Houston Black Dance Festival, presented by Dance Afrikana, is a bi-annual cultural event held during Black August in Houston, Texas. The festival celebrates the richness, innovation, and global impact of African and African diasporic dance traditions through community workshops, artistic exchange, and film presentations.
Rooted in the spirit of Black August, the festival also honors cultural resistance, Black liberation, and the enduring power of Black creativity across the African Diaspora.
This year, Houston Black Dance Festival is proud to introduce its inaugural Black Dance on Film screening program, spotlighting dance-centered films created by Black filmmakers, choreographers, dancers, and visual storytellers from across the African Diaspora.
We are seeking short films (5–30 minutes) that creatively engage dance and movement as central elements of storytelling, cultural expression, memory, resistance, joy, experimentation, and embodied practice. We welcome a wide range of genres and styles, including:
Dance films
Experimental films
Documentary shorts
Narrative shorts
Music and dance visual projects
Interdisciplinary movement works
The film screenings will take place on Saturday, August 8, from 5:00–10:00 p.m. in Houston, Texas as part of Houston Black Dance Festival.
Eligibility
Films must be directed, choreographed, and/or created by Black artists, including African Americans, Africans, Afro-Caribbeans, Afro-Latinx communities, and the broader African Diaspora.
Films must prominently feature dance or movement.
Runtime must be between 5 and 30 minutes.
All films must be submitted through FilmFreeway.
Houston Black Dance Festival aims to create an affirming platform for Black movement artists and filmmakers while fostering community, creativity, cultural preservation, and artistic dialogue through dance and cinema.
Houston Black Dance Festival is a non-competitive screening opportunity. Selected films will be featured as part of a curated program celebrating Black dance, movement, and visual storytelling across the African Diaspora.
Rather than competition, the festival prioritizes artistic exchange, cultural preservation, community engagement, and the uplifting of Black filmmakers, choreographers, and movement artists. Selected filmmakers will receive official festival recognition as part of the festival’s inaugural Black Dance on Film program.