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Join Tide Rising Art Projects for A Caribbean Film Night & Jam Session on Sunday, December 20, 2020 from 4pm - 6pm EST.
Spend an evening jamming to specially curated music, followed by a selection of Caribbean short films and finally delve deeper with the filmmakers during a Q & A session.

Reserve your spot at the link below:


Here is a bit more about the filmmakers and the films:

She Paradise - Maya Cozier
"She Paradise" written by Maya Cozier and Melina Brown, and directed by Maya Cozier is the 3rd film that will be featured during the Caribbean Film Night and Jam Session. Visit the link in bio to reserve your spot.

In "She Paradise" a teenage girl struggles to fit into a crew of Soca backup dancers. Her first chance on stage becomes a night of difficult choices, but also possibilities for an exciting new future.

Maya Cozier is a writer/director from Trinidad and Tobago. Her work has been featured on I-D VICE, Complex News, Short of the Week and more. Her feature film debut, She Paradise, was selected to have it’s world premiere at the Tribeca film festival 2020 and recently screened at AFI fest. She is currently pursuing an MFA at Columbia University. 

Yolanda - Cristian Carretero
"Yolanda" by Cristian Carretero is another film that will be featured during the Caribbean Film Night and Jam Session. Visit the link in bio to reserve your spot.

"Yolanda" follows a single mother who struggles to raise her children in the poverty stricken outskirts of Santo Domingo. She soon decides to risk it all and illegally immigrate in the search of a better life.

Cristian Carretero is a filmmaker from Mayagüez, Puerto Rico, a small town on the west coast of the island. He graduated with a B.A. from Sarah Lawrence College and studied film at FAMU. In 2014 he received his MFA from New York University. His films are mainly social dramas concerned with the contemporary Puerto Rican and Caribbean reality. In 2017 he won two Emmy Awards for producing the documentary “Semillas” and the science television show “Laboratario" both made for WIPR TV. 

His original works, which tend to focus on social and environmental struggles, have been shown internationally in venues including BAM Cinematic, Anthology Film Archives, Nighthawk Cinemas, O Cinema Wynwood, Puerto Rico Museum of Art, Montreal World Film Festival, Festival de Cine de Cartagena, Denver Film Festival, International Film Festival of Cartagena de Indias, Sydney Latin American Film Festival, and Festival de Cine de Huelva. In 2013 his short about Dominican immigration to Puerto Rico, "Yolanda" won Best Short at the Festival de Cine Global Dominicano, Screen Loud Film Festival, and the Carl Lerner Award for social significance. His short “Esta Isla”, commissioned by the French Institute, won Best Short at the 5to Festival de Cine Europeo. In 2015 he shot the experimental film “Díptico” commissioned by “Santurce es Ley”. In 2017 he made a short in Harlem titled “The Ticket”, based on a story by José Luis Gonzalez, which debuted in the Havana Film Festival. 

He is co-founder of the production house Experimento Lúdico with clients including National Geographic, CNN, The Intercept, i24, Field of Vision, WIPR, Newport Music Festival, Chicago Cubs, and Banco Popular. He also teaches workshops at the University of Puerto Rico. 

Auntie - Lisa Harewood
"AUNTIE", written and directed by Lisa Harewood (Barrel Stories Project) is one of the films that will be featured during the Caribbean Film Night and Jam Session. Visit the link in bio to reserve your spot.

AUNTIE is a middle-aged seamstress and respected caregiver looking after Kera in a rural Barbadian community. Seven years after Kera’s mother has emigrated to England in search of a better life, Auntie is confronted with the day she has long dreaded when the plane ticket arrives that will reunite Kera with her mother.

Lisa Harewood is Barbadian media maker based in the UK. She works across development communication, film and interactive media.

She was previously the producer of the Barbadian feature film A Hand Full of Dirt, which was selected for prestigious festivals in Los Angeles, New York and Toronto. Her debut short film Auntie was selected for development by the Commonwealth Foundation and premiered at Encounters Film Festival in 2013. It was one of 5 scripts chosen for development out of over 900 applications from 54 countries. It continues to screen extensively around the world and was acquired by the Black Public Media in the for its AfroPop series. 

