Ignacio Aguero - An award-winning filmmaker, writer, and producer. He remained in Chile during the entire period of the dictatorship making independent documentary films.
Chantal Akerman - "Comparable in force and originality to Godard or Fassbinder, Chantal Akerman is arguably the most important European director of her generation."—J. Hoberman, The Village Voice
John Akomfrah - An artist, lecturer, and writer as well as a filmmaker, his twenty-year body of work is among the most distinctive in the contemporary British art world.
Marc Allégret - A French director and photographer with a eye for discovering new talent. He helped start the careers of future stars including Brigitte Bardot, Simone Simon and Jeanne Moreau.
Natalia Almada - Recipient of the 2012 MacArthur “Genius” Award, Natalia Almada combines artistic expression with social inquiry to make films that are both personal reflections and critical social commentaries.
Madeline Anderson - The first African-American woman to direct documentaries, Madeline Anderson created films that are essential historical records of activism and a vital body of cinematic work.
Alice Arnold - A non-fiction filmmaker and an educator, her films and photography work explore the urban environment and visual culture.
Nurith Aviv - Having worked on about 100 films, both fiction and documentaries, Film Journal International has hailed her as "Innovative and daring."
Natalie Bookchin - Natalie Bookchin explores the effects of digital technologies and examines the ways in which people broadcast self-expression on the internet in a sharing economy.
Noel Burch - A filmmaker and film theorist, he published The Theory of Film Practice, a book that coined or established many of the terms that would come to dominate university Film Studies.
Olivia L. Carrescia - Olivia L. Carrescia has worked as a researcher, producer and editor for the past 25 years in the US and Europe. Her award-winning Mayan trilogy (Todos Santos Cuchumatan and The Survivors, and Mayan Voices: American Lives) has been distributed internationally and is now available for the first time on one DVD.
Raymond Depardon - Raymond Depardon is a celebrated photographer, photojournalist, and documentary filmmaker. A prolific artist, he has so far directed 20 feature-length films and published over 50 books.
Jihan el-Tahri - An Egyptian-born, French filmmaker, author and news correspondent, el-Tahris films include the Emmy-nominated House of Saud, The Price of Aid and most recently, Behind the Rainbow.
Elizabeth Fernea - A writer and filmmaker whose work focused on the Middle East, particularly women and the family. She was Professor of English and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Texas at Austin, where she taught for 25 years and was one of the founders of the Women's Studies program.
Fischli & Weiss - The Swiss artists Peter Fischli (born 1952) and David Weiss (born 1946), hailed by The New York Times as "the merry pranksters of contemporary art" and by ARTNews as "the best thing in Swiss art since Alberto Giacometti," have worked as a creative duo since 1979.
Maren Grainger-Monsen -A physician and award-winning filmmaker, who is currently Filmmaker in Residence and Director of the Program in Bioethics and Film at the Stanford University Center for Biomedical Ethics.
|
Nikolaus Geyrhalter - Nikolaus Geyrhalter is an Austrian director, producer, writer, and cinematographer who is best known for his static, observational style.
Patricio Guzmán - The acclaimed Chilean director of the masterpiece The Battle of Chile. His most recent film, The Cordillera of Dreams, completes his trilogy on Chile.
Dieudo Hamadi - The Congolese director of critically-acclaimed, social issue documentaries, including Downstream to Kinshasa.
Esther Hoffenberg - Hoffenberg has been working as director and producer in France since 1980. Since 2005, she has become increasingly involved in filmmaking.
Heddy Honigmann - Called "one of the contemporary masters of the form" by Sean Farnel, Director of Programming of Hot Docs, Honigmann’s work is known for strong imagery and her compassionate connection to her subjects.
Pirjo Honkasalo - Finnish director and cinematographer Pirjo Honkasalo has directed, written and worked as a cinematographer for award-winning documentaries and feature films for over 25 years.
Shôhei Imamura - The only Japanese director to twice win the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival. Shôhei Imamura has been described by The New York Times as "one of the most significant Japanese filmmakers of the postwar generation."
Hu Jie - In an oeuvre that includes woodcuts, animation and oil painting alongside documentary film, Hu Jie is credited as the first Chinese artist to frankly depict and document the horrors and heros of the Cultural Revolution and the Great Leap Forward.
Robert Kramer - A preeminent filmmaker of the American left, Robert Kramer was a significant presence in the independent film movement of the 1960s, celebrated for his distinctive cinematic style which blended fiction and docuentary filmmaking.
