Habibi Collective Podcast

Habibi Collective

an educational resource and insider's guide to the film industry, please donate: patreon.com/habibicollective

  1. 11/01/2021

    How to fund and sustain your moving image work? - Dazed Live

    Habibi Collective members Reman Sadani and Isra Al Kassi speak to Rehana Zaman and Sylvia Hong on how to fund and sustain moving image projects, at the Dazed Live event, London, in October 2021. In this episode, we explore questions like: how do you sustain your practice without heavily relying on external funding? How do you benefit from the commercial scene to develop commissions? How can you challenge existing models of funding and commissioning? Extra resources: Art Council England Guidelines. https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1V1clsdbNzJvs24goU81KC4_NIgndx2VF/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=111094572164427675363&rtpof=true&sd=true  SUCCESSFUL FUNDING APPLICATION LIBRARY https://www.thewhitepube.co.uk/fundinglibrary PROPOSAL LIBRARY https://www.thewhitepube.co.uk/project-proposal-library Rehana Zaman is an artist from Heckmondwike based in London. Her work speaks to the entanglement of personal experience and social life, where moments of intimacy are framed against cultural orthodoxies and state coercion. Conversation and cooperative methods sit at the heart of her practice. She has exhibited widely in the UK and Internationally. In 2019 she co-edited Tongues with Taylor Le Melle, published by PSS and was shortlisted for the Film London Jarman Award. She is currently a board member of not/nowhere artist workers cooperative and LUX who also distribute her films. Sylvia Hong is a Chinese-born French director and producer based in London. Co-Director of Skin Deep magazine, a platform for Black and Poc Creatives to work towards justice through cultural production. Previously video producer at British Vogue, she is currently the video commissioner for Dazed Media. Isra Al Kassi is a member of Habibi Collective and co-founder of T A P E collective. T A P E Collective is a curatorial collective that hosts cross-art events with a focus on films and art that explores dual heritage and mixed identities. Her background is in cinema exhibition, audience development, and community engagement which includes programming, fundraising, and commissioning artists and writers. In addition to her work with T A P E she’s currently working with BIFA, LFF, and Shasha Movies. Reman Sadani is a London-based Iraqi artist and a member of Habibi Collective. She is a multidisciplinary artist with a focus on moving image. Her recent research is focused on the material and personal histories of post-colonial structures. She questions how one can exit and heal from the colonial legacies collectively. Recent screenings and group exhibitions include: Mizna Arab Film Festival (Minneapolis), Aesthetica Short Film Festival, (York), Arab Women Film Festival (Rio de Janeiro), MoMa Modern Mondays (New York), Jerwood FVU Film Awards, Jerwood Arts, London (2020). Donate! Please consider donating towards our work: Patreon.com/habibicollective. A small monthly donation goes a long way towards paying innumerable costs including: screening fees for filmmakers, MGs, design assets and the endless web costs of developing a streaming service. Habibi Collective operates completely on a volunteer-led basis—is vital that we stay independent.

    46 min
  2. Episode 8 - Documentary Producer Elhum Shakerifar

    03/08/2021

    Episode 8 - Documentary Producer Elhum Shakerifar

    A conversation with Elhum Shakerifar, BAFTA nominated producer and curator, producing and distributing documentaries through her company Hakawati. In this episode, we discuss the importance of storytelling through documentary film, finding truth and creating a space of reality, raising important questions to audiences, and the future of filmmaking amidst the current climate.  Speaker bio: Elhum is a BAFTA nominated producer and curator, producing and distributing documentaries through her company Hakawati with the core ethos that a good story is all in the telling. Recent credits include winner of the BIFA for Best Documentary winning Almost Heaven (Carol Salter, 2017), BFI/Sundance funded Even When I Fall (Sky Neal and Kate McLarnon, 2017) and Arts Council funded ISLAND (Steven Eastwood, 2017). In 2015, her BIFA, BAFTA and EFA nominated production A Syrian Love Story (Sean McAllister, 2015) won a Cinema for Peace Justice Award, screened in UK and European parliaments and in over 70 countries. Her work has been broadcast internationally and screened at festivals including Berlinale, IDFA and Rotterdam. Elhum is a programme advisor for London Film Festival for films from MENA and Iran, and Film Curator for Shubbak, festival of contemporary Arab culture. In 2017, she was nominated for the Arab British Centre’s Award for Culture and was awarded the Women in Film and TV Factual Award 2017 and was one of Screen International’s 2018 #Brit50 Producers on the Rise. Elhum is also a lecturer at the Free University of Berlin and a research fellow of the Department of Anthropology at Goldsmiths University. Donate! Please consider donating towards our work: Patreon.com/habibicollective. A small monthly donation goes a long way towards paying innumerable costs including: screening fees for filmmakers, MGs, design assets and the endless web costs of developing a streaming service. Habibi Collective operates completely on a volunteer-led basis—is vital that we stay independent.  --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/roisin-tapponi/support

    43 min

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an educational resource and insider's guide to the film industry, please donate: patreon.com/habibicollective