About

Mandate & Land Acknowledgement

TQFF envisions a world where artists refuse oppression, build resistance and collectively imagine a queer world.

Toronto Queer Film Festival was founded in 2016 in response to a moment when major corporations were rapidly embedding themselves in the LGBTQ2S+ non-profit sector. Consequently, TQFF launched as a community-supported, grassroots, festival during Pride month. The festival prioritized experimental work, principled politics, collective care over corporate sponsorship, and industry approval.

Today, corporate funding continues to shape the arts sector. Much queer cultural production is now made legible, respectable, and marketable in service of corporate interests and nationalism. For nearly a decade, TQFF has chosen a different path against pinkwashing.

Through an annual festival and year-round gatherings, including symposia and community events, TQFF has created space for artists working outside industry norms. Queer, trans, disabled, racialized, Indigenous, and working-class communities gather at TQFF to screen work, share food, celebrate resistance, experiment, and imagine otherwise.

Our Mission

TQFF works against the constraints of capitalism, colonialism, and ableism alongside queer, trans, disabled, racialized, Indigenous, and working-class people from Toronto and beyond to:

  1. Present experimental screen-based work by and for creators marginalized by industry systems.
  2. Offer community-rooted education and skill-building that supports the making and circulation of film and media beyond professionalized pathways.

 

Land Acknowledgement

TQFF would like to acknowledge the indigenous territories that we gather on: this stolen land is the territory of the Huron-Wendat and Petun First Nations, the Seneca, and most recently, the Mississaugas of the Credit River.

The territory was the subject of the Dish With One Spoon Wampum Belt Covenant, an agreement between the Haudenosaunee Confederacy and Confederacy of the Ojibwe and allied nations to peaceably share and care for the resources around the Great Lakes.

We acknowledge ourselves as trespassers, and do so to show solidarity with Indigenous peoples of Turtle Island. We recognize that decolonization must be an active and ongoing process of reconciliation–TQFF is dedicated to creating a space in our programming to promote the creative and political work of indigenous queer and two-spirited voices.

Funders

Film Submission

TQFF’s Statement Regarding the Practice of Film Festivals Charging Entry Fees

At TQFF, one of our top priorities is to support filmmakers. In recent years, the number of films being made has exploded due to the widespread accessibility of high quality video production technologies. Unfortunately, however, in many ways it has never been harder for for filmmakers who make work without the benefit of large budgets or insider connections to get their projects shown at festivals, precisely at this moment when it has become possible for almost everyone to make films.

There are huge barriers to entry at almost every stage of most festival submissions process, starting with the first step: submitting your film. Submission fees, the requirement that filmmakers and producers pay amounts ranging from a few dollars to hundreds of dollars in order to have a festival even consider screening a film, have become ubiquitous, even on the LGBT film festival circuit. Festivals offer a range of excuses for charging these entry fees, including “we are a non-profit and by paying submission fees you are supporting our festival” to “we are overwhelmed by the number of entries in recent years and thus rely on the fees to hire programming staff to watch all of the entries”.

Such justifications for charging submission fees indicate additional motivating factors:

  1. Festivals view themselves as gatekeepers who can demand premiums from artists seeking the recognition and exposure for their work that some festivals offer;
  2. A prioritization of supporting their institution and the labor of their staff over the work of artists and filmmakers, without whom, in reality, they would be unable to host their festival;
  3. As the number of films being made and submitted to festivals continues to rise, many festivals want the submission fees to be a barrier to entry, especially since many festivals program very few films submitted through open calls and may already be overwhelmed by the number of entries they get even with the large submission fees.

In this manner, festival submission fees have become an accepted practice that is, intentionally or not, designed to restrict access for low-budget and/or marginalized filmmakers to have their work be considered and ultimately programmed at festivals. At base is the assumption that filmmakers and producers who do not have sufficient resources to pay high entry fees to numerous festivals do not produce work worth considering.

At TQFF, we are no more impressed by films made with large budgets than we are with the videos of first-time filmmakers who shot their project on their cellphones. We are thrilled that the proliferation of digital technologies is increasingly making it possible for even queer and trans folks with the least resources and institutional supports to make work.

At TQFF, we want to foster and support the production of all kinds of work, and that means dismantling institutional structures that discourage those with the least access and resources from submitting their films, much less have them be seriously considered. While money and resources can sometimes be instrumental in producing great work, they are no substitute for – and, in fact, often wind up being an anathema to – creativity, insight, and a commitment to bettering our communities.

As such, TQFF encourages anyone and everyone to make and submit work that fits with our mission to our festival. We will continue to do our best to reduce and remove barriers to production and distribution of work by queer and trans artists, we will never charge submission fees, and every film submitted will be watched by our programming team and considered for inclusion in the festival.



Staff

Nedda Ibrahim, Executive Director
Fateema Al-Hamaydeh Miller, Head of Programming
Collie McCutcheon, Programming Coordinator & Administrative Assistant
Sindi Pinari, Head of Communications
Anasimone George, Communications Coordinator
Cecilio Escobar, Technical Media Director
Tetyana Herych, Web Developer and Designer
Adriana Rosselli Londoño, Bookkeeper

 

Board

Emily Barton, Chair
Sherly Kyorkis, Vice Chair
Ludmylla Reis, Secretary
Bisma Iqbal, Treasurer
Claudia Sicondolfo, Chair, Programming and Membership Committee
Karam Tawfiq, Chair, Governance Committee
Kevin Greenspan, Chair, Communications and Marketing Committee
Omar Taleb
Emily Coutts 

Email: board@torontoqueerfilmfest.com

Contact

Contact

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