Student Gallery
Documentary Filmmaking Workshop
During the summer of 2006 Nathan Reetz from the Digital Aquarium, Georgia State's premiere multimedia laboratory and Colombian born Media-Educator and Documentary Filmmaker Roberto Arévalo developed and implemented Beyond Documentary. Beyond Documentary is an intensive, hands-on documentary workshop taught twice a year to students from diverse departments at Georgia State. Students learn how to produce documentaries using Ethnographic, Cinema Verité and Direct Cinema approaches.
During the six-month workshop, Arévalo guides students through a process of self-discovery and self-representation. This methodology stimulates mutual learning, and moves from basic documentation techniques to a process of tremendous personal growth for subject and producer alike.
Cumulatively these documentaries represent a tangible reflection of the South that is rarely known by either locals or outsiders. The documentaries represent and reflect Arévalo’s documentary style, which is full of candor, vividness, and wisdom. Over the past three years, Beyond Documentary has helped more than twenty students produce their own documentaries.
Introduction to the Exhibit
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Project Introduction |
Student Work
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Dying To Liveby Jeronique Bartley |
We are all forced to live because no one has ever asked to be born into this world. This is an engaging tale of a young girl born to unsuspecting parents. After losing one of her parents she is forced into survival mode: fighting everyday for a chance at life. Through her struggles, victories, defeats, and triumphs Jeronique shows us all that she is just another individual. | |
About the Filmmaker - A native of Atlanta, GA Jeronique is the fourth of six girls born to Melissa Gordon and Jerome Bartley. Jeronique' interest in the entertainment industry was sparked at a very young age after being asked to act and model by Ultrasage Modeling Troupe. Her interest in acting and modeling has led to her appearance in several fashion shows as well as a few stage plays, two regional commercials, and one local commercial. A marketing student at Georgia State University, Jeronique has become infatuated with the processes involved with film-making. When off stage and away from the camera's Jeronique enjoys; teaching; hanging out with her three year old son Jelani Josiah Bartley; and giving back to the community in whatever way she can. Many times you can find Jelani helping his mom with her projects. For more information or to contact Jeronique visit her web page at www.myspace.com/jeronique. |
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About the Instructor

Roberto Arévalo, Media Educator & Doc Producer
www.Beyondocumentary.com
Colombian born media educator and documentary maker Roberto Arévalo teaches and produces documentary projects that promote social, cultural and personal awareness. Since 1992 Arévalo has used cinema verité, direct cinema, ethnographic and story telling approaches in his documentary work.
Arévalo is the founder of Beyond Documentary an organization dedicated to the distribution, creation, and teaching of documentary. Currently Arévalo is an artist-in-residence at the Digital Aquarium, Georgia State University where he teaches an intensive documentary workshop to groups of students from the communications, anthropology and art departments. This collaboration has resulted in the production of 20 short documentaries, southern stories that are rarely or never told.
Arévalo has produced over 20 documentaries about youth, public health, immigrant experiences in the United States, education and art. Arévalo’s documentary work and the work of his students is recognized for its non-scripted nature. It captures people’s stories by using hand-held cameras, natural lighting and sound resulting in documentaries full of candor, vividness, and wisdom.
The subjects/collaborators of Arévalo’s documentaries are involved in the planning of their stories. This methodology stimulates mutual learning, and moves from basic documentation techniques to a process of tremendous personal growth for subject and producer alike. Arévalo also photographs the people and environments where the videos are created. Arévalo’s productions are first screened in the communities where they are produced and later at museums, festivals and universities nationwide.
In 1992 Arévalo founded The Mirror Project in Somerville, Massachusetts to teach teenagers at the Somerville Mystic Housing Developments, Watertown, Cambridge, Boston and other areas of the country how to produce documentaries about their every day experiences. Through an intensive hands-on curriculum, Arévalo guided students through a process of self-discovery and self-representation. After more than a decade of collaboration with teenagers, Arévalo and teen producers created more than 150 short documentaries and many of them have been critically acclaimed, winning prizes and being featured at festivals, universities, and museums nationwide.
Roberto Arévalo’s documentary work is relevant for individuals, practitioners and institutions in the following fields: American Studies, Anthropology, Art Education, Communications, Community Organizing, Colombian Studies, Cultural Studies, Ethnic Studies, Gender Studies, Immigrant Studies, Latin American Studies, Media Arts, Museum Studies, Public Heath, Psychology, Sociology, Urban Studies, Women’s Studies, Youth Services, Social Studies, Social Work, and Spanish.
Please visit www.beyondocumentary.com for a list of awards, publications and presentations.






