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Victoria Anderson-Gardner is an award winning Ojibwe filmmaker from Eagle Lake First Nation, Ontario. Victoria graduated from Ryerson University with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree for Film Studies. Victoria is focused on creating Indigenous content, showcasing underrepresented communities and using their skills as a filmmaker to educate. Victoria recently won the City of Toronto's Glenn Gould Protege Prize for their work. With over 4 years of experience in the film industry, Victoria is a director and producer who has worked on a variety of productions but is most well known for Namid (Reel Canada and Netflix commissioned short film), Tenaya (in development) (TIFF’s Big Pitch Audience Choice Award 2020), Becoming Nakuset (CBC Gem and Loud Roar Productions short doc, won the Best Short Film, Audience Choice Award at imagineNATIVE 2020), The Hurt That Binds Us (Voices With Impact short doc; won Best Documentary at the Ryerson University Film Festival), and Mni Wiconi: Mitakuyelo (imagineNATIVE and Netflix commissioned short doc). They are currently working as the assistant director on Crave’s new docu series called Thunder Bay and currently sit as an Advisory Board member for Art With Impact where they sit on the jury for their monthly film competitions.