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Beric Manywounds

they/them
Close up of Beric listening attentively on a blue stage with a strong orange warm spotlight illuminating their face and hair. Beric is a medium light skinned Two Spirit person with a clean shaven face, dark brown facial features and medium long brown hair with a fringe. They are wearing a sleek professional headset microphone, a black long sleeve shirt, and chunky black knitted scarf.

Close up of Beric listening attentively on a blue stage with a strong orange warm spotlight illuminating their face and hair. Beric is a medium light skinned Two Spirit person with a clean shaven face, dark brown facial features and medium long brown hair with a fringe. They are wearing a sleek professional headset microphone, a black long sleeve shirt, and chunky black knitted scarf.

Images
Close up of Beric listening attentively on a blue stage with a strong orange warm spotlight illuminating their face and hair. Beric is a medium light skinned Two Spirit person with a clean shaven face, dark brown facial features and medium long brown hair with a fringe. They are wearing a sleek professional headset microphone, a black long sleeve shirt, and chunky black knitted scarf.
Metadata
Biography

Beric Manywounds is a Two Spirit writer, filmmaker, and intermedia performance artist from the Tsuut'ina Nation of Treaty 7. Having a background predominantly in film and video, Beric has been creating filmic narratives since graduating from Capilano University’s Indigenous Independent Digital Filmmaking Program in 2010. Taking a special interest in the genres of fantasy, horror, and magical realism, Beric’s films reflect an exploration of post-trauma consciousness and spiritual transformation. Now currently based in Montreal (Tiohtià:ke) and enrolled in the Intermedia Cyber Arts program at Concordia University, Beric is giving shape and form to their futurist visions of Indigenous performance art and decolonized gender in creating new works hybridizing performative video, contemporary dance, cinema, and theatre.

The Cinematheque. “The Cinematheque / Luminous Territories: Indigenous Screening & Discussion.” Accessed April 2, 2024. https://thecinematheque.ca/films/2020/luminous-territories?fbclid=IwAR38wS9OcpqIv3eck9TLthXfXAogc4jxyfTVfBkNYFv25TfMjAGFoIa3xx8.
Filmography