Kabil’s stay on the JBFC campus, he was a guest lecturer in the JBFC's "World Crew" course for college students and he worked with students making documentary films about immigrants in Queens. In addition, Kabil hosted screenings of two of his films, Nightguards and Interrogation, at the JBFC Theater.

   
Fanta Régina Nacro, Burkina Faso
Spring 2009
The JBFC Media Arts Lab's first filmmaker-in-residence, Nacro lives and works in Burkina Faso, the West African land formerly known as Upper Volta, which is the home of FESPACO, the continent's largest film festival (now in its 40th year). One of only a handful of female African filmmakers, Nacro studied at the INAFEC film school in the Burkina Faso capital, Ouagadougo, and earned a master's degree from the Sorbonne in Paris. In a career spanning more than 20 years, she's depicted Africa's traditions and harsh realities, but she often turns her lens with comic joy on issues of sexuality, gender relations, and modernity. In 1993, she founded her own production company, Les Films du Défi, whose mission is to create, produce, and distribute films, support new filmmakers, and raise awareness of African films. She has won two dozen awards for her work in festivals around the world, from Cannes to San Francisco.
While at the JBFC, Nacro presented several of her films at the theater (The Night of TruthBintou, and Konaté's Gift) and taught film classes at the Media Arts Lab.