Danielle Black starts Indigenous filmmakers collective in Calgary - Action News
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Danielle Black starts Indigenous filmmakers collective in Calgary

Danielle Black, a young Blackfoot woman, is starting up an Indigenous filmmakers collective in Calgary to help local filmmakers tell the stories of the citys Aboriginal people.

Treaty 7 Filmmakers Collective to hold first meeting on Thursday

Danielle Black (second from right, seen with her supporters) describes herself as 'an emerging filmmaker, advocate, and fry bread eating Blackfoot Woman.' (Ayesha Clough/CBC)

A young woman is starting up an Indigenous filmmakers collective in Calgary to help local filmmakers tell the stories of the city's Aboriginal people.

Danielle Black is the founder of the Treaty 7 Filmmakers Collective, which will hold its first monthly meeting in downtown Calgary on Thursday.

"The goal is to bring Indigenous artists, filmmakers, sound tech people, screenwriters, script writers, editors to come out to meet each other, to sit in a circle, and to really talk about what needs to be done," Black told The Homestretch on Tuesday.

Black who also goes by the Blackfoot name Sui-Taa-Kii which means Rain Womanwas inspired by the work of the Aboriginal Filmmakers Collective in Winnipeg, where she spent three months doing a film program.

Expect more indigenous stories -- by indigenous filmmakers -- to hit theatres if the Treaty 7 Filmmakers Collective has its way. Danielle Black is the founder of the newly formed group, which is meeting for the first time tomorrow night in Calgary.

Black says Indigenous people haven't been given enough opportunity to tell their own stories.

"Indigenous people are a part of a culture that is deeply rooted in story-telling, and because we are in a time where there is a demand for our stories to be told, it's only right to have our people be the ones to tell them," she said.

The meeting will be held on Thursday at 6 p.m. at EMMEDIA Gallery & Production Society, which has offered the group space once a month.

Everyone is welcome, including non-Indigenous filmmakers.

"The focus is Indigenous filmmakers [but of course] everybody is welcome We are all Treaty people and we all live on Treaty 7 land," Black said.

With files from The Homestretch