Miniac Films Signs Director Pip Cowley For Spots, Brand Assignments
Pip Cowley
  • LOS ANGELES
  • --

Director Pip Cowley has joined Miniac Films, marking her first representation agreement with a production company for commercial and brand assignments.

Cowley’s most recent short, Undone, features actress and dancer Camren Bicondova in an emotional study in confronting trauma, told through dance. The film premiered exclusively this month on the Paper Magazine website, and was just honored at the Independent Shorts Awards as the Best Screendance Short.

With an extensive portfolio as a celebrity and lifestyle photographer and director--and a four-year stint as a sr. art director and photographer at the New York office of ad agency Anomaly--Cowley brings a unique perspective to her filmmaking. Her work for brands includes assignments for Google, Budweiser, Dollar Shave Club, Stella Artois, Shiseido, Spotify and Panera.  

Director John Christopher Pina, a partner in Miniac, connected the company with Cowley. He met her in L.A. and was impressed with her photography. She later worked with the production company, covering a shoot as a photographer-–fittingly, as she got her start as a music photojournalist.

“We saw how skilled she was in capturing natural, candid moments with talent. She has a special, almost nurturing way of making talent feel comfortable,” Miniac partner/EP Stephen Roesler said. “One of our favorite stories of Pip is when she was having lunch at Canters Deli in L.A. and she struck up a conversation with Jason Alexander of ‘Seinfeld’ fame. Somehow the story ends with Jason posing for Pip to take a portrait of him. The photo is hanging in the bathroom at our Miniac Los Angeles office right now. Anytime someone has to go, they see Jason.

“She’s talented, professional and easy to work with,” Roesler continued. “We’ve found her to be an amazing creative collaborator. And coming from a stills background, she excels in beautiful compositions and art direction.”

“It’s such a wonderful opportunity to sign with Miniac,” Cowley says. “I have so much respect for all the directors they work with and the way they operate collectively. I see this as a great place to grow and learn by having such talented people around me.”

An Australian who divides her time between New York and Los Angeles, Cowley got her start working as a journalist and photographer in music television. She segued into art direction when landing the Anomaly job. At the agency she helped produce social media content and traditional ad campaigns.

Cowley’s agency experience will influence how she approaches jobs for brands. “It helps me to see both sides of the story, and gives me a better understanding of how campaigns are developed.”

Another factor will be her experience as a still photographer, and how it applies to her work in film. “Both are very complementary of each other, especially when it comes to directing subjects,” Cowley explained. “I think the photography background helps me to be meticulous with set design, composition and framing. I’m also bringing in my knowledge of using light to create certain moods, feelings and emotions.”

A passion for dance is revealed in much of her work, beyond just Undone. “Dance can be such an integral part of bringing music to life,” Cowley said. “It adds another layer and dimension. I’ve always been mesmerized by dance, and I love the way a story can be told through movement, without the need for words. I’ve been lucky enough to meet some incredible dancers through working in music, and so I saw the dance films as a wonderful opportunity to collaborate with them while exploring topics that are often challenging to put into words.”

A perfect example of this is her short film Hold On, an impassioned plea shot guerrilla-style on the streets of Santa Monica at the height of the BLM protests in Southern California. Working with the dancer Jo‘Artis Ratti, Cowley shot him krumping in front of a line of California State Troopers. As she was making the film, people were in turn shooting her with their phones – indeed, footage from the scenes went viral overnight, with over 10 million views. It eventually made it into Michelle Obama’s “When We All Vote” campaign and the The Chicks (formerly the Dixie Chicks) music video for “March March.”

Cowley describes the whole process as humbling. She added, “It came together as a form of peaceful protest and cathartic release. And then it took on a life of its own.”

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