FEATURING FILMS FROM THE FOLLOWING DIRECTORS:

Scott Andrews
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Scott Andrews has been producing and directing cross-cultural documentaries since 1982. He holds an MA in Visual Anthropology from Temple University and the Anthropology Film Center in Santa Fe, New Mexico (1982) and a PhD in the Design and Evaluation of Educational Programs from Stanford University (1989).

Among the better known films he has directed are:  

"And Then Came John": The story of John Mcgough, an artist and unofficial mayor of the town of Mendocino, Ca who was born with Down Syndrome.  This film won Best documentary at the Birmingham Educational Film Festival, first aired on PBS, and became the first American documentary to be shown on national Soviet television.

"Last Images of War": The story of four photojournalists who died covering the Soviet-Afghan War, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and aired on the BBC, PBS and around the world. The film was nominated for three National Emmys, and won the Emmy for Best Directors while being shortlisted for an Academy Award Nomination for Feature Documentary.

"School Colors," a PBS Frontline three hour special about a year in the life of Berkeley High School forty years after the Brown versus The Board of Education decision brought about school integration throughout the United States.  Winner of the Dupont Columbia Silver Baton Award for Broadcast Journalism, the Broadcast equivalent of the Pulitzer Prize.

Scott returned to Santa Fe, New Mexico to live in 2013.  Since then he has been filming with local traditional artists, musicians, and craftspeople, while working to bring his idea of a video seed bank of traditional culture to fruition.

Christopher Beaver
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Christopher Beaver produces and directs multi-media projects concerned with the human experience of the environment.

His films as a producer, writer, and director include:  "Dark Circle," a feature documentary about nuclear proliferation – Grand Prize Documentary at the Sundance (then US) Film Festival, winner of a National Emmy Award and short-listed for an academy award;  "Treasures of the Greenbelt  and  Secrets of the Bay," about San Francisco Bay and the surrounding open countryside.  "Tales of the San Joaquin – A River Journey"  about California’s Central Valley which was nominated  for the Pare Lorentz Award of the International Documentary Association.  

Recent films reflect Christopher’s concern with water issues and landscapes:  "Tulare  The Phantom Lake" and a new film, "Where Once Was Water, Las Vegas" set in the driest city in the United States, Las Vegas, Nevada.  

His most recently completed film prior to  "Recuerdo, Nicholas Herrera, Land, Water, Art"  is  "Racing to Zero: In Pursuit of Zero Waste," which has appeared in two dozen film festivals across the United States and the globe, was shown on more than 200 PBS stations over 700 times in conjunction with Earth Day, 2016, and in early May of this year was shown on Russian television in Vladivostok to an estimated audience of 300,000.

Christopher has also taught, mentored, and lectured widely about documentary film, including at the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism, UC Santa Cruz, and the San Francisco Academy of Art.

Lucia Duncan
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Lucia Duncan is a filmmaker, radio producer, and educator. She has made films on labor, tourism, the environment and culture in Brazil, Mexico, and the United States.  

Her interest in video as a tool for cultural preservation led her to a Fulbright Fellowship in Brazil, where she worked for Video in the Villages, a non-profit that trains indigenous people to make films about their culture. During that time, she made Lord of Olinda, which documented the last public appearance of a beloved carnival character. The film was broadcast on public TV in Recife, Brazil.

Lucia’s film Whales of Gold explores how eco-tourism and conservation have brought profound change to a small fishing community in Baja California Sur. The film was selected as a finalist for the International Documentary Association Best Student Film Award and screened at festivals around the world.  

Lucia has a BA in Development Studies from Brown University and an MFA in Film/Video Production from The University of Texas. More of her work can be seen at: www.luciaduncan.com


Andrés Felipe Corredor/María Camila Gómez
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Andrés Felipe Corredor and Mara Camila Gómez are young Colombian filmmakers recently graduated from the Audiovisual Departments at The University of Medellin and the Jaime Isaza Cadavid Technical School. They are passionate about the majestic Colombian landscape and rich cultural diversity, and are dedicated to featuring it in their work. They are the founders of DC Films which has produced a variety of documentaries and short fictional works, including: "Escarabajo" (Winner of the Cinematography Prize at the Boyaca Independent Film Festival 2015) and "Aguas de Leyenda"(Selected for the 2017 ArteCine Film Festival of Tunja). They also work producing digital publicity for a variety of Colombian Businesses.

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