DOC CHICAGO
  • Home
  • 2021 Schedule
  • Past Events
    • 2019 Doc Chicago
  • About
  • Contact
  • Home
  • 2021 Schedule
  • Past Events
    • 2019 Doc Chicago
  • About
  • Contact
Search
Picture
RSVP HERE
WHAT IS DOC CHICAGO?
Doc Chicago is an annual gathering for and by regional documentary filmmakers that provides a space to connect with each other, learn, and share ideas. Filmmakers representing every career stage are welcome to attend!  
 
This year, Doc Chicago will unfold as a free hybrid event on Fri, Nov 5–Sun, Nov 7. Friday afternoon’s sessions and Sunday’s Grant Writing Workshop will be held online, while an in-person gathering will take place on Saturday, Nov 6 at the Chicago Cultural Center. Pre-registration for both online and in-person admission is required via Eventbrite.


We are excited to include  in-person film screenings to our program this year: a short documentary showcase co-presented with Chicago Filmmakers on Saturday evening, Nov 6, and a co-presentation with the Chicago Underground Film Festival of A Machine to Live In on Sun, Nov 7. See full descriptions and separate links for film tickets below.
 
TO KEEP YOU SAFE
All in-person components of Doc Chicago will require attendees to present proof of Covid-19 vaccination and wear masks. Thank you!

SCHEDULE
 FRIDAY, NOV 5
Friday’s sessions will be held via Zoom. You will receive a Zoom link once you pre-register for Friday's sessions via our Eventbrite listing.

3pm: Meet the Local Grant-Makers
Are you looking for funding for your next documentary project? Hear from some of the grant-makers who are providing support for projects by local filmmakers and ask them questions during this interactive online session. Presenters include Mark Hallett, Illinois Humanities; Julie Partynski and Kalena Chevalier from the City of Chicago’s Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events (DCASE); and Chicago Filmmakers’ staff who will provide info about the Chicago Digital Media Production Fund. Moderator: filmmaker and writer Julie Englander (see a description below of Julie’s Grant Writing Workshop on Sunday, Nov 7).

Picture
4:30pm: Finding Your Audience
Who is the audience for your work and how can you engage with them in an empowering way? This online session will highlight DIY and educational distribution, audience engagement, impact producing, and community screenings. Questions encouraged! Our presenters include: filmmaker Naeema Torres, who worked in home entertainment distribution prior to serving as the impact producer for Chicago filmmaker Ashley O’Shay’s documentary Unapologetic; and Peabody and Emmy award-winning filmmaker and professor Jay Rosenstein (In Whose Honor; The Lord Is Not On Trial Here Today), who will speak about his work with New Day Films, a filmmaker-run distribution company that has served the educational market since 1971. Moderator: Thavary Krouch, Chicago Film Office.

SATURDAY, NOV 6
Saturday’s daytime program will be held in person at the Chicago Cultural Center, Studio Theater (first floor), 78 E. Washington Street, downtown Chicago.
Find directions here.  PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED – GET YOUR TICKETS HERE.

 
10am: Welcome + Roundtables
Join our topic-driven version of “speed-dating”! Each corner of the room will have one or two presenters who will engage in small group conversations about a specific topic (e.g. documentary producing, sound for docs, or editing).  At the ten minute mark, audience members will be asked to move to a different corner to engage with another presenter and topic. This will be a fun way to meet new people while learning from other filmmakers. Tip: bring your business cards!

Among the presenters will be documentary producers Nevo Shinaar and Fenell Doremus (COOKED: Survival by Zip Code), accessible media advocate and documentary editor Matt Lauterbach (For the Left Hand), director/documentary editor Emmett Adler, filmmaker/editor/festival programmer Amber Love, festival strategist Deborah Rudolph, and award-winning cinematographers Keith Walker (Maya Angelou: And Still I Rise, Good Trouble: The Story of John Robert Lewis) and  Dana Kupper (Stevie).

Picture
Spotlight Presentations
We've incorporated short Spotlight Presentations into the schedule that give local filmmakers and organizations a chance to briefly share about a new film project they’re working on, a program they organize, or another documentary-related topic. We encourage you to seek out the Spotlight speakers during breaks in the program to ask them follow-up questions. Presenters throughout the day will include: Fenell Doremus, Documentary Producers Alliance; Latoya Flowers (Still Searching); Edwin Ruiz (Pico); Emmett Adler, Video Consortium; Rachel Rozcycki, (No One Asked You); accessible media advocate Matt Lauterbach; Gordon Quinn, Kartemquin Films; and Liliane Calfee, DePaul/CHA Youth Programs.

11am: Spotlight Presentations 1

11:30am:  Exploring the Archives

Who gets to decide which media projects are worth preserving? Are you working with communities whose perspectives and history are rarely represented? Whether you’re a filmmaker who is interested in sourcing archival footage or want to preserve your own work, bring your questions to our speakers: filmmaker Alex Halkin, Chiapas Media Project/Americas Media Initiative; Sara Chapman, Media Burn Archive; and Justin Williams, Southside Home Movie Project.

12:15pm Lunch Break – bring your own lunch or visit close-by restaurants for a quick bite.
 
1pm: Spotlight Presentations 2
Picture
1:15pm: On Collaboration: A Conversation With Judy Hoffman
In the 1970s, Judy Hoffman was active in the Alternative Television Movement and was experimenting with small format video equipment. After assisting French ethnographer and filmmaker Jean Rouch, she became deeply influenced by cinéma vérité and the idea of shared anthropology. Hoffman played a major role in the formation of Chicago’s Kartemquin Films as an original collective member, camera assistant on their early films, and  Associate Producer for Golub. Hoffman was the first woman Camera Assistant in Chicago, working on feature films and numerous PBS series. A major focus of her work has been with the Kwakwaka'wakw First Nation of British Columbia, producing films and videos about the reclaiming of Native culture. For over ten years, Hoffman directed a video training program on the N'amgis Reserve so that the Kwakwaka'wakw could create their own videos. Hoffman is a Professor of Practice in the Arts in the Department of Cinema and Media Studies at the University of Chicago.


