SFFILM SLOAN SCIENCE IN CINEMA INITIATIVE
SFFILM AND THE ALFRED P. SLOAN FOUNDATION CELEBRATE SCIENCE IN CINEMA WITH THE 2022 SFFILM SLOAN FELLOWS
$70,000 in fellowships has been awarded to filmmakers Temi Ojo and Mark Ingber for uplifting science in narrative films
in partnership with the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the nation’s leading philanthropic grantor for science and the arts—has announced the recipients of fellowships from their signature program, the SFFILM Sloan Science in Cinema Initiative. SFFILM launched the program in 2015 to celebrate and highlight cinema that brings together science and the art of storytelling, showing how these two seemingly disparate areas can combine to enhance the power of one another. The selections are meant to immerse a broad public audience in the challenges and rewards of scientific discovery, as well as to engage members of the scientific community.
The initiative includes exhibition programs, awards, and screenwriting fellowships that foster collaboration between scientists and artists and elevate filmmakers who tackle scientific or technological themes and characters.
“The scientific process, much like filmmaking, requires patience, vision, crucial support at the early stages, and celebration when experiments and projects come to fruition,” SFFILM Executive Director Anne Lai says of the program. “We are so proud to be in partnership with the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation for our Science in Cinema Initiative. Through these programs are able to support filmmaking fellows as they hone their stories, and we get to elevate the impact of science with our movie-going audiences. We are grateful for this meaningful partnership and the material impact it has on filmmakers and audiences alike.”
“We are thrilled to partner with SFFILM to announce the 2022 winners of the Sloan Science in Cinema Filmmaker Fellowships, part of our nationwide program to support films depicting scientific themes or characters and to highlight the contributions of underrepresented groups,” said Doron Weber,Vice President and Program Director at the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. “This year’s two terrific winning projects, a social comedy about winemaking in the south of France and a harrowing drama about the first Black man to undergo face transplant surgery in the US, showcase not just the range and diversity of subject matter in this program but the ways science and technology are redefining and remaking reality in contemporary life.”
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