DocYourWorld – ChicagoTalks http://www.chicagotalks.org News to Use Thu, 02 Jun 2016 18:32:02 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.4.1 /wp-content/uploads/2018/08/cropped-favicon-1-32x32.png DocYourWorld – ChicagoTalks http://www.chicagotalks.org 32 32 ‘Untold’ debuts during DocYourWorld 2016’s Sexual Assault Panel /?p=59258 /?p=59258#respond Thu, 02 Jun 2016 18:32:02 +0000 /?p=59258  

Untold
Untold is a documentary produced and directed by father and daughter, Leah, 20, and David Zeiger, 66. The film focused on abusive relationship Leah Zeiger had her sophomore year of high school.

A father and daughter team debuted their documentary, Untold” during Columbia College Chicago’s two-day Doc Your World festival in May.

Leah Zeiger, 20, a dance major at the college, was in an abusive relationship as a teenager. She told that story with her father, David Zeiger, 66, a professional film director and producer from California. When Doc Your World students were called upon to produce a documentary on a pivotal moment in their lives, the Zeigers felt obligated to share their story to heal themselves and other survivors.

“Making this film about what Leah and our family went through was necessary for all of us,” said David Zeiger. “It’s part of our DNA; that’s how we deal with it.”

Her father used his talents in film and photography to express his emotions after the death of his 9-year-old son in 1987.

Doc Your World is an interdisciplinary course. In addition to making short films, the students organized this two-day event.

A panel including the Zeigers and other sexual assault survivors, Jean Cozier, 61, and Cassandra Kaczor, 23, shared their experiences. Cozier, founder and executive director of Awakenings Foundation Center and Gallery, encompassed all of the panelist’s goals in combining their pain with their art.

“I’m a survivor who uses my art to heal myself and other people as well,” Cozier said. “I believe in it more strongly than I believe in almost anything in my life. The power of taking control of what happened to you is the most empowering thing that anybody can ever experience.”

AntIdentity was the theme of Columbia College Chicago's Doc Your World 2016 film festival. The theme represents moments in participants life that changed them for the better and reshaped their identities
AntIdentity was the theme of Columbia College Chicago’s Doc Your World 2016 film festival. The theme represents moments in participants life that changed them for the better and reshaped their identities.

Cozier, who was sexually assaulted as a child, exemplified this mindset with her foundation. The center provides coaching and a platform for survivors to open up about sexual violence in their lives in the form of artwork, writing, and graphic design.

Kaczor, a Roosevelt University graduate student in music composition, was sexually assaulted at 16, when a music producer she worked with forced her to perform sexual acts on him. She was then raped her junior year of college. Since then, she made it her mission to create and perform pieces that help herself and other survivors recover from their trauma.

With the same goal of healing through artistic expression, Leah Zeiger created the Sunflower Project. The multimedia organization uses dance, film and writing to educate young adults from middle school to high school about sexual assault, domestic violence and dating abuse.

Through education of young adults about healthy relationships, she hoped that they would be able to spot the early signs of abuse before escalation. One indicator she stressed was jealousy or paranoia, two signs that were prevalent in the beginning of her relationship.

The relationship was abusive mentally, physically and verbally, she recalled. After prom night, the abuse became sexual. She internalized the abuse, became depressed and attempted suicide. With her parents’ and professional help, she ended the relationship and filed a restraining order.

Sitting on a couch with her father in her documentary, she told of her ex-boyfriend’s terrifying retaliation. Police found him and a friend outside her house with a backpack filled with rope, chloroform, a bat, bullets, and condoms. Their intent was to break in the Zeiger home, take out her father, tie up her mother and siblings and rape her, police later said.

He was arrested and charged with eight felonies. After a plea deal, he was sentenced to two years in prison.

She recalled the first time she revealed her story to the public, in a dance called “Unnamed.” She spoke of the emotions that lead to it and the insights and power she gained by creating it.

“I was a dancer before I was a survivor,” she said. “Dance became a way to communicate what was going on and what happened–also a way to heal. I started dancing with a different purpose–I can dance to heal others.”

]]>
/?feed=rss2&p=59258 0
DocYourWorld 2016 kicks off May 3, 4 /?p=58941 /?p=58941#respond Fri, 29 Apr 2016 20:00:06 +0000 /?p=58941 cropped-Doc_LOGO_NoHashtag4Immigration, gender and race are all themes of work to be shown at Columbia College Chicago’s DocYourWorld festival May 3 and 4. The event will showcase a multitude of creative projects to push the boundaries of identity, or anti-identity.

The DocYourWorld festival is an opportunity for Columbia College students from a variety of majors to collaborate by creating and curating the event. The exhibition will include non-fiction documentary works by the students themselves, faculty members, as well as outside submissions from students of other schools and professionals.

“Documentary does not fit into a box, it’s not just film. It’s radio, it’s photography; there’s even interactive documentary,” said Jessica Siletzky, a CCC freshman organizing the event.

Based on this broad horizon of what is documentary, the exhibition will feature a variety of works and live performances, including spoken word, dance, and even an interactive drag show to exemplify this year’s theme: anti-identity.

This is the fourth year CCC has created and hosted DocYourWorld. This is the first time, however, that the event has been solely curated by CCC students, unlike previously when faculty produced it.

Eric Scholl, associate chair of the Television Department and filmmaker, said DocYourWorld will be part of a new interdisciplinary documentary major recently approved by the college.

“We’ve been doing DocYourWorld for the past few years as an interdisciplinary event, and from that event we said, ‘Why don’t we have this as a major?’”

The new course major launched this spring semester at CCC, co-taught by Scholl and Teresa Puente, associate professor of Journalism, as well as Ruth Leitman, assistant professor of Cinema Arts and Sciences. The course, titled DocYourWorld, is just like the festival, with students actually developing and curating exhibitions.

“We’re really excited,” Leitman. “This group has been working on it for the past four or five years.”

Hard-Earned-Photo
Hard Earned, a six-part documentary series by Kartemquin Films and produced by CCC faculty, was among the works featured at 2014’s DocYourWorld.

Elly Tier, a senior Cinema Arts and Science major at Columbia, serves as the talent coordinator for the event. Tier, whose duties include booking and scheduling talent, wished this new major was approved sooner.

“I am jealous that it is happening after I graduate, because that is something that I have not heard of, as a student, in other colleges,” she said.

DocYourWorld, Tier stressed, is unique to Columbia College Chicago, adding “It came out as a sort of passion project from teachers; it’s kind of bound to be something amazing.”

Tier also strongly advises other CCC students to get involved with the program in the future.

“Columbia is full of kids who are ready to do professional style work,” she said. “They are ready to make things and work in the real world, but I don’t see enough of my peers actually going forward to showcase it in front of an audience.

“Something like DocYourWorld,” Tier added, “is where a dancer literally can show their piece to not just their department but the entire student body with mixed people. It’s limitless the amount of opportunities that can come out of that.”

The diversity of students collaborating for this event is unique, Puente said. “We have students from the film department, journalism, television, dance–we even have some students from China,” she said.


  • The DocYourWorld 2016 festival
  • 10 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday May 4, and 11 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Wednesday March 4 
  • 1104 S. Wabash Ave., in Film Row on the 8th floor and in the Doc Center on the 4th floor
  • A different set of creative works is scheduled for each day. 
]]>
/?feed=rss2&p=58941 0