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Catherine Pancake

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Occupation
  
Cinematographer

Name
  
Catherine Pancake


Role
  
Filmmaker

Movies
  
Black Diamonds: Mountaintop Removal & the Fight for Coalfield Justice, Jay Dreams

Siblings
  
Ann Pancake, Sam Pancake

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Catherine Pancake is an American filmmaker and musician. She is a co-founder of the Red Room Collective, the High Zero Foundation, the Charm City Kitty Club and the Transmodern Festival. She is currently an Assistant Professor in the Film and Media Arts Program at Temple University and director of the Black Oak House Gallery. Her documentary film Black Diamonds (2006), an examination of mountaintop removal mining, has received a number of awards.

Contents

Personal

Pancake grew up in the areas of Romney, West Virginia and Summersville, West Virginia. She moved to Baltimore in 1993. she is a relative of the writers Breece D'J Pancake, Ann Pancake, and actor Sam Pancake.

Career

In Baltimore Pancake co-founded the Red Room Collective and High Zero Foundation. She also became a self-trained improvising percussionist and began making films, which ranged from short, experimental meditations to feature-length narratives and documentaries. She is a founding member of the Charm City Kitty Club (GLBT Performance Series) and the Transmodern Festival (Live.Art.Action.)

She currently lives in Philadelphia, where she is Assistant Professor in the Film and Media Arts Program at Temple University and director of Black Oak House Gallery.

Beginning around 2001, her primary project has been a documentary about the mountaintop removal project of the coal in southern West Virginia and its resulting environmental and humanitarian consequences titled Black Diamonds. Black Diamonds: Mountaintop Removal & The Fight for Coalfield Justice was released by Bull Frog Films for distribution in December, 2006.

Pancake received a Masters in Fine Arts at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in May 2012. As recipient of the Edes Foundation Emerging Artist Fellowship, she began the film Genius Project as her Edes Year project. In it she documents five avant-garde artists who identify as queer women: Eileen Myles, Barbara Hammer, Jibz Cameron, Shannon Funchess and Rasheedah Phillips.

Film and videography

  • 2006 release, Black Diamonds: Mountaintop Removal & The Fight for Coalfield Justice, DV 72 minutes; screened at the Documentary Fortnight Series at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) Feb 2008
  • 2009, Jay Dreams
  • 2010, bitterbittertears
  • 2011, Optical Scores
  • Awards

  • 2002, Maryland State Arts Council Individual Artist Award
  • 2006, Key to the City, South Charleston, West Virginia
  • 2006, Paul Robeson Independent Media Award
  • 2007, Jack Spadaro Documentary Award
  • 2007, Silver Chris Award - Best in Science & Technology Division - Columbus International Film Festival
  • 2012, Edes Foundation Emerging Artist Fellowship at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago
  • 2013, American Composers Forum, Subito grant for Axon Ladder, Bhob Rainey, Catherine Pancake, Meg Foley
  • 2014, Pew Center for Arts & Heritage “No Idea Too Ridiculous” grant for Allele Wake, Catherine Pancake, Bhob Rainey, Christina Zani
  • effortless battle film by catherine pancake music by ian nagoski 2003 three


    References

    Catherine Pancake Wikipedia