Sasha Waters [1] [2] also known as Sasha Waters Freyer, is an American documentary and experimental filmmaker, feminist and educator. She has produced and directed twenty films, [3] most of which originate in 16mm and except for her first documentary has edited all of her films. Her films have screened at the Brooklyn Museum, [4] the Museum of the Moving Image, Union Docs [5] and the Gene Siskel Film Center. Selected festivals include IMAGES in Toronto and the Telluride Film Festival. [6] She is also a professor of Photography and Film at VCU School of the Arts in Richmond, Virginia. [7]
Sasha Waters was born in Brooklyn and educated at the University of Michigan and the School of Visual Arts in New York City, where she earned her BFA in Photography in 1991. [8] She earned her MFA in Film & Media Arts from Temple University in Philadelphia. [9]
Waters began her academic career at the University of Iowa in 2000, teaching there until the end of 2012. [10] From 2013 to 2019, she served as Chair of the VCU School of the Arts Department of Photography + Film [11] where she is currently a Professor.
Waters co-produced her first film, Whipped (1998), with Iana Porter. It is a 16mm documentary portrait of three professional New York dominatrixes. [12] [13] Whipped premiered at the Philadelphia Festival of World Cinema, screened at the 1998 Chicago Underground Film Festival, [14] and was called a "likable, low-key demystification of a potentially lurid subject," by Variety. [15]
Waters' second film, Razing Appalachia chronicled a years-long struggle against the expansion of a mountaintop removal mine by Arch Coal in rural West Virginia. [16] [17] Reviewing the documentary for The New Yorker when it aired on the PBS series Independent Lens in 2003, Nancy Franklin wrote that it was a good example of "what makes public TV valuable." [18]
Chekhov for Children (2010) documents a full-length production of Anton Chekhov's Uncle Vanya that was staged in 1979 at Symphony Space on Manhattan's Upper West Side. Directed by Phillip Lopate, the play's cast and crew were made up entirely of fifth- and sixth-grade students from P.S. 75. It premiered in the US at the Telluride Film Festival [19] and at the International Film Festival Rotterdam. [20] It was listed as one of the "Best Undistributed Films" of the year in the IndieWire Annual Critics Survey, 2010. [21]
Waters' feature documentary Garry Winogrand: All Things Are Photographable [22] screened theatrically and at festivals in 2018. It was called one of the year's best by The New Yorker's Richard Brody [23] and won a Special Jury Prize in the Documentary Competition at the 2018 SXSW Film Festival. [24] The film aired on the PBS series American Masters in April 2019. [25]
Since 2019, Waters has been working on a documentary on the artist Bruce Conner and his unfinished film on the gospel group The Soul Stirrers titled Trouble Don't Last. [26] [27] She has also completed a trilogy of experimental short films that turn an anti-colonial and feminist lens onto the history of photography and cinema – cyanotypes in Ghost Protists, magic lantern glass slides in Fragile, and popular romance in Ashes of Roses. [28]
Sally Mann HonFRPS is an American photographer known for making large format black and white photographs of people and places in her immediate surroundings: her children, husband, and rural landscapes, as well as self-portraits.
Street photography is photography conducted for art or inquiry that features unmediated chance encounters and random incidents within public places, usually with the aim of capturing images at a decisive or poignant moment by careful framing and timing. Although there is a difference between street and candid photography, it is usually subtle with most street photography being candid in nature and some candid photography being classifiable as street photography. Street photography does not necessitate the presence of a street or even the urban environment. Though people usually feature directly, street photography might be absent of people and can be of an object or environment where the image projects a decidedly human character in facsimile or aesthetic.
Garry Winogrand was an American street photographer, known for his portrayal of U.S. life and its social issues, in the mid-20th century. Photography curator, historian, and critic John Szarkowski called Winogrand the central photographer of his generation.
Thaddeus John Szarkowski was an American photographer, curator, historian, and critic. From 1962 to 1991 Szarkowski was the director of photography at New York's Museum of Modern Art (MoMA).
