International Sun 29-03-2009

A Mirror Facing Africa: The 7th Tarifa African Film
By Carlos Fernández

Festival de Cine Africana Tarifa

The Festival de Cine Africano de Tarifa (FCAT – Tarifa African Film Festival, Spain) celebrates its seventh edition this year.

From 21st to 29th May 2010, this event will screen  more  than  100 African films and it will bring together some  of  the  most  distinguished  African  artists, in  the  closest  town of continental Europe to the African continent: Tarifa, an Andalusian town on the Spanish coasts of the Strait of Gibraltar - the two continents are in fact only 14 km apart from one another in this geographical area.

The FCAT spreads knowledge about African film production by exhibiting a representative wide variety of audiovisual African  works every year: from the classics to more innovative  and recent films, from documentaries to feature length fiction films, from South Africa to Morocco and from Senegal to Ethiopia.

Last May, internationally acclaimed Guinean filmmaker Mama Keita commented: “the  FCAT is a mirror facing   Africa”. Similarly, the highly celebrated and Cannes-awarded Malian-Mauritanian filmmaker Abderrahmane Sissako insisted on the importance of an African film festival like FCAT, hailing it as “a bridge that politicians never make”.

The FCAT is not just the only competitive African film festival in Spain, but it has become one of the biggest and most renowned film events of its kind both in and outside Europe. 

Offering  €48,500 in  prize  money  through  8  different awards, the festival in Tarifa embodies both an  innovative cultural bridge - in which African films become the encounters between the two continents and their different  cultures, and “a  tool for knowledge, raising of ocial awareness and development”, as Mane Cisneros Manrique,  founder  and director of the FCAT, explains.

Brief background

The FCAT was born from a non-profit privately driven Spanish organisation named Al Tarab,1  which Mane Cisneros Manrique - founder and director of this film event - created in Tarifa with a small group of collaborators in 2004.

The event was initially called Muestra de  Cine Africano de Tarifa – MCAT (non- competitive showcase of African cinema of Tarifa) and was merely focused on the  thematic  exhibition  and  discussion  of  African  films. 

In  2007  the  FCAT became an actual award-giving festival, granting initially seven different prizes
to the best African films as a means to generate a real support for the African

Film industry

1  Al-Tarab is an Arab term which refers to music and the whole scale of emotions produced by music.

In short, the FCAT was born  in  2004 with the aim of spreading knowledge about Africa in Spain through African films. In only 7 years it has grown into one of the most important meetings for those who love cinema and Africa. 

Film Programme

The 7th edition of the festival will present the following sections:

- Competitive sections:

Non-competitive sections

Casa África is a Canary Islands-based Spanish intergovernmental institution for the promotion of mutual relationships and knowledge between Spain and Africa (http://www.casafrica.es/).
 

audience have a chance to view historically important African films, as well  as  non-African  cinema  that  offers  a  perspective  of  how filmmakers from other parts of the world see this continent.

 Retrospectives - a selection of films (out of competition) that encloses four sub-sections:

Coinciding with the 50th anniversary of the Independence of 17

African countries, FCAT’10 offers a selection of African and non- African   productions that  illustrate, question  and  analyse  this independence.
 

Retrospective  Idrissa   Ouedraogo.   Coinciding  with  the  20th anniversary of  the Cannes’ Jury Award for his film “Tilaï”, FCAT 2010 will show a complete retrospective of the filmmaker from Burkina Faso.

Visitors and spectators will not find any red carpet or catwalk at the FCAT, but enthusiastic crowds who discover more realistic representations of Africa, both in and outside the film screenings.

FCAT 2010 Film Awards

- The first official Jury grants the following awards:

AUDIENCE SPECIAL AWARD for the best full-length film. This award is worth 5.000 € and includes a Trophy.

