Artist Spotlight - Andy Margetson

filmmaker andy margetson

Filmmaker Andy Margetson

Throughout the years we’ve met incredible people within the dance film community. We have decided to do an interview series to spotlight these individuals!

Andy Margetson is an award-winning Director based out of London, UK. Some of his short Dance Films include 'Lil Buck with Icons of Modern Art', 'Reborn', 'Nela' and 'Duet'.

Andy was the director of “STAVROPOL” which was an official selection of our 2022 film festival!

How did you get into dance filmmaking?

I have always worked with music and dance, from my earliest music videos through to larger commercial projects such as re-branding BBC One in the UK. In 2018 I was commissioned to make a film with Lil Buck at the Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris. It went on to win a number of awards and launched a series of short dance films.

What draws you to the screendance genre?

For me, the combination of Music and Dance has the power to move an audience more directly and immediately than any other medium.

Do you prefer choreography or more of an improvised approach?

For me, improvisation is choreography. Its choreography felt on the spur of the moment. What's exciting for me is an artist revealing their musicality - seeing how they respond and connect with a piece of music, whether it's choreographed ahead of time or in the moment.

Is there anything else that you would like us to share?

I have just come back from teaching a masterclass in filming movement at Cinedans, Amsterdam, and am completing a film with artist Hew Locke.

You can learn more about Andy on his website https://margetson.com/ as well as check out his dance films.

Instagram @andymargetson

dance film STAVROPOL

Film Still From “STAVROPOL”

Directed by Andy Margetson & Choreographed by Irina Kononova

Images provided by Andy Margetson

Artist Spotlight - Erika O'Neill

Dancer Director Choreographer Irrbloss Erika O’Neill

Director, Choreographer and Producer Erika O’Neill.

Throughout the years we’ve met incredible people within the dance film community. We have decided to do an interview series to spotlight these individuals!

Erika O’Neill is a director, choreographer, and producer based out of the small village of Årsunda in Mideast Sweden. Erika was the producer, writer, co-director & choreographer for the film “A Part” which was an official selection of our 2021 film fest!

What are three words that describe you as an artist?

Flowing, Emotional, Juicy.

How did you get into dance filmmaking?

As a kid, my father showed me Gene Kelly’s musical films, all of them from the old classic ‘Singing in the Rain’ to ‘The Pirate’. I guess that’s where it all started. And after breaking one too many of my mother’s porcelain vases while trying to interpret Kelly’s moves in the living room, my parents placed me in a dance school. I just love dance on film and it’s the best way of spreading dance and inspiring people all over the world.

During my years of dancing professionally, I have always loved working with film. I love being on a set and getting creative in ways you can’t be on a regular stage. The creative process of making a dance film is really something special. And I like to describe it as creating a painting, a piece of art that you can watch over and over again and keep for the rest of your life. Don’t get me wrong I love working on stage as well but when working with film you can give your audience your exact idea and it’s in many ways easier to give light to your story.

During the pandemic, I suddenly had a lot of spare time to create - but as we all know it, no live audience. As a choreographer, dancer, and dance teacher this was a really hard time for me as I had no work opportunities and all my dance classes got canceled. In April 2020 I received a scholarship for 2000 euros to create a piece about the Covid 19 situation and I realized that dance film was the best way to reach an audience. I had worked with Simon Hjortek before by creating music videos and I really love his artistry. I wanted him to give his unique artistic style to the film because, from my point of view, he was the only one who could make this idea as feverish, emotional, and epic as I wanted it to be. I presented the idea of “A Part” for Simon and together with the young dancers, we created something very special and unique for the Swedish dance film scene.

What inspires you as an artist?

I’m born and raised in a small village far out on the Swedish county side, and I still live very close to nature. I guess the forest and its surroundings always has inspired me in many ways. It’s where I go to seek inspiration and it’s the only place I can totally leave the outside world for a bit. (The only place I can get my ADHD brain to be totally silent) As long as I can remember I have always turned to the forest to seek inspiration and creativity. As a little girl, I always danced barefoot in a special grove close to a small water stream, a place I still return to whenever I’m in need of inspiration. My daydreaming grove. I have always loved storytelling in different ways and as an adult, I love to recreate stories through dance. I guess I’m very driven to create dance and art on topics that might not be the typical `dance subject´. I want to give my audience a reality check while enjoying something beautiful. Tell a story with pure fire and heart and create movement based on real stories from real-life events.

Your favorite quote?

If your dreams don’t scare you, they are not big enough.