Arthur MacCaig - An American of Irish descent and founder of DATHANNA, an independent production company, MacCaig directed and produced documentary films since 1978, including the award-winning A Song for Ireland and The Patriot Game.
Vitaly Mansky - Born in Ukraine in 1963, Mansky started his career as a cinematographer. In the 1990s he segued to working in Russian television as a director. He went on to direct independent documentaries and has lived in exile in Latvia since 2014.
Chris Marker - The almost legendary genius; a cinematic essayist and audio-visual poet who created A Grin Without a Cat and Remembrance of Things to Come. A pioneer auteur filmmaker and an original voice in world cinema for over 50 years, Marker passed away on his birthday, July 29, 2012.
Rosine Mbakam - Rosine Mbakam is a prolific, award-winning, Cameroonian-born filmmaker who is changing how African women are represented on screen. Her newest film, Mambar Pierrette premiered at the Cannes Film Festival.
Bill Morrison - Director of Decasia, described by The Village Voice film critic J. Hoberman as "the most widely acclaimed American avant-garde film of the fin-de-siècle."
Djo Tunda Wa Munga - Founder of the Democratic Republic of Congo's first production company, Suka Productions!, director/producer Djo Tunda Wa Munga's films include State of Mind, Viva Riva!, and Congo in Four Acts.
Shinsuke Ogawa - Born in 1935 in Sagamihara, Kanagawa, Japan. He began his film career in 1960 by making public-relations films, but soon left this lucrative career to devote himself to the production of independent documentaries.
Marcel Ophuls - Academy Award-winning director of Hotel Terminus and The Sorrow and the Pity. He was a former actor as well as a professor at Princeton University.
|
Eugenio Polgovsky - In 2004 Polgovsky received Mexico's National Youth Prize. His new documentary, The Inheritors, produced with support of the Hubert Bals Fund and Visions Sud Est had its world premier at the 65th Venice Film Festival.
Jean Rouch - The father of cinéma vérité (Chronicle of a Summer), a key figure in the Cinémathèque Française, and founding director of the Comité du film ethnographique at the Musée de l'Homme.
Lynne Sachs - Lynne Sachs had been painting and writing poetry for years when, in 1983, she began to make films, in particular documentaries, often with an unconventional, experimental approach.
Shelley Saywell - Writer and director of independent international documentaries that have been critically acclaimed and honored with many awards, including an Emmy for Crimes of Honour.
Daniel Schmid - Filmmaker and director of operas at the Zurich Opera House and the Grand Theatre Geneva, he was awarded an Honorary Leopard at the Locarno Film Festival.
Yuka Sekiguchi - The films of Yuka Sekiguchi revolve around a search for Japanese identity, as seen from both Japanese and international perspectives.
Allan Sekula - Photographer, theorist and filmmaker whose work frequently focuses on large economic systems, or "the imaginary and material geographies of the advanced capitalist world."
J. P. Sniadecki - J.P. Sniadecki is a filmmaker and media anthropologist whose work explores collective experience, sensory ethnography, and the possibilities of cinema. He teaches at Northwestern University.
Pema Tseden - Widely recognized as the leading filmmaker of a newly emerging Tibetan cinema and the first director in China to film his movies entirely in the Tibetan language.
Mila Turajlić - is an award-winning director born in Belgrade, Yugoslavia. Her films have screened at numerous festivals and been released theatrically in Europe and North America.
Susan Vogel - Professor of African Art and Architecture at Columbia University, Founder of the Museum for African Art in New York, and winner of the Herskovits Prize, the African Studies Association's highest honor for a book of original research on Africa.
Christopher Walker - A producer, director and associate producer of over 20 documentaries, his most recent film, The Dreamers of Arnhem Land, is the remarkable story of two Aboriginal elders who set out to save their community from cultural extinction.
Wang Bing - Born in Shaanxi, Wang Bing has been a leading documentary filmmaker of the burgeoning independent documentary scene in China over the last decade.
Shuibo Wang - 2006 Guggenheim Fellow, former member of China's Red Guard during the Cultural Revolution, Oscar Nominated director of Sunrise Over Tiananmen Square and the award-winning new release They Chose China.
Peter Watkins - Groundbreaking, controversial filmmaker of the famously banned Oscar® winner The War Game who continues to be a fierce critic of the global media structures, and continues to challenge conventional cinematic norms.
Ilan Ziv - Director of documentaries dealing broadly with issues of human rights, the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, and investigations of contemporary history.
|