Join us for an intimate evening of short films by queer filmmakers raised in San Francisco and still living in the Bay Area!
Over the past 3 years, co-curators and besties Natalia Vigil and Cristina Mitra have brought you Still Here San Francisco multidisciplinrary performances each June at National Queer Arts Festival.
Now's your chance to get to see the amazing shorts that have been part of the last 3 Still Here productions, including some new surprises!
We've got tantalizing sex stories, ...
Join us for an intimate evening of short films by queer filmmakers raised in San Francisco and still living in the Bay Area!
Over the past 3 years, co-curators and besties Natalia Vigil and Cristina Mitra have brought you Still Here San Francisco multidisciplinrary performances each June at National Queer Arts Festival.
Now's your chance to get to see the amazing shorts that have been part of the last 3 Still Here productions, including some new surprises!
We've got tantalizing sex stories, sexual tension on MUNI, teen angst in Golden Gate Park, and so much more. These are films that pay homage to a city that we love, a home for LGBTQ/Queer fam for decades, and one that we reclaim again and again -- tonight, through the visionary eyes of Bay-Area based filmmakers.
$7-$10
Artists' Television Acces
992 Valencia St, San Francisco, CA 94110
FILM LINEUP:
Sex Tapes: Portraits of Our City 1986-1996
by James Q. Chan & Tina Bartolome
The Bus Pass
by Nars Ee (Narissa Lee)
Calle Chula
by Vero Majano
Sissy Song
by Kegan Marling & Brian Thorstenson
Separate Together
by Amanda Vigil
Love Letter Project
by Raquel Vigil & Amanda Vigil
ABOUT Still Here San Francisco:
Still Here Productions brings together artists and community to explore the experiences of Queer/LGBTQI individuals raised in San Francisco during the 1980s and 1990s in the context of the rise of HIV/ AIDS and currently still living in San Francisco/Bay Area. Still Here’s narratives of queerness, coming out, sex, loss, AIDS/HIV, memory, legacy, and more stake a claim to San Francisco. They disrupt the assumption that everyone in San Francisco is from somewhere else and redefine the meaning of home, family, and identity in a “gay mecca.”
Find out more about Still Here San Francisco! #stillheresf