She is the creative director of Barrel Stories, an oral history project recording and sharing the stories of Caribbean families affected by parental separation and migration. Barrel Stories has evolved into as a multiyear, multiplatform exploration incorporating virtual reality, an interactive online documentary and interactive installations. 

She is a resident of the Pervasive Media Studio in Bristol known for its pioneering work at the intersection of technology and storytelling.

She is also a co-writer on an augmented reality app Shared Pasts: Decoding Complexity, which complicates the accepted history of colonial monuments and heritage sites. Lisa holds an MA in Creative and Media Enterprises from the University of Warwick and an MA from the University of the West of England in Documentary Production.






A new This Art Life event tomorrow - Kearra Amaya Gopee

 





Tomorrow to round out the year of great chats with Caribbean contemporary artists we will be speaking with Kearra Amaya Gopee. Join us tomorrow Friday December 18th at 1pm EST for an IG Live with them @tiderisingartprojects.
Kearra did a residency in Kingston with NLS in late 2018 where we had the chance to document some of their practice and speak with them about the work presented in their Open Studio.
The work 'Terra Nullius (2019) is the self-referential final peg of a trilogy that visualizes how personhood, family and intimacy are influenced by lineages of trauma and spirituality within diasporic Caribbean identity.'
Materials and medium: Single channel projection into water, metal washtub, mirrored washboard, powder detergent, bed sheet, clothing line.
Last IG Live of the year!
The newest Art Doc also featuring Kearra premieres during our upcoming Caribbean Film Night and Jam Session this Sunday at 4pm EST. Register here for a free ticket. https://bit.ly/37s2268


New Art Doc & Camille Chedda joins us on Instagram Live tomorrow.

 


Our most recent Art Doc features Camille as she shows her self-portraiture painting process and the ideas behind the work. Come join us tomorrow October 30 at 1pm (Jamaica/ GMT-5) on Instagram for a discussion about her work. Camille will be in discussion with Tide Rising Art Projects' team member filmmaker Danielle Russell. The talk coincides with the release on Friday of a short doc film focusing on her process and ideas.

Camille Chedda is an interdisciplinary artist being fueled by her consumption of news and media and further internalisation of the stories. In her practice she has worked on painting and drawing multiple self portraits on plastic bags and surfaces. Each portrait being observed by time spent looking in the mirror. The result being various paintings which are painstakingly observed and quickly committed to a mark or gesture. Her use of bio-degradable plastic as a surface also pushes the fleeting nature of the images created.


Watch the video below:



See more of Camille's work at www.camillechedda.com



This Art Life: Errol Keane II


Detail of 'First Daughter' (2018) by Errol Keane II


Errol Keane II spoke with Filmmaker and Tide Rising Art Project’s team member, Danielle Russell on Friday, August 28, 2020 as a guest on Tide Rising’s “This Art Life” series. 

The discussion centred on Errol’s work, “Daughters of Oshun” which he created during the Blaqmango Summer Residency in 2018. His use of braille as an interactive element in his work was of particular interest. He addressed the tension the braille creates when he encourages his audience to touch the braille, which is placed on an art object that is traditionally not meant to be touched.


First Daughter (2018) by Errol Keane II

Errol also addressed the importance of developing an art practice and the differences between being an illustrator and being a visual artist. He noted that the differences are especially important among persons who are outsiders to the art world. This segment of the discussion drew several comments from the audience members who had suggestions and advice for both Errol and aspiring and emerging visual artists who are seeking to define themselves as visual artists. 


After a lively discussion, Errol left us wanting more after revealing that he is working on a new secret project. To find out more about Tide Rising Art Projects and our featured artists, follow the handle @tiderisingartprojects on Instagram, Facebook and YouTube. You may also find Errol on Instagram @keane.eyes


ABOUT TIDE RISING ART PROJECTS

About Tide Rising Art Projects 

Tide Rising Art Projects is an artist-led initiative coming out of Kingston, Jamaica. The initiative is the brainchild of Jamaican artist and lecturer, Oneika Russell. We started out of an identified need for actively practicing local and regional visual artists to have their practices documented and promoted. Oneika’s involvement with the Caribbean Linked IV programme in Aruba, her work with NLS Kingston and the 5 year period spent teaching students of various levels and disciplines at The Edna Manley College of the Visual & Performing Arts all inspired the creation of the project. We started recording our first videos in March of 2017.