You can learn more about Erika on her website https://erikaoneill.com/

Instagram @_irrbloss_

Erika O'Neill Dancer Irrbloss

Dancer: Erika O'Neill

Images provided by Erika O'Neill.

Artist Spotlight - Simon Hjortek

Artist Simon Hjortek

Cinematographer, Editor & Visual Artist Simon Hjortek

Throughout the years we’ve met incredible people within the dance film community. We have decided to do an interview series to spotlight these individuals!

Simon Hjortek is a cinematographer, editor, and visual artist based out of Smedjebacken, Sweden. Simon was the co-director, editor, and cinematographer for the film “A Part” which was an official selection of our 2021 film fest!

What are three words that describe you as an artist?

Dreamlike, suggestive, beautiful.

Why Dance Filmmaking?

I think dance is a never ending inspiration and a beautiful way of expressing the whole spectrum of emotions. Dancing is like music and something we all understand on a mysterious fundamental level.

I have been working with music videos and started incorporating dance more often. In 2017 I got in contact with Erika O'Neill through the internet when looking for a choreographer for a music video project. We have been working since then on different projects.

How does the location play a role in your films?

It plays a big role. A location can spur ideas and set the tone of a whole project and I feel the most alive when finding a fantastic location and get to be there and build a temporary world.

What inspires you as an artist?

I find inspiration in the mundane and in nightmares. I like seeing possibilities in everyday surroundings and situations and I find the creativity and petrifying fear of nightmares to be very inspiring. I like very precise styles such as the work of Roy Andersson and also love the slow and mysterious worlds of Tove Jansson.

What do you want the world to know about your art?

I love exploring the slow, repetitive and dreamlike. To me dance is a perfect medium for that and I'm always excited to see where it can take my work next.

You can learn more about Simon on his website https://simonhjortek.com/ as well as check out some of his other dance projects.

Instagram @simonhjortek

cinematographer Simon Hjortek

Still from the music video "My Desert, My Rose". A collaboration between choreographer Erika O'Neill, dancer Emmy Park & Simon Hjortek.

Images provided by Simon Hjortek

Artist Spotlight - Zoe Rappaport

Movement Director/Choreographer Zoe Rappaport

Photographed by Andreea Radutoiu

Throughout the years we’ve met incredible people within the dance film community. We have decided to do an interview series to spotlight these individuals!

Zoe Rappaport is a Movement Director and Choreographer based out of Los Angeles, CA. Zoe’s film “Unspoken Words” was an official selection of our 2019 film fest.

How did you get into dance filmmaking?

My introduction to dance filmmaking began at the Advanced Choreography Intensive at The Studio School (which, unfortunately, no longer exists). In the program, I learned choreography for the camera and composition from teachers like Mark Marchillo, Jason Coosner & James Tabeek. My understanding of the genre of screendance deepened when I began working as the Creative Producer for Dare to Dance in Public Film Festival (D2D) with award-winning director/choreographer Sarah Elgart over 2 years ago. Through D2D, I've had the opportunity to watch hundreds of dance films from around the world while learning from the invaluable insights of renowned professionals in the field such as Kristy Edmunds, Renae Williams Niles, Tony Testa, and of course — Sarah.

What draws you to dance filmmaking?

In addition to being a dancer, I am a visual artist. My choreographic approach involves looking at the big picture. Dance is as much a visual form for me as it is kinesthetic. Dance filmmaking brings in an added element with the ability to look at your movement & make decisions about how to manipulate it to create something new. My editing process feels a lot like collaging to me...which I have always loved to do :)

What is your favorite quote?

"we came whirling

out of nothingness

scattering stars

like dust

the stars made a circle

and

In The Middle

We Dance."

-Rumi

Choreography or Improvisation. What do you prefer and why?

I love both and don't see them as so separate. My choreographic process begins with improvisation. I leave space within my dances for improvisation//movement-in-the-moment to come through — giving the dancers autonomy to make their own choices and be an active part of the creative and choreographic process.

List three adjectives that describe you as an artist

Intuition-driven; Non-linear; Follow the flow

Zoe is holding a MENTORSHIP 4 DANCERS:
A 6-Session Biweekly Online OR In-Person Program to Deepen into your Artistry & Creative Entrepreneurship. The deadline is September 29th.


