The Mbyá-Guarani Cinema Collective (also Guarani Film Collective or Coletivo Mbyá-Guarani de Cinema) is a Brazil-based video and visual arts production collective, focused on
Guaraní culture.
[1] It was founded in 2007 by
Patrícia Ferreira Pará Yxapy.
[2] The collective produces and disseminates work on a national and international level.
Within the last 15 years Mbyá-Guarani Cinema Collective, together with Patrícia Ferreira Pará Yxapy and the NGO Video nas Aldeias (Video in the Villages — VIV), [3] [4] [5] [6] created numerous film and video works which have been presented internationally. [7] The collective has participated in festivals around the world, such as Berlinale Berlin, [1] and conferences like Indigenous Peoples’ Engagement with Digital and Electronic Media in Nashville, Tennessee. [8]
The Mbyá-Guarani Cinema Collective sees the film-making process as holistic, interconnected to community, nature and the cosmos. In this case, the Indigenous filmmakers are not shooting a subject matter outside of themselves; rather, they are working and creating within a collective, interdependent, and interconnected understanding of their world order, positioning video technology as immersed into their ecosystem. [9]
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The Mbyá-Guarani Cinema Collective (also Guarani Film Collective or Coletivo Mbyá-Guarani de Cinema) is a Brazil-based video and visual arts production collective, focused on
Guaraní culture.
[1] It was founded in 2007 by
Patrícia Ferreira Pará Yxapy.
[2] The collective produces and disseminates work on a national and international level.
Within the last 15 years Mbyá-Guarani Cinema Collective, together with Patrícia Ferreira Pará Yxapy and the NGO Video nas Aldeias (Video in the Villages — VIV), [3] [4] [5] [6] created numerous film and video works which have been presented internationally. [7] The collective has participated in festivals around the world, such as Berlinale Berlin, [1] and conferences like Indigenous Peoples’ Engagement with Digital and Electronic Media in Nashville, Tennessee. [8]
The Mbyá-Guarani Cinema Collective sees the film-making process as holistic, interconnected to community, nature and the cosmos. In this case, the Indigenous filmmakers are not shooting a subject matter outside of themselves; rather, they are working and creating within a collective, interdependent, and interconnected understanding of their world order, positioning video technology as immersed into their ecosystem. [9]
{{
cite book}}
: |last=
has generic name (
help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
link)
{{
cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link)