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VMI in Taos, New Mexico. Left to right: Dante Cerano (P’urehepecha), Fabiola Gervasio (Mixe), Guillermo Monteforte,  Sergio Julián (Mixtec), Juan José García (Zapotec).

April 3 - 16, 2003

"Historias Verdaderas"Native video production in southern Mexico began in the early 1990s with the founding of the Centers for Indigenous Video in Oaxaca and Michoacán. Since then, Mixtec, Zapotec, Mixe, Maya, P'urhepecha, and other indigenous communicators have been producing work that provides rich and varied views of Native life and concerns. Recently, new, independent cooperatives in several communities have opened up more professional opportunities for indigenous media makers, providing access to training and post-production facilities.

Video México Indígena/Video Native Mexico (VMI) is a national tour that brings Native people living across borders together to meet each other and share their creativity. VMI provides an opportunity for U.S. audiences to see new works from production initiatives in Mexico at more than 15 screening sites. Screenings are introduced by award-winning producers Dante Cerano Bautista (P'urepecha) from Michoacán, and Juan José García (Zapotec) and Fabiola Gervacio Cándido (Mixe) from Oaxaca. The tour has been organized by the Film and Video Center of the National Museum of the American Indian in cooperation with Ojo de Agua Comunicación, a media cooperative in Oaxaca.

"Historias Verdaduras"Regional hosts for VMI are Native filmmakers and advisors who participated in Video América Indígena/Video Native America, a video tour in Mexico organized in 1998 by the Film and Video Center, Ojo de Agua, and other organizations, and screened in Mexico in more than 15 Native communities and cities in Oaxaca, Morelos, and Michoacán. In New York, VMI is hosted by director Randy Redroad (Cherokee); in Wisconsin, media makers Marlon White Eagle and Daryl Lonetree of the Hocak Nation; in New Mexico, filmmaker and scholar Beverly Singer (Santa Clara Pueblo and Navajo). In southern California, scholar and coordinator of the 1998 tour Erica Wortham, community liaison Yolanda Cruz, and members of the P'urepecha community near Fresno are all serving as hosts.

FEATURED WORKS

Selection made by Ojo de Agua Comunicación, and the Film and Video Center of the National Museum of the American Indian.

TOUR SCHEDULE

Rufino Domínguez (Mixtec) and Juana Soto (P’urépecha) at community screening in Madera, California. All programs will be introduced by indigenous videomakers from Mexico. Programs will be presented in Spanish and English. Except where noted, all videos are subtitled into English from Spanish and indigenous languages and admission is free.

New York City

April 3, 2003, 6-8 pm
National Museum of the American Indian, George Gustav Heye Center, Auditorium
Reservations recommended. RSVP at (212) 514-3737. For more information call (212) 514-3730 or email fvc@si.edu.
Historias Verdaderas/True Stories; Yah Gaal Biaa/The Soap Tree; Lhallchho/Our People; Lo'Hil K'in/The Taunt Celebration.
US premieres.

April 4, 2003, 3:30-5:00 pm
New York University, Performance Studies, 721 Broadway, 6th Floor
Reservations recommended. (212) 998-3759 or www.nyu.edu/fas/cmch
Historias Verdaderas/True Stories; Así es mi Tierra/My Homeland is Like This; Xanini/Corn Stalks.

April 5, 2003, 7:00 pm
St. Joseph Church/Iglesia de San José, 185 Suydam St., Brooklyn, NY.
For more information call El Proyecto de los Trabajadores Latinoamericanos: (718) 486-0800
Community screening with selection of works on tour.

Wisconsin

April 7, 2003, 6:00 - 9:00 pm
Ho-Chunk Hotel and Convention Center, Lower Dells Ballroom A, S3214 Hwy 12, Baraboo, WI.
For more information call (608) 356-6210
Community screening with selection of works on tour.

April 8, 2003, 4:00 - 7:00 pm
Chicano/a Studies Program, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 317 Ingraham, 1155 Observatory Drive, Madison, WI.
For more information call (608) 263-4486
Screening and discussion of works on tour.

