Artists cash in with In Your Pocket

Fourth edition of smartphone-video program demands less from artists upfront, pays more


The RT Collective will approve video submissions for its upcoming event, In Your Pocket: After Midnight, based only on proposals. Artists whose proposals are approved will not only be paid to create their proposed work but will see it screened at the 2015 Inside Out Toronto LGBT Film Festival.

In Your Pocket (IYP) is a screening of select short videos shot entirely on smartphones and similar devices. The screening is part of Inside Out and takes place at an off-site venue.

Previously, the RT Collective, which consists of Marcin Wisniewski and Chris Dupuis, asked people to submit completed original works, which would then be either approved or rejected for the screening. This format was problematic: it meant artists went to the trouble of creating new works on IYP’s quite specific themes with no guarantee those works would ever be screened.

“Theoretically, they could go and screen those works elsewhere, but that might not happen,” Dupuis says. “We felt like this hindered people rather than inspired them.”

To remedy this, the fourth edition of IYP is asking not for completed works for consideration, but for proposals only. If a proposal is approved, the artist can then go ahead and create work with the guarantee that it will be screened at IYP.

More than that — and a rarity in the arts world — they’ll be paid. Those whose proposals have been approved will receive $200 upon submission of their work (a higher fee than RT Collective paid in previous years).

These videos will be screened alongside works by pre-selected artists. This year’s pre-selectees are Jess Dobkin, Daniel McIntyre, Mikiki and Natalie Wood. “It helps in terms of getting people to submit if they know that some [better-known artists] are also screening,” Dupuis says.

The theme for 2015 is After Midnight. “In popular culture, the time just after midnight is one of exciting change and events: bells chime, men turn into beasts, witches celebrate the moon and the princess turns back into Cinderella,” says Wisniewski, who came up with the theme. He adds that each proposed work should address this theme from a queer perspective. “For queer people, that time after midnight has been a time of making connections . . . it is a time when many queer people openly occupy streets, spilling out of bars and clubs and taking them over with self-expression.”

The proposal deadline for In Your Pocket is Mon, Feb 23. For more information, visit rtcollective.ca.

Jeremy Willard is a Toronto-based freelance writer and editor. He's written for Fab Magazine, Daily Xtra and the Torontoist. He generally writes about the arts, local news and queer history (in History Boys, the Daily Xtra column that he shares with Michael Lyons).

Read More About:
TV & Film, Culture, News, Toronto, Arts

Keep Reading

Bentley Robles

Bentley Robles wants a brotherhood of gay pop stars

The yellow-haired singer talks rising stardom, Zara Larsson and dating while gay-famous
Vivek Shraya being kissed by a man

Vivek Shraya is hot, blond and hitting the dance floor

The Toronto multi-hyphenate’s new album, “VIVICA,” shirks respectability politics for a sensual, high-gloss exploration of queer and trans desire
Morphine Love Dion, Dawn and Morgan McMichaels

‘RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars 11’ plays it safe for the first bracket—until the very last minute

Already, we see the consequences of only two queens moving forward from each bracket to the semifinals
The cover of Alice Stoehr's Again, Harder. The book has black letters on a lilac background. In the middle of the cover is a red rectangle with a black line drawing of it. The drawing is of two figures entangled; they have human bodies but animal heads. The same image serves as the background behind the image of the book cover.

‘Again, Harder’ captures being part of an in crowd made up of those on the outskirts

Being trans can be a vital way to connect. Author Alice Stoehr illustrates how it can also be the extent of connection
Advertisement