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Reciprocal Relations

2022-09-01 - 2023-05-16

We're thrilled to announce the participants for our ongoing Reciprocal Relations programme!

Responding to our Call for Emerging Artists from last fall, selected applicants were each paired with an established artist from CFMDC’s membership to collaborate in the creation and delivery of a public program. The CFMDC mentoring artists include: TJ Cuthand, Nadine Valcin, Francisca Duran, Chris Chong Chan Fui and Sharlene Bamboat. Each paired artist duo researched and developed their projects through the winter and spring of 2023. Their collaborations may be presented online or in-person, depending on the location of the artists, and has taken the form of screenings, installations, and other presentation formats. Each emerging artist was paid $2000 for participating in the collaboration, program creation and delivery. 


Omolola Ajao

Paired with Nadine Valcin


Omolola Ajao is a Nigerian-Canadian filmmaker and interdisciplinary artist. Her documents ruminate on Black migratory life, scripting from observation, meditation and personal introspection. She embraces Black reality as means of endless imagination, exploration and excavation. Often playing within introjection to speculate upon migratory presence. She has screened internationally at Miami Film Festival, Urbanworld, TIFF Next Wave, and is a 2021-22 TIFF Fellow, Union Docs Fellow and Hot Docs Fellow.


Nada El-Omari

Paired with Francisca Duran


Nada El-Omari is a filmmaker and writer of Palestinian and Egyptian origin based in Montréal, Québec. She has centered her practice and research interests on the intergenerational transmissions of memories, displacement and the stories of belonging and identity through a poetic, hybrid lens. Focusing on process and fragments in text, sound and image, Nada explores different ways to self-narrate new ways to speak hybridity and self. El-Omari holds a BFA in Film Production and MFA in Film from York University.


KJ Edwards

Paired with TJ Cuthand


KJ Edwards is a Kanien’kehá:ka and mixed settler filmmaker. Her family is from Kahnawá:ke and Longueuil, Quebec; while she was born and raised in Treaty 6 Territory, Edmonton, Alberta. Holding a BFA in Film Production from the Toronto Metropolitan University, KJ is trained in narrative, documentary and experimental filmmaking techniques. She wrote and directed Meet The Sky (2021), a short dramatic film that is still making festival rounds. She is currently focusing on eco processing analogue film, and activating dreams and memories to create content for her MFA thesis at Emily Carr University of Art + Design, which is located on unceded traditional Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh Territory in Vancouver.


Athina Khalid

Paired with Sharlene Bamboat


Athina Khalid is a part-time writer, filmmaker, and editor, currently pursuing her Master’s in History at McGill University. Her work often engages with questions of history, memory, and archive. As part of the CFMDC's Reciprocal Relations program, she curated IN ITS PLACE, a film screening with Sharlene Bamboat, which took place this spring at La Lumière Collective in Montreal.


Mackai Sharp

Paired with Chris Chong Chan Fui


Mackai Sharp is a Queer Maōri-Canadian Filmmaker, Creative Dir, and Multimedia Artist. Raised on Vancouver island (on unceded K’omoks territory), Mackai has been filmmaking and creating since he was 8 years old, often fostering and researching his own arts education as no formal programs would accept him to study due to his early age. Mackai likes to confront his problems head on, using his preferred digital mediums as a space to tear apart existential ideas of self, community, interpersonal relationships and lived experiences. With these pieces, he makes work that tells a story he couldn’t put into words. His work has been shown across North America, Europe & Asia. Adjacent to filmmaking, Mackai is a published photographer working in both creative and journalistic photography. His intentions are to continue making art, films & friends; exploring new mediums and expanding his practice abroad.

TERRITORY & SOLIDARITY: The daily work of CFMDC takes place in Tkaronto (Toronto) which is covered by Treaty 13 signed with the Mississaugas of the Credit, and the Williams Treaty signed with multiple Mississaugas and Chippewa bands. We also acknowledge The Dish with One Spoon treaty between the Anishinaabe and Haudenosaunee that covers the land of what is now called southern Ontario. We work with the knowledge of the importance of recognition of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the four First Nations Principles of OCAP®. As a Media Arts organization we draw your attention to the work of the National Indigenous Media Arts Coalition (NIMAC). As part of  anti-colonial solidarity, CFMDC board and staff proudly commits to the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI). Calls to support PACBI and the wider Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) come from Palestinian civil society and are grassroots strategies opposing the colonization of Palestine by directly targeting complicity.

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Canadian Filmmakers Distribution Centre

209 - 401 Richmond Street West  

 Toronto, ON, M5V 3A8

  416-588-0725

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