The Greater Columbus Arts Council



The Columbus Film Council and

The Greater Columbus Arts Council

present the

((((((((((((((((((

2013 Media Arts Fellowship Program

The Greater Columbus Arts Council (GCAC) and The Columbus Film Council (CFC) encourage and support cultural development in the Columbus area. In this capacity, GCAC and CFC have partnered to present the 2013 Media Arts Fellowship Program as part of the GCAC Individual Artists Fellowships. Established in 1986 to recognize outstanding local artists, GCAC has awarded fellowships in painting, sculpture, photography, and crafts in its first year. Since then, over 160 awards, in a variety of disciplines, including visual arts, crafts, film and video, creative writing, music composition, and choreography/movement arts, have been made.

The 2013 program will distribute 3 fellowships to media artists, in the disciplines of film, video, and digital moving image.

As part of this exciting partnership, the Columbus Film Council will screen work by the fellowship recipients at the 61st Columbus International Film +Video Festival, the longest running film festival in the United States. The recipients will also receive their Fellowship Awards at the CIFVF’s Chris Awards Ceremony on November 16, 2013 at the Canzani Center on the Columbus College of Art & Design campus.

APPLICATION DEADLINE : August 30, 5:00 p.m.

THE PROCESS

1. A completed online application form file is due in GoArts, GCAC’s online application system () by August 30, 5:00pm. Three copies of the same required DVD and your signed cover page must be postmarked and mailed postmarked by September 4, 2013 to:

Greater Columbus Arts Council

Attn: Grants & Services/Media Arts Fellowship

100 E. Broad Street, Suite 2250

Columbus, OH 43215

No late applications will be accepted.

This should not be work created for this application, but rather your existing work as a filmmaker. This is not a 48hr FF type of program but rather an award for artistic excellence. Also the applicant should be the “auteur”, the primary creative owner of the work submitted. For example, in the case of Martin Scorsese his work as a director on Hugo would be eligible but his work as the Executive Producer on Frankenstein would not. Sometimes this may not be easy to discern (the Coen Brothers come to mind) so please contact Susan Halpern at shalpern@ if you need clarification in this matter.

2. You will be sent an email confirming receipt of your application. This email will include your application number. You will need to print your application, sign the cover page and return it to GCAC, postmarked by August 30. Please include your three DVD’s in the same packet with your application number written on all three DVD’s. YOUR NAME SHOULD NOT BE ON THE DVD OR IN THE FILM CREDITS. This is so the grant panelist may jury the work without knowing who the makers are. Failing to do so will disqualify your application. Please make sure to edit the submitted clip so that no maker names appear in the work sample.

3. Panelists will be provided a secure remote access link and a DVD to jury the applications down the finalists. The final three applicants will be chosen via panel sometime in early October. The final adjudication (dollar amount of the awards) will be determined by a guest filmmaker chosen from the top winners at the Columbus International Film + Video Festival. There will be two $1500 awards and one $3500 award given.

4. The three Recipients will be announced by the end of the week of October 14th and the final grant amounts will be announced at the CIFVF Awards Ceremony on November 16th.

ELIGIBILITY

The Individual Artist Fellowship program provides unrestricted grants to artists of outstanding talent and ability who currently live in the City of Columbus and/or Franklin County, and have done so for at least one year.

Students enrolled in a degree- or certificate-granting program of any kind at the time of application, or during the grant award period, may not apply.

The following categories will be considered for awards:

• Video

• Film

• Time based digital images

Please note work that is primarily installation art is not eligible for this award. The work that is eligible should be single screen work suitable for theatrical exhibition. Interactive works are also not eligible. Within those parameters all genres of media making (documentary, narrative, experimental, etc.) are eligible. The work must be created no earlier than 2007.

Past fellowship recipients are ineligible to apply for a period of three years from the date of their award. For example, a 2012 award recipient may not apply again until 2016.

