Framing Asbury Park within the AP'N3 Film Challenge
Monmouth Arts
By Darian Scalamoni / July 17, 2024
For the people who may be unaware, please let us know a little bit about the AP’N3 film challenge.
It started back in 2022 and is based on a film challenge that we [Michael and Nancy] did when we ran the Showroom Cinema. You have three weeks to shoot a three-minute film that’s shot entirely in Asbury Park. You can’t start early because you first have to get four requirements into the film, so everybody’s playing on a level field. We give you a theme, a line of dialogue, a prop, and a location. Then you’re on your own to shoot what you think, how you think it. You can use any genre you like. Last year, we had animation, live action, and music videos. It’s always surprising to us how many different ways people choose to use what we give them to create something original.
How did you and Mike come up with the concept for AP’N3?
We were looking to get more filmmaking in Asbury Park. There are a lot of film festivals that go on, but there’s really no filmmaker platform. We thought there was a lot of opportunity for this kind of art to appear in Asbury Park. And we thought this was a good way to encourage young people. It would bring people to the streets for filming, which is always so exciting, and then have a platform where everyone can see the films on a big screen because we choose 10 finalists. Our team picks the top three, and the audience chooses the Audience Award winner. It’s a great opportunity, and you’re seeing your film with a group of your peers and other filmmakers.
Why did you decide on a three-minute short film as the template for submission?
We thought that three minutes gives everybody a really good opportunity to show a short, concise story. There are a lot of film festivals. Even short films can run as long as 25 minutes. But 25 minutes is a long time, and you can’t really get in a lot of different choices or different entries. We thought the shorter, the better. If you could do it in 25 minutes, you should be able to do it in three minutes. We wanted to keep it short and sweet.
How does this film challenge help local filmmakers?
There isn’t much of an opportunity for people who are looking to make a film to get that first foot in the door. Film festivals are very challenging. Making a film is overwhelming. We thought a short film with a very low bar and a low threshold for entering would be a good opportunity for anyone to try it out. It’s $25 to enter and it’s three weeks of your time. It’s a very short commitment. Everyone who’s taken the challenge really feels that it helps them get that first film done.
This will be your third annual AP’N3 film challenge. What’s different about this year?
Every year, we tweak it a little bit to make it more responsive or reactive to what we hear from the audience. We are always looking to expand the view of the theme and the locations and the props so that we get a broader sense of the town. The first year we did the festival we got a lot of “boardwalk.” We’re looking to make it a little deeper in terms of what people can try their hand at so that we don’t end up with the same material every year.
This year we’re also looking to have a VIP party so everyone can talk to each other – it’s an opportunity for networking. Everyone wants to talk to each other about what kind of camera they use and how did they get that one particular shot. So, it’s a great opportunity to bring the film community together so that people learn from each other, and then they have a bigger community of people to connect with when they’re looking for more work.
In your eyes, what makes Asbury Park so special that it deserves a light shined on it by filmmakers in this challenge?
Asbury Park is both a city and a shore town. You have diversity here. You have the challenges that come with the city. You have growth. It has a vibe to it and name recognition, thanks to Bruce Springsteen. Looking at Asbury Park in different ways, I think, is good for perception. Whether you have a good perception of Asbury or a bad perception or an artistic perception, there’s so many facets that our film challenge allows people to see through new eyes.
In your two years of running AP’N3, what have been your biggest takeaways?
I don’t think we realized how happy it makes people to put a film together and collaborate with friends and families and to really run it themselves. Everyone comes away with more confidence than they started with. We know that people have taken these films and entered them into other competitions and have placed. So that means the film was not only good enough for our challenge, but it was a standalone piece that could go other places. Three minutes is a great calling card for a filmmaker. Anybody can take three minutes to watch your film.
Finally, what advice would you give to someone who is on the fence about doing the challenge?
Take the plunge! Nobody’s going to know what you had planned, or that what you came out with is something different. Only you know where you failed and where you succeeded. So, try it out. The biggest thing when it comes to production is you have to go through with it. You have to be able to adapt when a situation goes awry. As a director, as a producer, as a writer, as an actor, you have to roll with the punches. And I think just taking the plunge and trying it out for the first time is a good experience for anyone.
