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- L.T.

As it gets ready to kick off its 15th edition, it is annual fashion film festival A Shaded View on Fashion Film that gets the first gong: sponsorshi­p from France's ministry of culture.

Minister Rima Abdul Malak “gladly agreed to place [ the festival] under sponsorshi­p” given the cultural dimension at stake, the ministry said in a letter addressed to founder

Diane Pernet and festival president Emmanuel Asmar shown to WWD.

For the third year running, ASVOFF will run from Thursday to Sunday at Dover Street Market Paris, which takes the place of the now- closed 3537 cultural center.

Swedish singersong­writer Jay- Jay Johanson is the president of the edition's jury.

Judging films and curated selections this year are a broad group that includes the likes of Sara Sozzani Maino, GQ head of editorial content Pierre M'Pelé, Canadian actress Gabrielle Lazzure, designer José Levy and the still- anonymous creative behind Instagram meme account Couturfu.

Some 115 fashion films will compete for the year's 16 prizes, which range from the grand prize and Black representa­tion in film to the “Climate Warrior” curation introduced this year, focusing on children 6 to 12 years old who express themselves around climate change.

As is tradition, trophies will be made by New Yorkbased artist and designer Miguel Villalobos, save for the one awarded for the “Responsibl­e Actions” section, created by Parisbased upcycling artist William Amor with the support of the Ateliers de Paris fund for creative profession­als.

Beyond the competitio­n, highlights of the edition will include the opening projection of “Invisible Beauty,” codirected by Bethann Hardison and Frédéric Tcheng, that chronicles Hardison's evolution from a runway model to an agent, activist, mentor, diversity aficionado and more; a three-film tribute to South African fashion designer Thebe Magugu; and a spotlight on the industry's disastrous environmen­tal impact with the “Junk” docuseries by Olmo Parenti and Matteo Keffer.

Kicking off the 20 thematic sections of the edition is a curation of AI-generated films, which will be followed by a talk between photograph­ers and artistic directors Alexandre Sade and Marguerite Chaillou of MCAS Bureau, the agency behind the first AI billboard campaign in France for underwear label UndizDocum­entaries will take the lion's share of the four-day event, with Olivier Nicklaus' “The Versace Saga,” an homage to Academy-award nominated costume designer Arianne Philipps; and "The Pusher," where profession­al skateboard­er Steve Olson looks at the following generation of his sport.

Talks and master classes will also be aplenty, including a session at 6 p. m. on Saturday where jury president Johanson will open up on his creative process and an exhibition by visual artist Anouk Kruithof will tap into the diversity of dance videos distribute­d online.

Closing the edition will be the Sunday projection of “Tilda Swinton: Le geste et le genre,” ( or “gesture and gender” in English), a documentar­y by Pierre- Paul Puljiz that weaves together clips from the actress' storied career with insights from those who have worked with her, including filmmaker Pedro Almodovar, Olivier Saillard and Haider Ackermann.—

 ?? ?? A still from Alice Fassi's “ChocoHoax” film presented in competitio­n at ASVOFF 15.
A still from Alice Fassi's “ChocoHoax” film presented in competitio­n at ASVOFF 15.

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