DVDs

The main support materials for the review are DVDs of your work. With your signed cover page, please send three (3) DVD copies of the same ten minutes of work. The DVDs should be NTSC zone 0 or 1. PAL and Secam DVDs will not be accepted. Blu-ray discs are also not acceptable. Please make sure that your DVDs will play on a standard consumer DVD player. Package your DVDs so that they will arrive undamaged. DVDs that arrive damaged will invalidate the application.

What to include in your ten minutes of work is entirely up to the individual applicant. You may submit trailers, clips, finished shorts, etc. Please bear in mind that the ten minutes of work may be the only representation of your work that the panel views. You may include a longer clip following the required ten minutes but there is no guarantee that the panelists will view more than the ten minute clip at the head of the DVD. Please include your three DVD’s in the same packet with your application number written on all three DVD’s and with your signed cover page. YOUR NAME SHOULD NOT BE ON THE DVD OR IN THE FILM CREDITS. This is so the grant panelist may jury the work without knowing who the makers are. Failing to do so will disqualify your application. Please make sure to edit the submitted clip so that no maker names appear in the work sample.

For technical issues, contact Ruby Harper (614.221.8406; rharper@) or Diamond Zimmerman (614.221.8398; dzimmerman@) at GCAC.

COLLABORATIVE & DUPLICATE APPLICATIONS

Collaborative works may be submitted. Artists must submit separate application forms and clearly indicate the name(s) of the collaborative artists and the roles credited for each artist. Only one award is possible for collaborative works, which must be shared equally by each artist.

THE JURYING PROCESS: REVIEW CRITERIA

Awards will be recommended by a panel of experts in the field of media arts. Their decisions will be based solely on the artistic excellence of the work submitted for review. You are therefore encouraged to submit works that clearly convey the techniques and concepts you employ. The primary criterion is quality. Gender, race, age, financial need, education, professional affiliations, previous recognition, and occupation are NOT considerations for funding. The panel will consider:

• The relationship of your work to activity in the field on a statewide, regional, and national basis.

• Creative and inventive use of the art form.

• Overall consistency in the body of the work you submit for review.

• Innovation in style and/or concept.

• Technical proficiency in the use of the medium/media.

The panel review process will be anonymous. Panel members will see only your DVDs, identified by the application number assigned to it. The application form itself will be unavailable to the panel. You are encouraged to complete the section called “Description of Work Presented.” Please avoid using this section to cite past artistic accomplishments. This statement may be read by the panelists to clarify the focus or direction of your work, though GCAC/CFC staff retains the right to edit any statement if it contains, in their judgment, information that could possibly compromise the panelists’ objectivity.

The panelists for 2013 are:

Ann Bohlen

Independent filmmaker

Yellow Springs, Ohio

Anne Bohlen is an Emeritus Faculty of Antioch College where she was Professor of Communication and Media Arts for fourteen years teaching 16mm film, digital audio and documentary production and history courses, and mentoring senior projects in narrative, experimental and documentary film, video and audio. While at Antioch she also co-curated and hosted public documentary programs including Documentary Diversity, The Future of the Documentary, Media Activism, Resistance and Transformation: Latin American Documentary, Witnessing Prison: Inside and Out, Environmental Documentary, and the Margaret Mead Traveling Festival. Recently Anne served as a Morgan Fellow at the new Antioch providing curricular leadership and producing cultural and intellectual public programming series and gallery exhibitions.

Anne also has eighteen years experience as an award-winning independent documentary filmmaker. Her film Blood in the Face co-produced and co-directed with Kevin Rafferty & Jim Ridgeway, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, was broadcast nationally on the Discovery Channel and showed in theaters nationally and internationally. Anne received an Academy Award Nomination as a co-producer of With Babies and Banners and a National Emmy Award as a co-producer of The Global Assembly Line. She also co-produced/directed the documentary, Reform on the River, and The Power and the Spirit, a radio documentary that aired on NPR’s All Things Considered. Anne’s other film production credits include work on Roger and Me, Muhammad Ali: The Whole Story, Rosie the Riveter, Seeing Red, Memorial, Earth and the American Dream, and Taken for a Ride. Her films have been screened at film festivals, exhibited theatrically and broadcast on television internationally.