Asbury Park Arts Council Launches Third Annual AP’N3 Film Challenge
TAPintoAsbury Park
Your Neighborhood News Online - By Alissa Deleo
By Matt Doherty - Published July 9, 2024 at 12:00 PM
Showcasing films from top finalists, and entries from two community groups nurturing Asbury Park's future filmmakers
ASBURY PARK, NJ — The Asbury Park Arts Council (APAC) has announced the much-anticipated return of the AP’N3 Film Challenge, inviting filmmakers of all skill levels to create short films celebrating the vibrant culture of Asbury Park. Now in its third year, this creative competition challenges participants to produce 3-minute films shot exclusively within Asbury Park over a three-week period, from August 5th to August 26th.
Each film must incorporate a required theme, location, prop, and line of dialogue, which are revealed at the start of the competition. Entries will be submitted through the FilmFreeway web portal, with judging conducted by a panel of industry professionals. The top-rated films will earn the chance to be screened at the prestigious Premier Event scheduled for November 3rd, where cash prizes await the top three films and an audience favorite chosen by Premier attendees.
Nancy Sabino, Executive Director of the AP’N3, expressed enthusiasm for this year’s challenge, stating, “We are so pleased to give everyone a chance to showcase our city in film. You cannot believe the creativity that can happen in three minutes, and we are always pushing the envelope to offer help and community to those with talent and determination.”
The AP’N3 Film Challenge has become a hallmark event in Asbury Park, drawing participation from diverse groups including local organizations fostering young talent. In 2023, films from youth-serving organizations like the Boys and Girls Club of Monmouth County and Inspire Life Inc. were showcased at the Premier, highlighting the city’s emerging filmmakers.
Carrie Turner, APAC Executive Director, emphasized the community spirit of the challenge, saying, “AP’N3 is meant to be a fun exercise, open to the whole community, that invites people who live in or visit Asbury Park to share a story. We were excited by the increase in entries and Premier attendance from 2022 to 2023 and believe we are developing a valuable avenue for creative expression in our city.”
Reflecting on her experience winning first place in 2023, filmmaker Chloe Evangelista, who entered an animated film, remarked, “The AP’N3 is an opportunity to show people your unique view of Asbury Park.” Her film and others from past challenges are available for viewing on APAC’s website.
Registration for the 2024 AP’N3 Film Challenge is currently open through the official FilmFreeway page, welcoming aspiring filmmakers to join this celebration of creativity and community in Asbury Park.
Siren Arts Celebrates 8th Year
Martin Cid Magazine: News About Art, Entertainment, Culture
By Molly Se-kyung - June 10, 2024
Siren Arts Celebrates 8th Year: Transformer Unveils New Exhibition Space in Asbury Park
ASBURY PARK, NJ – The ever-evolving landscape of contemporary art takes a vibrant turn this summer as Transformer proudly presents its 8th annual Siren Arts summer artist residency program and performance art series. This year, the celebratory season kicks off with the grand opening of a much-anticipated new exhibition space on June 13.
Located at Asbury Ocean Club’s corner space at 4th Ave & Kingsley St, the brand new art haven is set to become the pulsating heart of transformative art culture in Asbury Park, NJ. Fueled by the magnanimity of Starfield Companies, Transformer seeks to amplify its mission of championing emerging artists and fostering an inclusive and engaging community through its innovative Siren Arts program.
The grand opening, slated for June 13, 6-8pm, will treat audiences to a summer-long exhibition featuring Siren Arts performance photography by local talent Sara Stadtmiller, new paintings from Zach Storm, and an array of evolving artwork from Transformer’s FlatFile program. The new space will also be utilized by this summer’s Siren Arts deepwater artists-in-residence, as they create new works to be presented in public performance art events Thursday evenings July 11 through August 15 on Asbury Park’s 2nd Avenue Beach.
Initiated in 2017, Siren Arts has established itself as a vital summer artist residency program & performance art series that primarily supports underserved BIPOC and LGBTQIA2S+ artists within mid-Atlantic urban spaces. This year’s lineup of Siren Arts: deepwater artists-in-residence boasts thought-provoking names like Tai Tai, tasha dougé, and Jordan Deal among others, set to tantalize aesthetic interpretations and interactions.