The second official Jury grants the following award:

The Youth Jury votes the following award:

 A member of the Andalusia Public Broadcasting will award the following prize:

More information on Tarifa can be found on www.fcat.es

FCAT’10 International Press Officer: Federico Olivieri
federico@fcat.es

Posted By: .

skip to top

Bookmark and Share

Your Comments

Names:

Email:

Commment:

 
skip to top

African Artists Portfolios

Chuka Machie is a Fine Artist
Chilonga Haji is a Fine Artist
Muyiwa Osifuye  is a Photographer
Tamar Mason is a Mixed Media Artist
Leopold Segson is a Fine Artist
Danisile Ncube is a Sculptor
Burns Effiom is a Mixed Media Artist
Stephen Gwoktcho is a Mixed Media Artist
Kusum Shah is a Fine Artist
Hesham Nawwar is a Mixed Media Artist
Kwame Nyongo is a Illustrator
Hendrick Lilanga is a Mixed Media Artist
Sulaiman  Ishola is a Fine Artist
Medie  Mulindwa is a Fine Artist
Dinesh Revankar is a Illustrator
Michael Wafula is a Mixed Media Artist
Granete Ngirandi is a Fine Artist
Amani Elabden is a Mixed Media Artist
Jean Wabotai is a Fine Artist
John Odoch-Ameny is a Sculptor
Hannah Uzor is a Fine Artist
Mwandale Mwanyekwa is a Sculptor
Mpumelelo  Dube is a Fine Artist
Eric Abaka is a Fine Artist
Walter  Mariga is a Sculptor
Lynda Cookson is a Fine Artist
Vusi Mfupi is a Mixed Media Artist
Maggie Otieno is a Sculptor
Lemos Djata is a Fine Artist
Thom  Ogonga is a Mixed Media Artist
Click To View All African Artist Portfolios

Kaafiri Kariuki at the Creativity Gallery

Shades of Time: An exhibition by Kaafiri Kariuki at the Creativity Gallery National Museum of Kenya

News By Regions

Featured Artist Portfolio

Title: Making Ways
Name: Tabitha Wa Thuku
Country: Kenya
Medium: Mixed media on heavy canvas
Size: 149 X 140 cms
Click here to view

News

Goodman Gallery Response to Threat of Censorship from the ANC
Samuel Githui's 'Zebra Crossing' @ The One Off Gallery
Nomthunzi Mashalaba Presents 'Mamiya'
Portraits for Self Determining Haiti
Word: Future Tense. An Exhibition by Wosene Worke Kosrof

Features

Common Misconceptions Artists Have About Galleries
In Conversation with James Barnor, in Comparison with Malick Sidibé
Gor Soudan & Paul Onditi's 'Another World is Possible'
The Politics of Exclusion: The Undue Fixation of Western-Based African Curators on Contemporary Africa Diaspora Artists-A Critique
An Arts Renaissance in Johannesburg

Editorials

How African Sculpture Influences Modern Art
Interrogating Western Paradigms: Rethinking Authencity in African Art
Should Artists Accept “Dirty Money”?
Art as an Expression: Are artists part of “the problem”?
Development as a Destroyer of Culture: Demolition of Uganda National Museum

News From External Sources

Davidkrut.book.co.za: Special Collection: TAXI Art Book Series
Herald.co.zw: Publishers Challenged to Produce African Art Books
Herald.co.zw: Transforming Colonial Legacy Through Art
Culturemap.com: Faces of Kings
Culture24.org.uk: Brighton Photo Biennial 2010

Exhibitions

Conrad Botes at the KZNSA Gallery

Follow Us On....

Facebook
skip to top
Look

Edcross Fine Art
Art South Africa
Mocada
National Museum Of African Art
Creative African Network
African Art Online
 
Learn

Culture.info
Hivos
Arterial Network
Doen
Blogs

Art's Own Kind
AACHRONYM
Contemporary Arts in Northern Nigeria
Lifestyle & Design

Contemporist
Dwell
Wallpaper*
Cape Craft Design
Moco Loco

Site Map

Contact Us

User Agreement

Privacy Policy

Links & Resources

RSS

FAQ

Home

About Us

Africa Art News

© 2000 - 2010 AfricanColours.
Hosting by Outdare