Devyani Saltzman

Devyani Saltzman is a Canadian author, curator and journalist. She is the granddaughter of the late Canadian weatherman Percy Saltzman and the daughter of film directors Paul Saltzman and Deepa Mehta.[1]

Devyani Saltzman
Occupation
  • Writer
  • Curator
Parents
Websitedevyanisaltzman.com

Early life and education

Devyani Saltzman was born in 1979. The daughter of a Jewish Ukrainian father (award-winning filmmaker Paul Saltzman) and a Hindu Indian mother (the noted writer, director, and filmmaker Deepa Mehta), Her parents were separated when she was 11 years old. Saltzman received her degree in Human Sciences from Hertford College at Oxford University in 2003. She specialized in sociology and anthropology. She grew up on film and television sets, and was the recipient of the Young Professionals International Internship grant to work on a feature-length documentary in India.

Writing career

Devyani Saltzman is the author of Shooting Water: A Memoir of Second Chances, Family, and Filmmaking, as well as articles for The Globe and Mail, The National Post, The Literary Review of Canada, the Atlantic, Tehelka, Marie Claire, Room literary journal and The Walrus Magazine.

Her freelance writing subjects include interviews with Pico Iyer, Sarah Polley, Floria Sigismondi and articles on India, long-term care facilities and immigrant domestic workers.

Devyani Saltzman’s debut book Shooting Water: A Memoir of Second Chances, Family, and Filmmaking details the making of her mother, Deepa Mehta’s, third film in her “Elements” trilogy, entitled Water. It was published in Canada (2005), the US and India and received "starred reviews" in both Publisher’s Weekly and the Library Journal and was called 'A poignant memoir' by The New York Times.

Current projects - Curator/Director, AGO

Saltzman is the founding curator, literary programming, at Luminato, Toronto's Festival of Arts and Creativity and has been involved in a number of arts initiatives including Project Bookmark Canada, The Toronto Museum Project as well as being a juror for the National Magazine Awards, Canada Council for the Arts, Ontario Arts Council and The Hilary Weston Writers' Trust Prize for Nonfiction. In 2014 she was appointed Director of Literary Arts at Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity, Canada's national arts hub, where she oversaw year-round programming and public events. In 2018 she was appointed Director of Public Programming for the Art Gallery of Ontario.[2]

Awards and Governance

Writers’ Trust of Canada Board Member
SummerWorks Board Member
OAAG Board Member
gollark: Oh, oops, I got the lever direction mixed up, sorry. I meant that if you left it trapped then it wouldn't have reason to torture you.
gollark: And you can verify that.
gollark: Unless it can somehow precommit to torturing the simulations.
gollark: If it values suffering for its own sake it might as well do it anyway, but I don't think doing the torturing would advance other goals.
gollark: If you ~~*do* pull it~~ leave it contained, I don't think it has any actual reason to torture the simulation, since you can't verify if it's doing so or not and it would only be worth doing at all if it plans to try and coerce you/other people later.

References

  1. Deepa MehtaBiography Notable Biographies
  2. "AGO - Art Gallery of Ontario". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 2020-02-05.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.