Alaska Is a Drag
Still image from "Alaska Is a Drag" (Courtesy photo)

After four days filled with more than 80 films screenings, including 15 in competition, the inaugural Smithsonian African American Film Festival, presented by the Smithsonianโ€™s National Museum of African American History and Culture from Oct. 24-27, announced the six films that won the inaugural awards.

โ€œThe museumโ€™s inaugural film festival celebrates African-American culture through the medium of film, and we are tremendously proud of the five winners of our first-ever juried competition,โ€ said Kinshasha Holman Conwill, deputy director of the National Museum of African American History and Culture. โ€œEach awarded film is a singular work of film artistry, telling powerful stories, which are not only great entertainment but are important cultural markers in African-American and American film.โ€

Of the 225 films submitted for consideration, 15 were a part of this yearโ€™s competition, with top honors being presented as follows:

โ€ข Narrative Feature โ€“ โ€œAlaska Is a Drag,โ€ directed by Shaz Bennett
โ€ข Narrative Short โ€“ โ€œWhere the Water Runs,โ€ directed by DuBois N. Ashong
โ€ข Documentary Feature โ€“ โ€œUnited Skates,โ€ directed by Dyana Winkler and Tina Brown
โ€ข Documentary Short โ€“ โ€œBlack 14,โ€ directed by Darius Clark Monroe
โ€ข Experimental and Animation โ€“ โ€œGive,โ€ directed by David de Rozas
โ€ข Audience Award โ€“ โ€œRespect and Love,โ€ directed by Angelique Webster

The winners were selected by nine jurors based on a set of criteria including technical merit, relevance to the National Museum of African American History and Cultureโ€™s collection, storytelling, and representation of African-American history and culture.

Jurors included:

โ€ข George Alexander, principal, Galex Media Group
โ€ข Ayoka Chenzira, division chair of the arts and chair of the Department of Art and Visual Culture, Spelman College
โ€ข Terri Francis, associate professor, cinema and media studies, director, The Black Film Center/Archive, The Media School at Indiana University
โ€ข Michael Gillespie, associate professor of film, Black Studies Program, the City College of New York
โ€ข Maori Holmes, artistic director, BlackStar Film Festival
โ€ข Shola Lynch, curator, moving image & recorded sound division, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture
โ€ข Michelle Materre, Materre Media Consulting/Creatively Speaking
โ€ข Dawn Porter, director and producer, Trilogy Films
โ€ข April Reign, senior director of marketing, Fractured Atlas

โ€œI am tremendously proud of the inaugural winners, filmmakers and jurors who devoted themselves and their films to the first Smithsonian African American Film Festival,โ€ said Rhea Combs, curator of photography and film at the National Museum of African American History and Culture and organizer of the film festival. โ€œThe festivalโ€™s success is rooted in the commitment of the many dedicated filmmakers whose moving images inspire and shed light on the many untold stories of the African-American journey.โ€

The Smithsonian African American Film Festival is supported by Toyota, AARP, Netflix, Earl W. and Amanda Stafford and the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities.

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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