You can learn more about Zoe here www.rappaportdance.com

Instagram @zoe.rappaport

Unspoken Words dance film Zoe Rappaport, Dancer Zen Waterford

Still from "Unspoken Words" dance film by Zoe Rappaport

Dancer: Zen Waterford

Images provided by Zoe Rappaport

Artist Spotlight - Ali Kenner Brodsky

Choreographer Ali Kenner Brodsky

Photo Credit Rich Ferri

Throughout the years we’ve met incredible people within the dance film community. We have decided to do an interview series to spotlight these individuals!

Ali Kenner Brodsky is a Choreographer based out of South Dartmouth, MA. Ali’s film “between silences” was an official selection of our 2019 film fest.

How did you get into dance filmmaking?

I fell into making dance films. In 2016 I met filmmaker Rich Ferri. It was this introduction that would prove integral to my desire to make films. Around the same time, my good friend (ahem: Betsy Miller) planted the seed that I should consider making a dance film. She thought my live work was cinematic and that I may want to consider making a film. Fast forward to 2017, Rich and I collaborated with musician MorganEve Swain on a music video for her band. It was after that experience that I knew I wanted to dive into making dance films. It was all timing -- the right piece, the right space and the right team. Now, I want to make more! I’m in love with the medium.

What inspires you as an artist?

My work is largely autobiographical and I tend to draw on human experiences; from my experiences of grief, love, longing, and memory.

what draws you to dance filmmaking?

I love dance films as it allows me to curate the audience's eye in a more specific way. It opens new avenues for artistic expression and I love the relationship between camera, performer and environment.

How does architecture or location play a role in your films?

the environment/ place is another "character" in the story. it greatly influences my work.

What are 3 adjectives that describe you as a filmmaker/artist?

specific, considered, subtle.

Is there anything else that you would like us to share?

in addition to being a dance artist, educator and curator I'm the co-founder of the Motion State Dance Film Series.

You can find more about Ali’s work at http://www.alikennerbrodsky.com/ and https://vimeo.com/alikennerbrodsky

Instagram @akbandco

Dance Artist Ali Kenner Brodsky & Director of Motion State Dance Film Series

Photo Credit Nikki Lee

Images provided by Ali Kenner Brodsky

Artist Spotlight - Kate Mitchell

Throughout the years we’ve met incredible people within the dance film community. We have decided to do an interview series to spotlight these individuals!

Kate Mitchell is a Director, Co-Choreographer and Set designer based out of Oakland, CA. Her film “Golden” was an official selection of our 2020 film fest.

How did you get into dance filmmaking?

Like most of my projects- collage, sculptural couture, writing, and collaborations (dance/theater/photography), the idea of filming dance came into my head unannounced and wouldn't let me go...which meant I needed to pursue it!

What draws you to dance filmmaking?

As a dancer and choreographer, I've always longed for more closeness between performers- particularly dancers -and live audiences. Unless you're sitting in the first few rows of the theater, you miss the subtleties of each dancer's way of using her (his/their) body and expressive self. What thrills me about presenting a dancer and dance on screen is that it enables the audience not only to see the dancer's moving body in all its facets, but also to experience the dancer's inner life directly- to enter the world where she resides, to see as she sees, feel as she feels, and touch as she touches. Film provides the incredible opportunity of portraying these things in the most tactile and visceral way possible.

What do you want the world to know about your art?

Color and texture, beauty and strangeness, and the expressive power of the human body all excite me, and shape my passion for expressing the contradictions and incongruities of growing up female.

Is there anything else that you would like us to share?

It was a thrill for me that my film, GOLDEN, was included in the festival! As a first-time filmmaker, that validation gives me the confidence to make another film, and to continue to learn and create as an artist.

You can find more about Kate and her work at http://www.katemitchell.org/

Instagram @katemitchellcreative

Facebook https://www.facebook.com/FW111613

Golden Dance Film, Kate Mitchell

Images provided by Kate Mitchell

Artist Spotlight - Jennifer Akalina Petuch

Throughout the years we’ve met incredible people within the dance film community. We have decided to do an interview series to spotlight these individuals. 

Jennifer Akalina Petuch is a Co-Director, Cinematographer, Editor, and Videographer based out of Tallahassee, Florida. Her film “Liminality” was an official selection of our 2020 film fest.

What are 3 adjectives that describe you as an artist?

Playful, Fearless, Balanced

Is there anything that you would like us to know about your work?