Through endeavors that bridge the gap between the environment and art, this year’s artists will explore oceanic themed creations while sparking dialogues on intersectional implications of climate change. With the thriving artistic community of Asbury Park as their canvas, a new wave of contemporary art is set to make a splash this summer.
This year’s Siren Arts: deepwater artists-in-residence include:
July 8 – 12 / Tai Tai (New York, Chicago, Los Angeles)
July 15 – 19 / tasha dougé (Bronx, NY)
July 22 – 26 /Jordan Deal (Philadelphia, PA)
July 29 – Aug 2 / Erin Ellen Kelly (New York, NY)
August 5 – 9 / Laura Bernstein, with Patty Gone, and Perrin Ireland (New York, NY)
Aug 12 – 16 / Kelindah Schuster (Brooklyn, NY)
North 2 Shore + Asbury Underground
North 2 Shore + Asbury Underground
June 10, 2024 - June 16, 2024
Prudential presents North to Shore Festival has teamed up with Asbury Underground for its long-awaited return to Downtown Asbury Park. Featuring over 200 artists and musicians, Asbury Underground is Asbury Park’s very own free-roaming carnival of creativity, where the vibrant heart of downtown transforms into a sprawling canvas of sounds, sights and unscripted joy.
New Jersey Planning and Redevelopment Conference
New Jersey Planning and Redevelopment Conference
June 5, 2024 - June 7, 2024

APAC Executive Director, Carrie Turner, along with Asbury Park Director of Planning and Redevelopment, Michele Alonso, and FCA Director of Planning and Urban Design, Eric Galipo, will be discussing the Asbury Park Arts & Culture Plan on a panel entitled Cultivating Community: Igniting Places Through Community-Driven Arts and Culture Planning.
How Asbury Stays Ahead of the Conformist Curve
Asbury Park SewagePlant
Next phase in sewage plant mural project - TriCity News February 15, 2024
ASBURY PARK — This newspaper has long prepared for the economic boom that we knew would one day hit our beloved little city.
We planned for it during our early years building up everything here that was creative, artistic and alternative — starting when the city was largely abandoned.
The inevitable economic boom would bring enormous pressures for conformity. That’s what happens when a place becomes hot. Our strategy was to build up artistic and cultural leaders and traditions that could withstand the onslaught — and be around to attract new types and forms of creativity.
The DIY and punk days of 20-25 years ago, when the few artists here could pretty much do whatever they wanted on an empty Cookman Avenue, are over. What’s replaced them in the creative tradition are people like Parlor gallery owner Jenn Hampton — the foremost arts leader in Asbury today with her influence all over — and powerhouse creatives like renowned music photographer Danny Clinch and his Transparent Gallery, which has also become an important music venue. (Hampton was here in the early days 20 years ago.)
The up-and-coming young creatives are still here in numbers actually much larger than 20 years ago. And more continue to arrive. They now live in Asbury Park or any of the interesting towns in the triCity region of eastern Monmouth a short ride away.
Still, Asbury Park is the driving force and engine in our region for the arts and culture (with Red Bank a strong second).
We give you that long-winded introduction to report about the latest on the mural project at the Asbury Park sewage treatment plant on the ocean. Yes, murals on our sewage plant! And what’s gone on there is a perfect example of why our city — stranded out here in a suburban region — stays ahead of the conformist curve. Where else is a sewage plant transformed into an arts icon?
Asbury arts leaders like Jenn Hampton, Deputy Mayor Amy Quinn, Asbury Park Arts Council Executive Director Carrie Turner and others put together a mural program for the panels on the treatment plant. The murals that have been stalled, as Amy Quinn says, are “phenomenal.”
The south and east sides of the treatment plant already have multiple murals. The last phase is ready to go. Request for proposals (RFPs) for the north face of the plant, which faces the senior citizen high rise tower, are now available for artists to return to the city. Quinn said that the city has approximately $5,000-6,000 to pay the muralist.
And demonstrating that Asbury Park’s commitment to the arts is all-ages, the impetus to do the north side of the plant came from seniors in the Asbury Towers high rise next door.
“Every year, upon completion, we ask the artists to give us feedback about the project as well as how it is, being an artist working in town on this project,” said Hampton. “Last year, the artists all shared that some of the seniors would show up and watch them painting and had asked when ‘their wall’ would get done.”