Todd Kwait

Independent filmmaker and musician

Cleveland, Ohio

Todd Kwait has a distinguished record of success as a business executive, a lawyer, a documentary filmmaker and a record producer. A dynamic and creative leader, Todd personifies the business manager with an entrepreneurial spirit that is the hallmark of today’s global executive.

In 2005, in keeping with his strong entrepreneurial and creative spirit, Todd boldly ventured into filmmaking with the formation of his film company, Ezzie Films. Todd’s first documentary film was a project with Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee and Lovin’ Spoonful founder, John Sebastian. The film, Chasin’ Gus’ Ghost () was an award winning film and is the first of Todd’s three documentary films. Todd’s second documentary film is titled Vagabondo () and his third, and most recent film, For the Love of the Music (), won the best documentary film at the Boston International Film Festival in April 2012. In addition, Todd has served on the board of directors of Independent Pictures (Ohio Independent Film Festival) since 1998; an organization which supports independent filmmakers.

Laura Paglin

Independent filmmaker

Cleveland, Ohio

Laura Paglin has been producing and directing films since she was a teenager. Each one of her narrative and documentary films has explored the dramatic lives of 'the underdog'.  Her nostalgic comedy/drama feature, NightOwls of Coventry (2005), tells the tale of cultural turf warfare in the 1970’s, where a seedy all-night deli becomes the “theatre of battle”. NightOwls was shown theatrically in several US cities as well as Toronto and is distributed my Cinema Epoch/ Koch Lorber Video.  Paglin’s more recent films have dealt specifically with struggles of poor minorities. Her documentary, No Umbrella – Election Day in the City (2006), brings us street level view of the 2004 Election Day failures as they play out in one inner city polling location. No Umbrella premiered at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival and won many awards including the “Jury Award for Best Short” at the Full Frame Film Festival in Durham, N. Carolina and an “Audience Award” at the Sydney Film Festival.  It was acquired by HBO documentary films and aired on Cinemax.  

Her first feature length documentary, Facing Forward (2011), follows a charismatic but troubled teenager as he navigates a strict new inner city school.   Facing Forward was a runner up for the ‘Roxanne T Mueller Audience Award for Best Film’ at the Cleveland International Film and was the winner of a “Crystal Heart Award” at the Heartland Film Festival. Paglin is currently collaborating with her local PBS station to prepare Facing Forward for national broadcast. Her current documentary in progress, Eleven, tells the complex and horrific story of the Anthony Sowell serial murders that were discovered in Cleveland, Ohio in 2009. Eleven was the winner of a recent industry pitch competition held at the Paley Center in New York. Paglin is a two-time Cuyahoga County Artist Fellowship recipient.

The Awards

Two (2) $1,500 fellowships and one (1) $3,500 fellowship will be awarded. The awards are intended to recognize outstanding local artists. Fellowships are intended to assist artists in any manner they deem fit to support the creation of new works and/or the advancement of their careers.

Award recipients should intend to remain in residence for the grant award period (September 1, 2013 – August 30, 2014).

2013 Media Arts Fellowship finalists and recipients are invited to apply for the 2015 Artist Exchange Program, a two to three month residency in Dresden, Germany. If you have any questions about the residency, please contact Diamond Zimmerman at GCAC (614-221-8398; dzimmerman@).

Questions?

Ruby Harper, Grants & Services Director

Greater Columbus Arts Council

Ph: 614.221.8406

Email: rclassen@

Diamond Zimmerman, Program & Services Coordinator

Greater Columbus Arts Council

Ph: 614.221.8398

Email: dzimmerman@

Susan Halpern, Executive Director

Columbus Film Council

Ph: 614.444.7460

Email: shalpern@

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