I feel that the ever-growing field of digital technology has had an increasing presence in dance and theater productions. As an artist, I see interactive performance technology incorporated into choreographic and staged works as a prime site of access for multigenerational audiences. Multimedia theater pieces tap into the rapidly changing times, keeping abreast with new developments, as an integral part of helping to maintain its cultural relevance. As a Dancer, Choreographer, Projection Designer, Filmmaker, Multimedia Artist, and Educator, my goal is to use the necessary tools to embrace, explore, and cope with new challenges and opportunities in artistic works. From my own experiences, I firmly believe that providing a strong foundation in performance technique, coupled with an introduction to a new genre of digital choreography and movement exploration, enriches our artistic vocabulary and sense of inclusion. My own research focuses on exploring the synergistic relationship between movement techniques and multimedia works. Technology is constantly changing and developing, and my continued investigations allow me to stay connected to this evolution of our field. I want my artistic endeavors to provide another vehicle to express equity in social and global messages through the universal language of dance, the love of live works, and our cultural dependence on technology. By striking a desired balance between technology and movement invention, I can inspire future choreographers, students, and artists to explore these digital techniques and designs that could result in new and innovative works that stimulate and reach diverse audiences. My life-long mission as an artist and digital choreographer is to create work that resonates with the audience members. My goal is for them to walk out of the theater thinking back on their experience feeling stimulated and inspired.

What is your favorite quote?

"Strength does not come from physical capacity. It comes from an indomitable will." Mahatma Gandhi

You can learn more about Jennifer and her work here http://www.japetuch.com/about

Instagram @jennie.petuch

Dancer Jennifer Petuch

Images provided by Jennifer Akalina Petuch

Artist Spotlight - Mark Freeman

Throughout the years we’ve met incredible people within the dance film community. We have decided to do an interview series to spotlight these individuals. 

Mark Freeman is a Producer, Director, and Editor from Encinitas, CA. His film “Atena/Nets” was an official selection of our 2020 film fest.

How did you get into dance filmmaking?

I came to dance as a documentary filmmaker. My work attempts to combine the visceral emotions of performance with observational documentary techniques. In contrast to “creating and shaping” a performance, my approach is more intent on discovering and revealing, and less interested in interventions. It’s more about capturing than controlling. It’s about process as well as product.

How does architecture or location play a role in your films?

Site-specific dance for camera is an encompassing form that includes a wide range of dance and film practices and techniques. It is often thought of as an experimental form of expression, yet it derives from traditional aesthetics, making Aristotle’s classical conception of dance a fitting starting point: "Dance is rhythmic movement whose purpose is to represent character — what we do and how we suffer." (Aristotle, Poetics)) Atena/Nets is set in Jamestown, a traditional fishing community in Accra, the capital of Ghana. Choreographers Julius Yaw Quansah and Sena Atsugah are enmeshed in the challenges of daily life. They cast a wide net, drawing from Ghanaian traditions and remaking their world.

Is there anything else that you would like us to share?

My screendance practice privileges the screen. My understanding is that cinema is a synthetic art, which draws freely from all forms of creative expression, yet is not bound by the history or conventions of the forms it samples, explores and re-imagines. I am interested in creating work that only exists on the screen. The dance is performed for the camera and the result is work, which in no way attempts to represent a “live” performance. My intention is to use the tools and techniques --- the “language of film” to deconstruct and reconstruct the performances; to discover meaning in the formal elements of the images captured. The choreographers and performers give me the gift of their bodies and movements. I rely on their movement and performance choices. And they in turn are willing to invest their trust and their work in my experience and perspective as a filmmaker. Ultimately I agree with the view of Priscilla Guy who suggests that the “movement material” serves the final composition on screen, which is the actual choreography of the screendance.

You can find more about Mark and his work at https://markfreemanfilms.sdsu.edu/

Alexander Street

https://search.alexanderstreet.com/search?searchstring=mark+freeman

Routledge Performance Archive

https://www.routledgeperformancearchive.com/search?searchString=Mark+Freeman&newSearch=

Dance Film Atena/Nets, Mark Frreman

Images provided by Mark Freeman

Artist Spotlight - Adele Thomas

Throughout the years we’ve met incredible people within the dance film community. We have decided to do an interview series to spotlight these individuals. 

Adele Thomas is a Director, Producer, Writer, and Editor based in Los Angeles, CA, and Vancouver, BC. Her film “She” was an official selection of our 2020 film fest.

How did you get into dance filmmaking?

