Event Overview
In this Keynote, Louis Massiah will explore community media as a vital cultural practice rooted in collaboration, sharing excerpts from his films to illustrate this approach.
As founding director of Scribe Video Center, Massiah has developed models for participatory media production that support individuals and communities in telling their own stories. Challenging conventional notions of authorship, he emphasizes the shared processes of research, production, and exhibition, framing media-making as a collective endeavor.
Central to his presentation is Massiah’s ongoing commitment to building institutional frameworks that sustain community-based storytelling over time. Through Scribe, he has cultivated a space where emerging and experienced makers alike can engage with film and video as tools for inquiry, dialogue, and connection.
Massiah will reflect on how these structures enable the circulation of knowledge across generations and foster networks of cultural production grounded in local experience. Within that framework, he will discuss Precious Places, a longstanding project that brings community residents together to create short documentaries about sites of personal and shared significance.
Through Massiah’s lens, filmmaking emerges not only as an art form but also as a participatory process capable of showcasing more inclusive narratives and shaping a more just society.








