Toronto International Film Festival From 2004 to 2008, Cowan acted as co-director of the
Toronto International Film Festival. He helped launch Future Projections, which aimed to be a city-wide meeting of the visual arts and cinema. Under Cowan's direction, Future Projections collaborated with the
Royal Ontario Museum,
Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery,
Art Gallery of Ontario, and
MOCCA.
TIFF Bell Lightbox In 2008, Cowan became artistic director of
TIFF Bell Lightbox, a multi-purpose film institution and the home of the
Toronto International Film Festival. Cowan oversaw the film exhibition and film education functions of the project, which created film retrospectives on
Raj Kapoor and
Gregg Araki. On the Lightbox stage, he interviewed
Guillermo del Toro,
Christopher Doyle,
Geena Davis and
Susan Sarandon, among others. His writing appeared in 180°, Lightbox's seasonal programming guide. He also served as the primary curator of Lightbox's museum space, beginning with
Essential Cinema, a gallery show detailing the inspiration behind 100 key films in cinema history. Cowan was the Toronto curator for several exhibitions including
Tim Burton (a project of the
Museum of Modern Art, New York) and
Fellini: Spectacular Obsessions (which premiered at the Jeu du Paume in Paris in 2009). Before his departure, Cowan completed two large-scale projects:
A Century Of Chinese Cinema, a 100-film retrospective of Chinese cinema history that also included a new visual arts commission,
New Women, from
Yang Fudong, debuted in June 2013. Cowan co-curated the
David Cronenberg: Evolution exhibition in October 2013 and
David Cronenberg Transformation, the accompanying museum show at the
Museum Of Contemporary Canadian Art of visual artists responding to
Cronenberg’s work. He contributed to catalogues for both shows, oversaw an Alternative Reality Game (Body/Mind/Change, created by
Lance Weiler) and the David Cronenberg Virtual Exhibition.
SFFILM In March 2014, Cowan became executive director of San Francisco Film Society (which he rebranded as SFFILM in 2016). He led a staff of 33 full-time employees and over 100 seasonal employees and interns each year and built unique partnerships with key cultural institutions and locally meaningful brands across San Francisco, including SFMOMA, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, Dolby, Lucasfilm and Pixar. While doubling the organization's revenue, Cowan worked with his team to create a revamped annual charity gala as a major national award season event, including a $250,000 net annual Fund-A-Need campaign for education initiatives. He successfully moved SFFILM Festival's theater footprint to transit-friendly neighborhoods, resulting in a significant shift to younger and more diverse audience demographics and doubled foundation support for artist development activities, initiating unique new programs with Alfred P. Sloan, Westridge, Flora Family, Compton and Time Warner Foundations, He also launched SFFILM Invest, a major initiative to bring philanthropic and equity-based investments to contemporary American independent films; initial slate generated $1 million in investments. He left SFFILM in May 2019. Cowan had worked as an independent consultant to film festivals, movie theaters, producers and media-related NGOs from October 2019. == References ==