Our aim is to document and promote the practices of local and regional contemporary artists and initiate engagement opportunities for Caribbean contemporary artists within the region and internationally as well. We also aim to provide education opportunities for artists and the public as well as research resources through our videos, website content, seminars and workshops.

Our current projects in 2020 involve the creation and publishing of online videos about local artists as well as ongoing collaborations to promote curated groups of contemporary artists in the Caribbean via social media, exhibitions etc. We are also working on new formats of media production, online engagement and workshops. At present our resources dictate the scale of project we can work on but we do view these early projects as the necessary capacity building activities for an eventually larger reach. We have new and exciting ways for supporters and the community to help contribute to our sustainability and new content and resources lined up. Stay updated by joining our mailing list.


About the Team


Oneika Russell

Oneika has been a practicing artist both locally and internationally from 2005. She has exhibited both regionally and internationally and has had the opportunity to participate in various programmes such as the MEXT: Monbukagakusho scholarship, the Davidoff Art Initiative/ Residency Unlimited Residency Programme and the Commonwealth Arts & Crafts Award. She has also taught at The Edna Manley College of the Visual & Performing Arts in Kingston from 2014-18. Oneika was also the creator and main contributor behind the now archived art blog, ART:Jamaica. Oneika acts as producer, videographer and editor on the series of short form art docs on our YouTube channel and liaison/ planner for our curatorial projects. 


Petrina Dacres

Petrina Dacres is the Head of Art History at The Edna Manley College of the Visual and Performing Art. Her teaching and research centers on Caribbean and African Diaspora Art, Public sculpture and memorials, and memory studies. She has also worked as a curator, most recently on the exhibition, ‘Uprising’ at the National Museum Jamaica in 2016. And, was recently the inaugural Stuart Hall fellow at Harvard University's Hutchins Center. Petrina has been working with the initiative as an independent curator on two projects currently in process and is active in our other digital curated projects. Petrina has worked as curator on our exhibition projects and as creative consultant on Season 3 of our Art Docs. She has also produced and hosted some of our digital art events.


Danielle Russell
Danielle Russell is a local filmmaker who has participated in both The British Council’s script development workshop and the JAMPRO/JAFTA PROPELLA script to screen development film project. Both projects have seen the short film she developed through the programme be screened at The Trinidad & Tobago Film Festival. She has also acted as art director and producer on other local films. She studied Communication at CARIMAC at The University of the West Indies in Kingston and Film and television at The Communication University of China in Beijing. She has also taught ‘Storytelling’ and ‘Scriptwriting’ in the University of Technology, Jamaica’s Animation BSc. programme. Danielle has worked as videographer and production consultant for our Art Docs series of videos on our YouTube channel. She has also produced and hosted some of our digital art events.


Partnerships & Collaborations

ART DOC: Esther Chin on Ancestry & Mourning

Esther Chin, 2018


In the latter half of 2020 we are beginning to release a new series of Art Docs with artists we have been speaking with over the past 2 years plus. We have also begun to accompany those Art Docs on our YouTube channel with a live Instagram session with the artists and a member of our team in conversation. This IG Live series was initially titled 'Mini-Art Talks' but we are returning to our 'This Art Life' format to feature guest artists in a live interactive discussion. Follow us on Instagram (@tiderisingartprojects) to catch our live sessions each month and hear more about the Art Docs. Subscribe to our YouTube channel to catch our videos.

In our latest Art Doc, Esther Chin shares her experience of using her practice as a process of mourning and dealing with grief. She references mourning practices in Chinese and Latin culture. She also speaks about the ways she has found to reconnect to her ancestry. This Art Doc was filmed during the 2018 Blaqmango Summer Residency.

To catch these video documents of Esther and her work visit these links:

Esther Chin is set to give a Mini Art Talks on Instagram Live



Hop online tomorrow lunchtime - 1pm (GMT-5) and join us on Instagram for a live Mini Art Talk with Esther Chin. She will be chatting with arts researcher & lecturer/ independent curator Petrina Dacres.

The newest upcoming video in our Art Docs series features Esther. Esther's process-oriented work draws references and materials from the natural world and Asian culture. The video will be available on our YouTube channel tomorrow. See you then. Our Instagram handle is @tiderisingartprojects
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