VMI in Taos, New Mexico. Left to right: Dante Cerano (P’urehepecha), Fabiola Gervasio (Mixe), Guillermo Monteforte,  Sergio Julián (Mixtec), Juan José García (Zapotec). New Mexico

April 9, 2003, 6:00 - 9:00 pm
Poeh Center, Pojoaque Pueblo, NM.
For more information call (505) 455-1110 or go to www.poehcenter.com
Community screening + selection of works on tour.

April 11, 2003, 4:45 pm
Taos Talking Picture, The Forum, Taos, NM.
Information and reservations: (505) 751-0637 and www.ttpix.org
Historias Verdaderas/True Stories; Pidiendo Vida/Petition to Life; Guia Toó/Powerful Mountain
Taos Mountain Award 2003 - Taos Talking Pictures has selected Ojo de Agua Comunicación to receive its Taos Mountain Award. Usually given to recognize the lifetime achievements of an outstanding aboriginal film professional, the award is going this year to a collective organization for Native media in Mexico's southern state of Oaxaca.

April 11, 2003, 7:00 - 9:30 pm
National Hispanic Cultural Center of New Mexico
, 1701 4th Street, SW, Albuqerque, NM (intersection of Av. César Chávez)
For more information call (505) 246-2261 or go to www.nhccnm.org
Screening and discussion of works on tour.

Dante Cerano (P’urépecha) and Juana Soto (P’urépecha) with members of the P’urépecha community in Madera, California. California

April 12, 2003, 6:00 pm
FIOB/Frente Indígena Oaxaqueño Binacional, 2014 Tulare Street, Conference Room, Fresno, CA.
For more information call (559) 499-1178 or go to www.laneta.apc.org/fiob/
Screening and discussion of works on tour.

April 13, 2003, 4:30 - 6:00 pm
San Joaquín Church/Iglesia San Joaquín, 401 W. 5th Street, Madera, CA, 93637.
Cortos Taraspanglish/Taraspanglish Shorts + selection of works on tour.

April 14, 2003, 4:00 pm
University of California - Los Angeles, 179 Haine Hall.
Screening and discussion of works on tour.

April 15, 2003, 6:00 pm
Casa del Mexicano, 2003 Calle Pedro Infante, Los Angeles, CA.
Cortos Taraspanglish/Taraspanglish Shorts + selection of works on tour.

PARTICIPANTS

ORGANIZATIONS

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Regional hosts and advisors:

  • Yolanda Cruz
  • Alex Halkin
  • Daryl Lonetree
  • Guillermo Monteforte
  • Javier Sámano
  • Jason Silverman
  • Beverly Singer
  • Marlon White Eagle
  • Erica Wortham

Muchas gracias:

  • Father Gianni Agostinelli
  • Francisco Arguelles
  • Columbia University - Teachers College, New York
    Kristin Eno, Graeme Sullivan
  • Comisión Nacional para el Desarrollo de los Pueblos Indigenas, Mexico
  • Comité de Benefiencia de Mexico, California
  • Comité de Defensa de la Libertad Indígena, XiNich
  • Comité Pro Democracia en Mexico, California
  • Downtown Community TV, New York
    Matthew O'Neill, Paula Morrongiello, Karina Escamilla
  • Environmental Film Festival, Washington, D.C.
    Flo Stone, Chris Confessore, Helen Strong
  • EXE Video Indígena, Michoacán
  • Federación Oaxaqueña de Comunidades y Organizaciones Indígenas en California (FOCOICA), California
  • Jonathan Fox
  • Frente Indígena Oaxaqueño Binacional (FIOB), California
    Rufino Domínguez, Gaspar Rivera
  • Ho-Chunk Hotel and Convention Center, Wisconsin
  • Hocak Nation
  • HoCak Wazija Haci Language Division, Wisconsin
  • Mexican Cultural Institute, New York
    Hugo Hiriart, Carlos Gutiérrez, Mayra García
  • Mexican Cultural Institute, Washington, D.C.
    Ignacio Durán, Ethel Gómez
  • National Hispanic Cultural Center, New Mexico
    Dr. Reeve Love
  • New York University, New York
    Center for Media, Culture and History
    Barbara Abrash, Faye Ginsburg, Jeff Himpele
  • New York University, New York
    Performance Studies and the Hemispheric Institute
    Diana Taylor
  • Ojo de Agua Comunicación, Oaxaca
  • Poeh Center, Pojoaque Pueblo, New Mexico
    Vernon Lujan
  • El Proyecto de Trabajadores Latinoamericanos, New York
    Oscar Paredes, Linda Machuca
  • David Riker
  • Smithsonian Institution
    Hirshhorn Museum of Art and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.
    Barbara Gordon
  • International Center, Washington, D.C.
    Francine Berkowitz, Raymond Seefelt
  • National Museum of the American Indian, Maryland and Washington, D.C.
    Helen Scheirbeck, Jill Norwood, Molly McCracken, Victoria Wunsch
  • National Museum of the American Indian, New York
    John Haworth, Catherine Morrison, Berquis Arias, Margaret Chen, Rachahd Garguilo, John Humphrey, Sue Lank, Leonor Morel, Anne Marie Sekeres and volunteers John Humphrey and Paloma Wasserstein
  • Taos Talking Pictures
    Morten Nilssen, Jason Silverman, Kelly Clement
  • Taraspanglish Migrants Video Project, Michoacán and California
    Juana Soto Sosa, Aureliano Soto Rita
  • University of California-Los Angeles
    Chicano Studies Research Center
    Chon Noriega, Isabel Meléndez
  • University of California-Los Angeles
    American Indian Center
    Hanay Geoghimah, Kasi McMurray
  • University of Wisconsin-Madison, Wisconsin
    Chicano/a Studies Department
  • US-Mexico Fund for Culture/Fideicomiso para la Cultura US/Mexico

    A very special thanks to Guillermo Monteforte.

Credits:

  • Photos courtesy of: Ojo de Agua and EXE Video Indígena
  • Design: Diane Bonder.
  • Video Mexico Indígena Tour Staff
    Senior Advisor: Elizabeth Weatherford
    Project Coordinator: Amalia Córdova
    Program Assistant: Gabriela Zamorano
    Administrative Assistant: Kim Hudson
  • Native Networks/Redes Indígenas Website Team
    Wendy Allen
    Sergio Julián Caballero
    Nora McCartney
    Erica Wortham

Funders:

Major support for Video México Indígena/Video Native Mexico has been received from The Ford Foundation and the Latino Initiatives Fund, administered by the Smithsonian Center for Latino Initiatives. During the year extensive Mexican film and video programming at the George Gustav Heye Center in New York City has been made possible with public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs and through the generosity of the MetLife Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

Image credit: VMI in Taos, New Mexico. Left to right: Dante Cerano (P’urehepecha), Fabiola Gervasio (Mixe), Guillermo Monteforte, Sergio Julián (Mixtec), Juan José García (Zapotec) - photograph by Amalia Cordova/Film & Video Center.; Still from Historias Verdaderas; Still from Historias Verdaderas; Rufino Domínguez (Mixtec) and Juana Soto (P’urépecha) at community screening in Madera, California. Video México Indígena tour, US 2003 - photograph by Amalia Cordova/Film & Video Center.; VMI in Taos, New Mexico. Left to right: Dante Cerano (P’urehepecha), Fabiola Gervasio (Mixe), Guillermo Monteforte, Sergio Julián (Mixtec), Juan José García (Zapotec) - photograph by Amalia Cordova/Film & Video Center.; Dante Cerano (P’urépecha) and Juana Soto (P’urépecha) with members of the P’urépecha community in Madera, California. Video México Indígena US tour, 2003 - photograph by Amalia Cordova/Film & Video Center.

Featured Works

Tour Schedule

Participants

Organizations

Acknowledments

Dante Cerano

Juan José García

Fabiola Gervacio

Sergio Julián Caballero

José Luis Matías Alonso
Juana Soto-Sosa

Mapping Mexican Media: Indigenous and Community Video and Radio



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