I just saw An Ecstatic Experience by Ja’Tovia Gary for the second time last 
weekend at the Columbus Black International Film Festival & think it’s really 
doing interesting work with found footage:

http://www.jatovia.com/an-ecstatic-experience-new/

Not a black woman, but equally worthy of attention is Christopher Harris’s 
“Reckless Eyeballing”:

https://www.viennale.at/en/films/reckless-eyeballing  [Chris, where’s your 
website???  Couldn’t find it with a quick google search…]

As for composition & sequence, again not a black woman (just a woman), but I 
showed Katherin McInnis’s “Hat Trick” in my intro film production class to set 
up a flip book assignment this week, and I think the way she uses contact 
sheets of found images could be really interesting for both conversations:

https://vimeo.com/98387497

And Jen Proctor’s remake of Bruce Conner’s “A Movie” is already becoming a 
classic of the genre (for the YouTube era):

https://vimeo.com/11531028

Lots of non-white-dude options out there…
Roger

On Aug 30, 2018, at 11:30 AM, David Sherman 
<davidgatessher...@gmail.com<mailto:davidgatessher...@gmail.com>> wrote:

In a university production course have shown both Conner's  "A Movie" as a 
prompt for student found footage editing assignment and Marker's "La Jete" for 
photographic composition and sequencing.  I would be grateful for suggestions 
of short works by specifically women of  color that could be used as I 
mentioned above.
Many thanks,
David

--
David Sherman
 520-366-1573
www.explodedviewgallery.org<http://www.explodedviewgallery.org/>
www.davidshermanfilms.com<http://www.davidshermanfilms.com/>
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