New Thinking: Research in Film Award Winners 2021
Naomi Paxton talks to the winners of the annual Research in Film Awards which pick out projects using film to showcase new academic research.
Migration, autism, young Colombians escaping violence, Yorkshire farming and children born of war in Uganda are the topics highlighted in the winners of this year’s AHRC Researcher in Film Awards. Naomi Paxton looks at the winning entries.
The Best Animated Film of the Year winner Osbert Parker is a three-time BAFTA nominated director and an animation lecturer at the National Film and TV School. His winning film Timeline was produced in collaboration with the Migration Museum for an exhibition called Departures and Matthew Plowright from the museum joins him to talk to Naomi Paxton about condensing a history of migration into a ten minute animation built around the idea of lines connecting.
https://www.migrationmuseum.org/
https://vimeo.com/496398115
The Best Doctoral or Early Career Film of the Year winner was Alex Widdowson’s animated film Drawing on Autism. This forms part of his practice-based doctoral work with the Autism through Cinema project at Queen Mary, University of London. He talks to Naomi Paxton and the ethics of making a film about other people’s experiences of autism.
https://www.qmul.ac.uk/sllf/film-studies/research/autism-through-cinema/
You might also be interested in this Free Thinking conversation with novelist Michelle Gallen and Dr Bonnie Evans from QMUL about representations of autism /programmes/m000r3ly
The Best Research Film of the Year was won by Birte Vogel for The Art of Peace, MedellÃn – a documentary exploring the impact of community-led arts initiatives that work with marginalised youth, and particularly young men, in Colombia who are at risk of becoming involved in ongoing violent conflict. Joining Naomi to talk about the film is Teresa Ó Brádaigh Bean, Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Manchester and part of The Art of Peace project team.
https://sites.manchester.ac.uk/the-art-of-peace/home/about/research/
The Best Climate Emergency Film of the Year was given to Newland: New Vision for a Wilder Future which hears from a pair of farmers in York shire and focuses on the tensions between farming and conservation, looking at issues including public access, heritage, and sustainability. Suzie Cross is Artistic Director of the Land Lines Research Project at the University of Leeds – she made the film with Dave Lynch
https://landlinesproject.wordpress.com/
You can find two Free Thinking conversations about the Land Lines project
The episodes are called Nature Writing /programmes/m000ktf4 featuring Pippa Marland and Connecting with Nature /programmes/m000xthj hearing from Pippa Marland and Anita Roy about their anthology.
The Inspiration Award winner was Dheeraj Akolkar. His film The Wound is Where the Light Enters was inspired by a docu-dance performance created by fifteen young people born of war rapes in Northern Uganda. Professor Sabine Lee from the University of Birmingham is part of a research network that explores the experiences of Children born of war https://www.chibow.org/
https://research.birmingham.ac.uk/en/publications/children-born-of-war-past-present-and-future
You can find out more about the awards here https://ahrc.ukri.org/innovation/research-in-film-awards/
This New Thinking episode of the Arts and Ideas podcast was made in partnership with the Arts and Humanities Research Council, part of UKRI
You can find more episodes devoted to New Research in a playlist on Â鶹Éç Radio 3’s Free Thinking programme website.
Producer: Paula McFarlane
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