School of Cinema Announces New George and Judy Marcus Endowed Chairs

Wednesday, May 27, 2020
Photos of Mayuran Tiruchelvam and Artel Great
Mayuran Tiruchelvam (left) and Artel Great (right)

San Francisco State University has named Artel Great and Mayuran Tiruchelvam the George and Judy Marcus Endowed Chairs in the School of Cinema. They will join the University as assistant professors in Cinema in the fall of 2020, bringing with them extensive backgrounds in both filmmaking and cinema scholarship.

Great and Tiruchelvam will lead new projects and coursework within the School of Cinema and contribute to the overall intellectual life of the University community, the Bay Area and beyond, says School of Cinema Director Celine Parreñas Shimizu. Tiruchelvam, who often features underrepresented groups in his own films, will teach filmmaking through a social justice lens. Great, whose scholarly work delves into the intellectual history, critical discourse and aesthetics of Black cinema and visual culture, will teach courses in African American film studies.

Both new faculty members say what drew them to San Francisco State is the University’s ongoing commitment to social justice and equity, as well as the world-class School of Cinema. “In collaboration with students and colleagues at the School of Cinema, I hope to honor that tradition of resistance,” Tiruchelvam said.

“I look forward to teaching about the rich contributions, culture and politics of Black cinema in both the American context and across the African diaspora,” Great said.

Tiruchelvam, the Marcus Endowed Chair in Social Justice Fiction Filmmaking, is an award-winning screenwriter and producer with a background in community organizing and activism. His feature screenwriting debut, the neo-noir “The Girl Is in Trouble,” was released theatrically in 2015. His producing credits include the documentary features “The Untold Tales of Armistead Maupin” (Audience Award, SXSW 2017), about the acclaimed San Francisco author, and “To Be Takei” (Sundance in 2014), a portrait of actor, activist and pop culture icon George Takei. He received a Bachelor of Arts in American studies and African American studies from Wesleyan University and a Master of Fine Arts in film from Columbia University. The Sundance Institute fellow previously taught producing and screenwriting at Columbia University and Sacred Heart University.

Great, the Marcus Endowed Chair in African American Cinema Studies, is an Independent Spirit Award-nominated filmmaker. He is a contributor and editor of the forthcoming anthology “Black Cinema and Visual Culture: Art and Politics in the 21st Century” (Routledge, 2021). As a fellow at the Cinema Research Institute in Manhattan, he created Project Catalyst, an app that distributes alternative cinema and content created by and for communities of color. He’s held academic positions at New York University; University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; and Spelman College. He earned a Bachelor of Arts in film and television production and a Master of Arts in cinema and media studies from the University of California, Los Angeles. He earned his Ph.D. in cinema studies at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts.

Great and Tiruchelvam’s positions at SF State were made possible by alums George (B.A., ’65) and Judy Marcus (B.A., ’62), who gifted the College of Liberal & Creative Arts $25 million in November 2018. The funding helped establish four endowed chair positions, two in the Creative Writing Department and two more in the School of Cinema.

Dean of the College of Liberal & Creative Arts Andrew Harris says he’s pleased that Great and Tiruchelvam will be joining the University in the fall. “Their commitment to the School of Cinema and its social justice values was evident in their visits and their experiences, and I look forward to their lasting contribution to this campus and to the Bay Area’s many arts communities,” he added.

— Jamie Oppenheim

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