I started shooting dancers when I lived in Sydney Australia between 2009-2011. At the same time, I was working in a photography studio and we had a dance center called Harbour Dance Centre literally adjacent to our studio. Now I look back and see how remarkably serendipitous that was. I shot the dancers in studio and also on location, which I realized I much preferred to the studio lighting. They felt more cinematic and less contrived outside in natural light. I picked up the photography dance project again in Vancouver BC Canada, however this time with a little more structure and planning behind the series I wanted to capture. I decided I'd like the dance images to relate to the five primordial elements (Fire, water, earth, air & ether), all shot on location so that the location became entwined with the dancer and the element. I exhibited this series in a small gallery in Vancouver in 2018 called 'The Truth Is' - an excerpt from the artist statement: "The dance is symbolic to the elements, and emphasizes that we come of the earth, not "into" it. By exploring powerful movement and intuitive self expression, the dancer truly embodies the connection to one or more of the elements. This series unites the female form in their strength, in their power, and in their beauty, as captured in the fantastical art form of dance." The full dance series can be found here: https://adelethomas.com/dance After the exhibit I set out to capture dance movement on film as the stills images although beautiful only captured one moment in time. I decided on the storyline for 'She' after a long journey of reading books on mythology and reading several 'hero's' journey myths. Truth be told I could only really find one story that pulled me into its grip that represented the feminine version of the hero. It was of the Sumerian goddess Innana of love, sex, war, justice, and political power. The ultimate feminist! In the tale she has to pass through seven gates where she is stripped of all material possessions and attachments and plunges into the underworld where she is killed by her sister, only to be brought back by two sexless gods that revive Innana with the food and water of life. With my interpretation, I wanted to portray a journey we can all relate to when we've gone through hardship, grief, or something deeply dark in our lives. Entering into Dante's furnace and then resurfacing is always a life changing experience.

What inspires you as an artist?

Everything and anything to be honest. It could be a person, or something a person has said, something I have read or watched. I love folk tales, myths, art, dance, music, and of course film but I especially feel inspired when in nature.

What draws you to dance filmmaking?

I love watching the fluidity of how a dancer moves and I think documenting it on film is so breathtakingly captivating! Stories have always been told through music and dance as a way of communication for thousands of years. The fact it is a form of communication without words is so profound! My hope in creating films like 'She' is to share this thought provoking imagery to uplift and inspire people.

How does architecture or location play a role in your films?

The location is very important to portray the story being told. For me in the film 'She', I wanted to show our modern world and how it eats us up. Pulls us in all kinds of directions. We all feel so attached to our modern world but we're never truly free when we're in it. When my dancer leaves the city it's almost as if the city is a material possession that she can't let go of. She needs to strip it away, lose the attachment to it, like everything else and find peace in nature.

What is your favorite quote?

"Follow your bliss and don’t be afraid, and doors will open where you didn’t know they were going to be.." - Joseph Campbell

Is there anything else that you would like us to share?

I'm always open to collaboration on projects, especially those that inspire and uplift.

You can learn more about Adele and her work here https://adelethomas.com/

Instagram @adelethomas_photo

Filming Dance Film "She" Director Adele Thomas

Images provided by Adele Thomas

Artist Spotlight - Shelley Siller

Throughout the years we’ve met incredible people within the dance film community. We have decided to do an interview series to spotlight these individuals. 

Shelley Siller is a Dancer and Choreographer based out of Washington, D.C. We screened her film “A Reflecting Pool of Visuals” in 2018 and “The Grid” in 2020.

How did you get into dance filmmaking?

I was extremely lucky to be introduced to filmmaker Jeff Prioleau by a mutual friend. I have huge respect for his artistic eye and his creativity and we inspire each other to take our content to the next level!

How does architecture or location play a role in your films?

Location, location, location! When Jeff and I talk about a shoot, we are usually talking about location first. I was inspired by a gorgeous sunset I saw at a marsh nature preserve in DC and we did a great water shoot there, and he was inspired by the sunrise at the Reflecting Pool and we hopped in and created a beautiful video there as well. Light, natural elements, and man-made structures play a huge role in our collaborations.

Choreography vs. improvisation? Which do you prefer and why?

I prefer improvisation! I love having the freedom to play on a shoot, to use what’s around me, and to have the flexibility to create with the videographer in real time on the day of the shoot.

Is there anything else that you would like us to share?

Stay tuned for our cicada Brood X celebration shoot, coming soon!

You can learn more about Shelley and her work here https://www.shelleysiller.com/

Instagram @shelleysillerdance

You can find Jeff’s work here @jeprioleau

Dancer Shelley Siller

Images provided by Shelley Siller

Artist Spotlight - Fu LE

Throughout the years we’ve met incredible people within the dance film community. We have decided to do an interview series to spotlight these individuals. 

