Jean-françois Ravagnan

Born in 1983 in Liège, Belgium, Jean-François Ravagnan was trained at the Institut des Arts de Diffusion in Louvain-la-Neuve in Belgium. Alternating between fiction and documentary exercises, he follows the teaching of Belgian directors Frédéric Fonteyne, Bénédicte Liénard, Benoît Mariage and Frédéric Dumont.

Since 2007, he has worked as first and second assistant director on a dozen films, notably Le Silence by Lorna and Le Gamin au Vélo by Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne.

Along with his film career, he regularly collaborates with the theater as a video creator. On the occasion of shows in Europe and Latin America, he produced the video creations for Fabrice Murgia's shows produced by Le Théâtre National de Belgique and La Compagnie Artara.

In 2015, he directed his first short fiction film entitled Renaître. Shot between Brussels and Tunis, the film was selected at the 68th Locarno Film Festival and awarded at several international festivals.

Today, Jean-François Ravagnan is more particularly devoted to the development of his next fiction and documentary projects.

Nadine Keseman

Nadine Keseman is a film editor and director. She’s also been an editing teacher at “Institut des Arts de Diffusion", Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium for 20 years. Finally, Nadine was also in charge of the movie selection at Plan K, an independent movie theater in Brussels, Belgium. 

Bukary Sawadogo

Dr. Boukary Sawadogo is professor of cinema studies in the Department of Media and Communication Arts at the City College of New York - City University of New York.

Dr. Sawadogo is the author of numerous publications on African cinema, including three books, book chapters, articles, and film reviews. His monographs are: Les cinemas francophones ouest africains, 1990-2005 (Harmattan, 2013), African Film Studies: An Introduction (Routledge, 2018), and West African Screen Media: Comedy, TV Series, and Transnationalization (Michigan State University Press, 2019). 

In addition, he has made a documentary film Salut Y’all: African Teachers on the Bayou (2013) which was selected by festivals in the USA and Africa. He is also the producer and director of the YouTube web-series, Aventure africaine à New York, on the experience of francophone African immigrants in New York City. 

Mamadou Dia

Mamadou is a Senegalese director based in New York. He completed a Master in Filmmaking at the Tisch School of the Arts (NYU). Before moving to the US he worked as a videojournalist and camera operator in Senegal for more than eight years. His short film, Contained, is based on true events that happened in Sierra Leone when he was covering the Ebola outbreak in 2014. His short film Samedi Cinema (2016) premiered at the Venice and Toronto International Film Festivals, and won the CH Cinema Network Prize at the Fribourg International Film Festival in 2017. His debut feature film, Nafi's Father (2019), won the Golden Leopard in the Filmmakers of the Present competition and the First Feature award at Locarno International Film Festival.