Document 9 Selection Panel
Chris Bowman
Chris Bowman is a filmmaker, writer and sound designer who also works as a freelance editor and lecturer/tutor. His work has been shown widely at assorted European and British film festivals. In 2002/2003 he was EMARE resident at the Werkleitz Gesellschaft Media Lab in Germany. His film afterlife (2002) toured the world as part of the Best of Berlin Transmediale.03, screening across four continents. A copy of his film Our Eye (2000)- a family history using digital techniques to re-interpret 8mm archive footage – was accepted for the permanent collection of the Scottish Screen Archive.
Darren Hercher
Darren Hercher studied documentary photography at Newport School of Art in Wales, graduating in 1999. He spent several years in London working as a freelance camera-man before going onto direct his own award-winning films. Darren’s first film ‘Send Me Somewhere Special’ won him ‘Best Newcomer’ at the 2005 Grierson Awards. He was also the winner of ‘Best Documentary’ at the Britspotting Awards of 2006 while his next film ‘The Downhill Racer’ earned him ‘Best Documentary Feature’ at the 2007 Celtic Media awards. The following year Darren moved to Glasgow to make his film ‘Sighthill Stories,’ which was awarded the Scottish BAFTA for ‘Best Factual Programme’ in 2009. His latest film project is ‘The Winner Loser.’
Karen O’Hare
Karen O’Hare is currently working at Screen Academy Scotland, a Skillset Film & Media Academy, where she develops, delivers and manages both a training programme for post graduate film students and short training courses for film & TV professionals in Scotland. She is also a filmmaker and is currently editing a documentary on climate change activists and trying to write her first feature film. She has volunteered for numerous film festivals since 1999 in lots of different roles from technical manager to projectionist, from runner to sitting on award juries. Festivals include: West Belfast Film Festival, Belfast Film Festival, Cinemagic Children’s Film Festival, Belfast, Edinburgh International Film Festival, Glasgow Film Festival, European Media Art Festival, Osnabruck, Germany and of course Document in Glasgow.
interpret 8mm archive footage – was accepted for the permanent collection of the Scottish Screen Archive.
Mona Rai
Born and based in Glasgow, Mona has a degree in Fine Art Photography from The Glasgow School of Art and has exhibited her work in numerous spaces. Having worked as a documentary photographer for The European Roma Rights Center and The Roma Press Center Budapest, documenting human rights abuses of the Roma communities in Hungary, Romania, Slovakia and Croatia, she returned to work with the Gypsy/Traveller communities in Scotland and the Asylum / Refugee communities in Glasgow. These experiences highlighted the need for an organisation which would promote human rights and combat media misrepresentation of minorities and Asylum Seekers in Scotland, and with Paula Larkin in 2003 she co-founded The Document International Human Rights Documentary Film Festival.
Karol Piekarczyk
Worked for three years at WATCH DOCS Human Rights in Film Festival in Warsaw. During that time he has been responsible for numerous tasks such as being a Volunteers Coordinator, a member of the selection panel and developing and coordinating a School Film Clubs programme, working in close cooperation with the One World Film Festival in Prague. Karol studied journalism at the University of Warsaw. He has also finished the School of Human Rights at the Helsinki Foundation of Human Rights. Currently he is continuing his studies at the University of Glasgow in Sociology and in Film & TV studies. His academic interests focus on areas such as human rights in documentary film, global civil society or the film propaganda of the Third Reich.