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CRAIG BERGGOLD

 

 

Select Films

 

Gendered

Precarious Love 

Pocket Desert: confessions of a snakekiller 

Educate Your Attitude: Gay & Lesbian Youth Speak Out! 

Fresh Talk: Youth & Sexuality 

Up To Scratch 

 

Highlights

Currently, Craig is a PhD candidate in Cultural Studies at

Queen’s University, where he received a SSHRC Doctoral

Graduate Scholarship and a Douglas Sheppard Wilson Film

Fellowship. Craig teaches media production, cultural studies,

art history and labour studies.

 

He is a Teaching Fellow in the Film and Media Studies Department

where he has taught eight courses including:

 

FILM 336  – Film and Politics

Crossing Borders: Migration and Precarious Work in Globalization

 

FILM 435 – Culture and Representation

Speculative Fiction: Science Fictions Films and Alternative Social Models

 

At Queen’s, Craig is also former President (2014-19) of Public Service Alliance of Canada (PSAC) Local 901 advocating for 2000 academic workers.

 

For ten years at Vancouver’s Emily Carr University of Art + Design 

Craig taught over 30 courses on video art, film production and experimental documentary practices.

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In 2020, Western Front Gallery's exhibition included A Time To Change images from Craig's tenure as a photographer with the Canadian Farmworkers Union. The photos were used to reveal, mobilize, and overturn racially discriminatory labour laws.

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In this podcast conversation, Susan Stewart and Craig discuss "precarious visibility" and contemporary art practices, while also engaging visual culture critiques in social movements. 

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Up To Scratch screened at the AGO—Art Gallery of Ontario's Toronto: Tributes + Tributaries exhibition. In this 1986 art-as-activism collaboration, Craig's 16mm-short cut-out collage animation exchanges political narratives with Clive Robertson's song, choreographed bodies, and coalition beats. Exploding the populist music video form and set against the backdrop of unemployment.

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Pocket Desert: confessions of a snake killer, co-directed with

Teresa Marshall, has been broadcast nationally on The Discovery

Channel and recognized with the Ecology Award at the WorldFest Film Festival. Nominated for 12 international awards, including

Best Cinematographer and Best Documentary.

 

Fresh Talk: Youth & Sexuality was awarded the prestigious Gold Apple Award in Human Sexuality at the National Educational Film Festival, 

the Red Ribbon Award at the American Film Festival, and First Place at National Council of Family Relations, Washington, D.C..

 

Educate Your Attitude documentary challenges the censorship of young people's emotional experiences with powerful stories that empower peer's to gain a positive appreciation of their sexuality.

 

"The Colour of Food" is a historical photo essay of South Asian women farm workers and their organizing campaigns; and, "Canada: Mexico found guilty of blacklisting pro-union migrant workers" is an expose of the temporary foreign workers program.

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At Simon Fraser University’s Special Collections Library Craig is the lead researcher for The Canadian Farmworkers Union Archive Project. 

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In 2017, he received the Public Service Alliance of Canada-Ontario Activist Award for Outstanding Contribution Protecting Workers' Rights.

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Craig is a co-founder of the Vancouver MayWorks Festival of Working People and the Arts.

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Today, Craig is a key organizer in The Case for Basic Income and the Arts campaign. View PSA: "Basic Income Now — I can change the world."

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... striving to combine a contemporary media arts practice with social justice activism. His award-winning films have been seen on television, festivals, museums and galleries around the world.

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