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StaffMahen Bonetti, Executive Director Rico Speight Muriel Placet-Kouassi Aba Taylor Hellura Lyle Toccarra Thomas SupportThe programs of AFF are made possible by the generous support of: Ford Foundation The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture Tides Foundation The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts New York Foundation for the Arts Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) Partnership for Parks UNDP GoCard French Cultural Services
New York State Council
American Express Company
ContactAfrican Film Festival 154 West 18th Street Suite 2A New York, NY 10011 voice: 1.212.352.1720 fax: 1.212.807.9752 Mailing List >> email: nyaff@erols.com |
OverviewAfrican Film Festival, Inc. (AFF) is a New York non-profit 501(c)(3) arts organization. The organization, established in 1990, began as an ad hoc committee of African and American artists and scholars. In the 1950s and 60s, African filmmakers began to create images of post-colonial Africa with nuanced understanding of Africas cultural diversity. Over the last half century, having sliced through stereotypes with exacting social critique, African cinema has become a unique blend of aesthetic experimentation, history and politics. As African nations have constructed modern identities from traditional and colonial experiences, the role of visual culture in communicating these new transitional identities has immediacy for audiences around the world. The impetus for themes such as colonialism, post-independence corruption and chronicles of tribal customs often erupts from the ironies of contemporary life. But African filmmakers also draw from springs of myth, fantasy, humor and magic to nourish a narrative sensibility in which tradition and modernity encounter each other. The oral traditions, unique pacing and non-linear style of African story-telling have in fact become classifying characteristics of African filmmaking. This kind of art is a powerful intellectual and emotional force for social change. As the twenty-first century begins, we are witnessing a great revolution in mass communications capabilities that drastically reduces the distances between cultures. Images, sounds and ideas are exchanged almost instantaneously, creating dynamic hybrid cultures. As Western consumer culture has influenced global society, so it has been invigorated by the differing sensibilities, traditions and styles of other cultures. Likewise, African film has evolved from its early exploration of colonialism into a new diasporic and international consciousness. For almost twenty years, AFF has bridged the divide between post-colonial Africa and the American public through the medium of film. AFFs unique place in the international arts community is distinguished not only by leadership in festival management but a comprehensive approach to the advocacy of African film and culture. We are particularly mindful of the many ways in which cinema is as much a medium of cultural exchange as an educational gate-way. back to topMissionIn 1990 AFFs founders established goals that continue to enrich our mission and organizational development: To use African cinema to promote and increase knowledge and understanding of African arts, literature and culture; Board of DirectorsTracy “Binta” Austin Francis Baffour Patricia Blanchet Jay Bernstein Mahen Bonetti Djibril Diallo Manthia Diawara Carol Davis Fiske Pam Frank BethAnn Hardison Don McMicheal Ira Moseley Hillary Ney Mamadou Niang Eric Robertson Advisory BoardGrace Blake Jonathan Demme William Greaves Gordon Parks Nana Rawlings Flora M'bugu-Schelling Annabelle Thomas |
ProgramsThe funding, development and production of AFF programs are administrated from our New York offices. The New York African Film Festival (NYAFF) was established in 1993 with our festival co-organizer, the Film Society of Lincoln Center. This flagship program of screenings and panel discussions was presented bi-annually until 1998 and is now an annual spring event. Screenings feature critically acclaimed releases of feature- and short-format works by African directors of the global diaspora and their counterparts. The New York African Film Festival is presented annually at the Walter Reade Theater by African Film Festival, Inc. and the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Subsequent screenings are held at the Brooklyn Academy of Music and additional venues throughout New York City. The Traveling Film Series is intended to make the unique experience of watching African cinema available throughout the country, and increasingly, around the world. Per request, AFF ships a comprehensive film program to cultural institutions, museums and universities in the US and abroad. This collection of feature films and shorts is augmented by promotional and AFF-designed educational material. The Young Adult Education Program has been available since 1994 to New York City public high school educators. Selected films provide a fun and creative way to learn about African culture. Students are invited to matinée screenings followed by discussions with filmmakers and professionals in the field. The Outreach Programs are a public service initiative that nurtures grassroots appreciation of African cinema. Partnership with existing community-based cultural institutions makes screenings and cultural events in public venues and educational facilities accessible and affordable, if not free, for a broad base of viewers. The Panel Discussions and post-screening events where filmmakers meet their audience as well as other media professionals foster interest in African culture and encourage the development of new channels of distribution for African film throughout the US and abroad. While AFF functions primarily as a film and cultural events programmer, we continue to develop as an international resource center. AFF Video/Film Archive holds over 500 African film titles on various stock, including 35mm, and it is growing. In addition, AFF continues to acquire and index documentation of African filmmakers and the history of the motion picture industry in Africa for research purposes. Only a portion of this valuable material is currently available through our Web site. back to topInternational PerspectiveSince AFF was established in 1990, it has been dedicated to the promotion of African cinema to both national and international audiences. Although, AFF is largely invested in building and maintaining audiences for African cinema in the United States, it also recognizes the importance such work holds on a global scale. Therefore, AFF has worked to establish an international presence that includes our past collaborations co-curating the 1996 “Lights on Africa: A Program of African Film,” for the Solomon R. Guggenheim exhibition Africa: The Art of a Continent and the African and African Diaspora Film Series for the 2nd Johannesburg Biennale, in 1997. In addition to our past collaborations, AFF also has ongoing partnerships, in which we co-curate programs such as: Celebration of African Heritage African Film Festival in Bahia, Brazil; Atlantic Mirror: A Showing of Films from Africa and the Diaspora, Rio de Janeiro; the Sydney African Film Festival; African CineFest Barbados (a component of the Bicentennial Global Dialogue, a Pan-African symposium hosted in Barbados); The African Film Festival at the Bob Marley Museum in Kingston, Jamaica (hosted by the Bob Marley Foundation); Baobab Week in Mexico City, Mexico; and African Film Festival at Southern Hemisphere, Puerto Rico. back to top |
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