Picture
2pm: Beyond the Single Screen
How can we bring a documentary sensibility to work that reaches beyond the single plane of our computers, TVs, or cinema screens?  Hear about the artistic process behind the work of some highly creative Chicago media artists!

When Latoya Flowers doesn’t work on her documentary Still Searching, she serves as the Senior Multimedia Creative at the Field Museum, where she collaborates with exhibit designers, content developers, illustrators, motion graphic artists, and lighting designers to create immersive multimedia experiences for traveling and permanent exhibitions. Chicago filmmakers Salome Chasnoff (Code of the Freaks) and Meredith Zielke (A Machine to Live In) will discuss their collaborative project Present Absence, a deeply moving five-channel video installation that honors the lives of people who were killed by Chicago Police. Based on interviews with family members, the installation invites viewers to sit down amongst the mourners to encounter those who were murdered not as cases or statistics but as full human beings.
Panel moderator: filmmaker and educator JP Sniadecki, Northwestern University

2:45pm: Spotlight Presentations 3
 
3:15pm:  Community Conversation: What Do We Need?
When we recently surveyed filmmakers who had attended the first DOC CHICAGO gathering in 2019, many responded that they wanted to connect with other filmmakers in person, which is no surprise after the isolating experience of the pandemic. How do we move forward as a relatively fractured community of media artists? What do we need from each other as a community and individually? How can we contribute to making the documentary field more equitable and anti-racist? This facilitated discussion will include opportunities to speak to each other in smaller breakout groups. Our discussion will be facilitated by Akilah Martin, PhD, an educator and consultant, who hosts the podcast Roots Watering Hole. 
 
4:30pm Closing Comments + Social Time!

Picture
7pm: DOC CHICAGO Short Film Showcase
Chicago Filmmakers, 1326 W. Hollywood Ave, Chicago
SEPARATE RSVP HERE
Join us for a thought-provoking collection of Chicago-produced short documentaries by both established and next generation filmmakers. Ranging from meditative works to reflections on the legacy of a slave revolt to a vibrant artist portrait, seniors looking for Stormy Daniels, and docs set in Chicago neighborhoods, this will be a great program to sample highly diverse short works by Chicago media makers.

Picture
Featuring short films by Naeema Torres (Redacted), Cai Thomas and Ankur Singh (Last Slice), Lily Freeston (2020), Anna Lee Ackermann (As We Are Planted), Dan Rybicky (Stormy and the Admirals), Erin Babbin and Michael Sullivan (Ben LaMar Gay–Artist in Residence), Emeer Hassanpour (m is for motherhood), and Marilyn Oliva (Plantas Sin Fronteras). Q+A with the filmmakers to follow the screening.

Thanks to Chicago Filmmakers for once again collaborating with us on this free public screening!  Due to Covid protocols and capacity limitations at the venue, you must RSVP at this separate link on Chicago Filmmakers' website for the screening.


SUNDAY, NOV 7
2pm-4pm: Grant Writing Workshop
This workshop will be held via Zoom. You will receive a confirmation email with a Zoom link once you pre-register via Eventbrite.
Documentary filmmakers have to be entrepreneurial when it comes to raising funds for their films. Although crowd funding and investments are increasingly playing a role in film financing, applying for grants remains a key ingredient for many docs. Tailoring your proposal for a specific funder, figuring out what goes into a budget, and where you can look for funding are all topics that will be covered in this grant workshop for documentary filmmakers. You’ll also have a chance to share and receive feedback on a logline that you’ve crafted.  
 
The workshop will be co-taught by documentary filmmaker and writer Julie Englander and filmmaker Ines Sommer, who teaches at Northwestern University. Julie is a producer on the documentary Punch 9 for Harold Washington, which recently premiered at the Chicago International Film Festival. She has written numerous successful grant proposals for other filmmakers, enabling them to raise hundreds of thousands of dollars for their projects. An ITVS panelist once called her grant writing “exemplary.” Ines has written numerous organizational and individual project grants, has served on several grants panels, and doesn’t mind talking about budgets.    
 
This workshop will be capped at 12 participants and once you've registered, you will have the opportunity to send in a logline for feedback.

Picture
Picture
Chicago Underground Film Festival:
9:15pm:  A Machine to Live In – Chicago premiere!

Logan Theater, 2646 N Milwaukee Ave, Chicago
 
We are excited to co-present A Machine to Live In with the Chicago Underground Film Festival (CUFF), the longest running underground film fest in the world! The 28th Chicago Underground Film Festival takes place at the Logan Theater and is presented by Full Spectrum Features.

Chicago filmmakers Yoni Goldstein and Meredith Zielke­’s A Machine to Live In (2021, Brazil, 80 min) is a hybrid documentary set in Brazil that links the cosmic power structures of the state to the mystical architecture of cults and utopian cities. This “sci-fi” documentary provides a complex portrait of life, poetry, and myth set against the backdrop of the space-age city of Brasília and a flourishing landscape of UFO cults and transcendental spaces. Watch the trailer here. 

Use our contact form to request a Doc Chicago discount code before you order your tickets via the CUFF website.



Proudly powered by Weebly
  • Home
  • 2021 Schedule
  • Past Events
    • 2019 Doc Chicago
  • About
  • Contact