The Art of Pitching - with Cass Gardiner of the Tribeca Film Institute
NOTE: THIS SEMINAR IS NOW VIRTUAL. If you RSVPd to Eventbrite, you will be sent zoom information.
Sorry for any inconvenience; it's due to health concerns of the community.
What is a pitch? The presentation of your film to potential funders, producers, agents, and others. What does it involve? What should you include? How long should you talk - what paper work should you have?
All these things and more - find out from Cass Gardiner of the Tribeca Film Institute. The Tribeca Film Institute annually supports a group of diverse filmmakers and media artists to realize their stories, and also presents in-school education to emerging young filmmakers.
RSVP to: https://bit.ly/2u71yS0
With thanks to the Tribeca Film Institute, a presentation of Third World Newsreel and the Documentary Forum at CCNY.
About our speaker, Cass Gardiner
Cass is an Anishinaabe Algonquin artist, filmmaker, and curator from the Kebaowek First Nation. Her documentary film “The Edible Indian” has met critical acclaim in classrooms and theatres internationally and was nominated for Best Documentary Short at the American Indian Film Festival. She is also a passionate arts activist within Indigenous communities and has worked as a film mentor and youth outreach worker on reserves across Canada. She is the co-founder of Matters Unsettled, a curatorial collective that uses the gallery to challenge preconceived notions of culture, identity, and belonging focusing on people of color. A 2017 Curatorial Fellow at the Center for Craft, Creativity & Design in Asheville, North Carolina, Cass’ latest show “Forward Facing” is a featured show for Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival in collaboration with Critical Distance Centre for Curators and the Aboriginal Curatorial Collective. She holds an MFA from Ryerson University and a BA from NYU Gallatin.