|
Judy Hoffman has worked in film and video for over 25 years. She
was active in the Alternative Television Movement of the early 1970s,
experimenting in the use of small format video equipment. During
the 1973 International Visual Anthropology Conference, she assisted
French ethnographer and filmmaker Jean Rouch. She researched a film
project for him, and became deeply influenced by cinéma vérité
and the idea of shared anthropology. Hoffman played a major role
in the formation of Kartemquin Films, working on many of their film
productions and was the Associate Producer on Golub, which debuted
at the New York Film Festival. She is currently on Kartemquin's
Board of Directors. The first woman film Camera Assistant in Chicago,
Hoffman was an apprentice in IATSE, and worked on feature films,
but ultimately chose documentary. Her credits include numerous PBS
series, including Ken Burns' Baseball, Frank Lloyd Wright, and Jazz.
A major focus of her work has been with the Kwakwaka'wakw First
Nation of British Columbia, producing films and videotapes about
the reclaiming of Native culture. For over ten years Hoffman directed
a video training program on the N'amgis Reserve so that the Kwakwaka'wakw
could make their own tapes, and she continues to work with them
on their projects. She received a VOICE Media Activism Award from
Chicago's Center for Community and Media in 1994, was a Visiting
Artist at Middlebury College in 1997, and was the Guest Artist at
the Big Muddy Film Festival in 1999. She was awarded the 2004 Nelson
Algren Committee Award for community activists making a significant
contribution to Chicago life. As the Acting Director of The Documentary
Center of Columbia College in 1996, she along with Ronit Bezalel
developed Voices of Cabrini, about the destruction of public housing
in Chicago. Hoffman directed a behind the scenes documentary DVD
on Britney Spears, called Stages: Three Days in Mexico, that was
shot by Albert Maysles. She, in turn, was a cinematographer on Maysles'
upcoming videos on the Dalai Lama, and on The Gates, a documentary
on Jeanne Claude and Christo's Central Park installation, airing
on HBO in 2005. Recent productions also include additional cinematography
on Howard Zinn: You Can't be Neutral on a Moving Train, screening
on the Sundance Channel; and cinematographer on Michelle Citron's
interactive CDRom Mixed Greens. Hoffman also produced Ishai Sagi,
an interview with an Israeli Defense Force Officer who is refusing
to fight in occupied territories. She received an MFA from Northwestern
University, and presently holds an appointment at the University
of Chicago, as Lecturer in the Committee on Cinema and Media Studies
and Department of Visual Arts.
Last Updated on Nov. 15, 2007 |