The Canon Video Grant – Short Film Documentary offers the recipient €8,000 and a loan of video kit to produce a documentary project. 2024 recipient Alan Lau is using his grant to produce The Gordian Knot, a story of animal rights, religion and social struggle. "Our hope is to gather a community of individuals who care deeply about animal welfare and are willing to stand alongside marginalized groups. Together, we can amplify the voices of those who cannot speak for themselves and push for meaningful change," he shares. © Alan Lau
First launched in 2020 in response to an ever-changing media landscape in which video continues to become and essential tool for photographers, the Canon Video Grant - Short Film Documentary is an annual award recognising the best emerging documentary filmmaking talent worldwide, sponsored by Canon in association with Images Evidence. Entries are now open for the 2025 edition.
"This grant aims to celebrate and support up-and-coming champions of this new age of visual storytelling by giving them funding and a platform to be heard," says Richard Shepherd, Senior Product Marketing Manager, Canon EMEA.
"Canon is also arming storytellers with the innovation they need to further propel their careers in video. Just as the stills and video capabilities of the Canon EOS 5D Mark II marked the beginning of a shift in the market that enabled visual storytellers to move between stills and motion, the hybrid workhorse Canon EOS R5 Mark II with 8K video and Dual Shooting Function takes this a step further."
Over the past five years, the grant has afforded previous recipients the ability to tell the stories not previously told, from all over the world. French-Swiss photojournalist Michaël Zumstein was the recipient of the inaugural Canon Video Grant – Short Film Documentary and used the grant to continue his work as a filmmaker. His grant took him to Senegal, West Africa, to explore the growing connection of its young people to China, as a means to find work.