Fu LE is a Director and Choreographer based out of France. His film “MASS” was an award-winning film at our 2019 Film Fest. 

How did you get into dance filmmaking?

I started to make films as soon as I started to dance. It was a way for me to shape some choreographic works as I did not have money or opportunities to play in theaters. I was also a traveler at that time, filmmaking was thus a way to make my kind of dance logbook.

What inspires you as an artist?

Everything out of mainstream media.

 What draws you to dance filmmaking?

It is a good combination between my visual arts background and my dance practice. I focus on the way to choreograph the camera itself.

How does architecture or location play a role in your films?

They are usually the starting point of my works. I meet a place that inspires me, by its history, its shape, its people... and then I build my composition from it.

 Choreography vs. improvisation? Which do you prefer and why?

I focus on single shots, thus all my works are precisely written. I build a whole choreography with the dancing and technical team, and at the very last moment, I try to give some space for improvisation and spontaneity to freshen up the structure.

What describes you as a filmmaker/artist

disciplinary, autodidact, alchemist

What is your favorite quote?

In screendance, dance is not the subject but the medium.

What do you want the world to know about your art?

To get a feeling of travel.

You can find out more about Fu LE and his work at  www.cie-tetrapode.com 

Instagram @cie.tetrapode

Dance Film Still Directed Fu LE

Images provided by Fu LE

Artist Spotlight - Lawrence Fung

Throughout the years we’ve met incredible people within the dance film community. We have decided to do an interview series to spotlight these individuals. 

Lawrence Fung is an Artistic Director, Choreographer, Filmmaker, and Dancer based out of Phoenix, Arizona. His film “Burden” was an Official Selection of our 2020 Film Fest. His contemporary dance company Kraken Still and Film strives to continually produce works in various mediums and spaces and hopes to build a global reach as an American contemporary dance company. 

What inspires you as an artist?

The natural landscapes, different architectural environments, paintings, and the primal and rigorous movement.

What draws you to dance filmmaking?

Being able to explore various places and cultures, and using the world as your own stage. The playing field is leveled when it comes to dance filmmaking as long as the artists and dancers are interested and committed to create work beyond the theatre. It has always been a difficult entry point for up-and-coming companies and choreographers since most of them aren't backed by a theatre space but when it comes filming, the possibilities are more flexible and less closed off.

Choreography vs. improvisation? Which do you prefer and why?

A combination of both is much needed. We need solid choreography to ensure the movement is crisp and up-to-par, it also makes the editing more cohesive. Furthermore, dancers need to be able to adapt their movement into various landscapes and flooring. Being able to modify, have room to improvise on set without needing too much time to reconfigure the overall movement is crucial. Time is always against filming on location and the desired lighting is fleeting.

What is your company Kraken Still and Film currently working on? 

My company has finished the production of our 2021 flagship project "Distant Worlds." The film premiered on May 20th at Tempe History Museum. The project was partially funded by the city of Tempe via a Vibrant City Grant. Stay in touch with us @krakenstillandfilm to find out more about tour dates for "Distant Worlds" film as well as its live performance.

You can find out more at  www.krakenstillandfilm.com 

Instagram @krakenstillandfilm


Lawrence Fung dance filmmaker

Images provided by Lawrence Fung

Artist Spotlight - Shannon Janet Smith

Throughout the years we’ve met incredible people within the dance film community. We have decided to do an interview series to spotlight these individuals!

Shannon Janet Smith is a Director, Producer, and Choreographer that is based out of Sierra Madre, CA. We screened her film “Confrontation” in 2017.

What inspires you as an artist?

As an artist, I’m inspired by emotion, color, body language, nature, the occult & avant-garde.

What draws you to dance filmmaking?

Some of what draws me to dance filmmaking is the ability to deliver a narrative without verbally speaking. The body can tell such raw & honest stories. I like the storytelling aspect of dance film through movement. It is a form of communication & a way to connect with others. Also, the collaborative process is appealing since I get to be surrounded by skilled professionals who shine in their departments. Every aspect is magic.

What is your favorite quote?

“Find out who you are & do it on purpose.” - Dolly Parton

Is there anything else that you would like us to share? 

I wish my fellow artists infinite abundance in their creativity. Keep making your art, you are essential.

You can find more about Shannon and her work at www.shannonjanetsmith.com 

Instagram @shannyjan

Confrontation Dance Film, Directed Shannon Janet Smith & Steven Butler

Images provided by Shannon Janet Smith