Portfolio
How Hair You!
Budding feminist comically criticizes the shame of body hair through an educational expedition of razor advertisements and femininity.
Features Dr. Beverly Guy-Sheftall, director of Women's Research & Resource Center, chair of Comparative Women's Studies, and Anna Julia Cooper Professor of Women's Studies at Spelman College.
Best Picture, Best Cinematography, Best Production Value, Best Story, and Audience Choice at The Green Screen Project 2022 Film Festival. Selected for the 13th BronzeLens Film Festival. Selected for the Autumn Sun HBCU Invitational.
Woody Spike Stuck in the Spring
A critique of the male gaze. An ode to the Black female southern oppositional gaze. Dedicated to bell hooks.
First Student Selected for The Black Women Film Network Short 2022 Film Festival. Best Film at The Green Screen Project 2023 Film Festival.
Hands Down
Hands Down is an ode to hands: the beauty, the simplicity, and the potential we have in our very own palms.
Selected for The Green Screen Project 2023 Film Festival. Selected for 2022 SPLICE Film Festival.
The Suburban Princess
Microfilm that follows a girl trapped in isolation.
Selected for The 3rd Annual Morehouse College Human Rights Film Festival.
Ma Julia (TRAILER)
Ma Julia follows the descendent of a granny midwife, who goes on a surreal journey to connect with her family legacy and the hidden triumphs of Black Southern history.
Spelman College Senior Thesis Film.
Nominee for NATAS Student Production Awards. Selected for the 14th Annual BronzeLens Film Festival. Selected for the 5th Annual Morehouse College Human Rights Film Festival. Selected for the 2023 Topaz Film Festival.
The Hallway (Trailer)
This narrative film follows four Black girls coming of age in their predominantly white high school. Through sisterhood and unapologetic expression, these girls learn what it means to be young, Black, and free.
Winner of the Beats x MACRO Pitch Competition at the 3rd annual HBCU Summit.
WHERE DO YOU GO
TO FEEL FREE?
Unlike our overwhelmingly negative society that flourishes off tragedy and stagnation, this poetic, impressionistic film explores how the mind can be an escape and the imagination can give momentary peace.
Periodt
This short film explores the stigma surrounding menstruation through the lens of Black women at Spelman College.
Quiet Cinema Vérité in the Autumn Woods
Cinéma Vérité - style of filmmaking characterized by realistic, typically documentary motion pictures that avoid artificiality and artistic effect and are generally made with simple equipment.
19
On the eve of her twentieth birthday, Kennedy believes she’s becoming less cool and reflects on her epic past.
small but holy
An ode to small towns where religion has been an electrifying force in black communities for decades. The interviewee, who was a local resident, shares her experiences as a preachers’ kid.
I’m here
A short coming of age film that illustrates the importance of representation, Black history and HBCUs.
Green Meadows
There is something about being in nature that makes everything seem so simple and easy. This feeling comes with every visit to Green Meadows Preserve, a local Marrietta treasure.
At 112 acres, "Green Meadows Preserve offers quiet woodlands and meadows ideal for walking, picnics, kite flying, and exploring plants, birds, and flowers. There are public garden plots, Cherokee Indian medicine and food plant gardens, a Bluebird trail, a Civil War period house and garden, honeybee hives, etc"
To learn more visit: https://greenmeadowspreserve.org.