Duane Michals is an American photographer. Michals's work makes innovative use of photo-sequences, often incorporating text to examine emotion and philosophy.
Sonali Gulati is an Indian American independent filmmaker, feminist, grass-roots activist, and educator.
South by Southwest, abbreviated as SXSW, is an annual conglomeration of parallel film, interactive media, and music festivals and conferences organized jointly that take place in mid-March in Austin, Texas, United States. It began in 1987 and has continued growing in both scope and size every year. In 2017, the conference lasted for 10 days with the interactive track lasting for five days, music for seven days, and film for nine days. There was no in-person event in 2020 and 2021 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic in Austin, Texas; in both years there was a smaller online event instead.
James Crump is an American film director, writer, producer, art historian and curator. His films include Black White + Gray: A Portrait of Sam Wagstaff and Robert Mapplethorpe; Troublemakers: The Story of Land Art; and Antonio Lopez 1970: Sex Fashion & Disco.
John Chester is an American filmmaker and television director.
Nathan Lyons was an American photographer, curator, and educator. He exhibited his photographs from 1956 onwards, produced books of his own and edited those of others.
Leo Rubinfien is an American photographer and essayist who lives and works in New York City. Rubinfien first came to prominence as part of the circle of artist-photographers who investigated new color techniques and materials in the 1970s.
John D. Freyer is an American artist who teaches Photography & Film at Virginia Commonwealth University.
New Documents was an influential documentary photography exhibition at Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1967, curated by John Szarkowski. It presented photographs by Diane Arbus, Lee Friedlander and Garry Winogrand and is said to have "represented a shift in emphasis" and "identified a new direction in photography: pictures that seemed to have a casual, snapshot-like look and subject matter so apparently ordinary that it was hard to categorize".
Fraenkel Gallery is a contemporary art gallery in San Francisco founded by Jeffrey Fraenkel in 1979. Daphne Palmer is president of the gallery.
Michael Ernest Sweet is a Canadian photographer, writer, and educator. He is the author of two books of street photography, The Human Fragment and Michael Sweet's Coney Island.
George S. Zimbel was an American-Canadian documentary photographer. He worked professionally from the late 1940s, mainly as a freelancer. He was part of the Photo League and was one of its last surviving members. Born in Massachusetts, he settled in Canada about 1971. His works have been shown with increasing frequency since 2000, and examples of his work are part of several permanent collections including the Museum of Modern Art and the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts. He was described as a humanist. Zimbel published several books of his photographs, and in 2016 was the subject of a documentary retrospective film co-directed by his son Matt Zimbel and distributed by the National Film Board of Canada.
The Virginia Commonwealth University School of the Arts is a public non-profit art and design school in Richmond, Virginia. One of many degree-offering schools at VCU, the School of the Arts comprises 18 bachelor's degree programs and six master's degree programs. Its satellite campus in Doha, Qatar, VCUarts Qatar, offers five bachelor's degrees and one master's degree. It was the first off-site campus to open in Education City by an American university.
Garry Winogrand:All Things are Photographable is a 2018 documentary film about the photographer Garry Winogrand. It was directed and produced by Sasha Waters Freyer.
Simpson Kalisher was an American professional photojournalist and street photographer whose independent project Railroad Men attracted critical attention and is regarded as historically significant.
Shane Boris, is a film producer and the founder of Cottage M, an independent production house. Boris was nominated for Best Documentary Feature for The Edge of Democracy at the 92nd Academy Awards in 2020. Later, in 2022, Boris produced two acclaimed documentaries, Fire of Love and Navalny, both securing Oscar nominations and marking him the first producer since Walt Disney to be nominated for two Academy Awards for Best Documentary Feature in the same year. Unlike Disney, Boris not only garnered nominations but also won the Oscar in 2023 for Navalny. This dual accomplishment of two nominations and a win set a new record in film history.