“This was heartwarming for me, knowing that they care and are interested in seeing art too. In fact, with Wooden Walls Project (the mural project Hampton curates on the boardwalk), I am hoping to acquire a golf cart to do a mural tour for seniors, in case they have not been able to see them all because of physical limitations,” Hampton said.
Both Quinn and Hampton are on the city’s Public Arts Commission, which approves public murals in the city. The commission is sponsoring this next phase of the mural project at the sewage treatment plant, with the Asbury Park Arts Council helping to coordinate.
Unlike the other sides of the plant with multiple mural panels, the north side will have one mural concept for the six panels there, Quinn said. New artists who have not painted other murals on the plant will be given priority. In addition, residents of the senior tower will be given input on the final choice of the mural.
For Artists' Sake
For Artists' Sake - Lecture Series
The For Artists’ Sake lecture series was created in response to the feedback APAC has gathered from the creative community through outreach for the Asbury Park Arts & Culture Plan and various networking events. We asked, “What can APAC do for you?” and “What would you like to know more about?” and heard a variety of responses that ranged from how to turn one’s art into a business, apply for grants and residencies, improve marketing skills, and build/expand an on-line presence to understanding intellectual property rights and navigating the public permitting process.
The series is spearheaded by APAC Board Member, Bob Ellis, who is also the founder of Longfellow Deeds, Inc, a 501(c)3 with a mission to use micro-philanthropy to create local events involving the arts to provide direct, positive impact into the daily lives of the community. Ellis coordinated and moderated the pilot lectures, which took place at the Jersey Shore Arts Center in May and included sessions presented by professionals on social media, intellectual property and licensing, and sourcing funding opportunities. Feedback received from attendees of this first series will help shape future lectures which we will announce on APAC’s social media and website.

BOUNDARIES & ATMOSPHERES art pop-up
On Saturday 13th, starting at 3pm, we will have an artist talk and Q&A with Murphy Munday and Danny Clinch followed by live music by Renee Maskin
Murphy Munday is an abstract artist who explores the interplay of color and emotion through various mediums, including oil and chalk pastels, acrylic, and watercolor paints, sculpture, paper and any other medium her ideas require. Her work is a celebration of vibrant, moody color and impulsive marks and gestures, with a style that shifts with the changing seasons, moods, and life’s ups and downs. Through her creative process, Murphy invites viewers to immerse themselves in a world of fluid perceptions and feelings, navigating intricate emotional terrains and boundaries. “The works that I create are not just about color and texture, they are about the feelings and memories each hue evokes, the spaces they inhabit, and the stories they tell. Each painting is a visual exploration of the intangible moods and emotions we feel but struggle to articulate.” – Murphy Munday.
Where : Transparent Clinch Gallery, 201 Fifth Ave, Asbury Park, NJ 07712
Gallery Hours : Saturday 11a – 8p, Sunday 12p-7p
APAC March Filmmaker Meetup
Thursday, March 28th at 7pm
Asbury Park Library, 500 First Avenue, Asbury Park
SAVE THE DATE to join us for the our second APAC Filmmaker Meetup of 2024 in Asbury Park! Our March event will once again take place at the versatile, multi-functional Asbury Park Library.
Our special guest for the evening will be director Serena Schuler. Serena will talk about the highs and lows of fundraising for her films. She will discuss the challenges and opportunities for filmmakers to raise money for their projects.
Serena Schuler is the writer, director, and series creator of Makeshift Society, whose work spotlights diverse, female-led, and BIPOC stories through the lens of comedy. A graduate of Cornell and Columbia, her films have screened in festivals around the world, and won Audience Awards at the Washington Jewish Film Festival and the Women in Comedy Festival. Her series Cake Walk is now streaming on Elizabeth Banks’s WhoHaha Network.
Space is limited, so click this link to register and let us know you plan on attending.
We look forward to seeing you on March 28th!
4th Wave Festival
TAP into Asbury Park
By Matt Doherty
Local Teen Musician Organizes Fourth Wave Fest: A Benefit Music Festival Empowering Women in Asbury Park
ASBURY PARK, NJ – A wave of empowerment and melody is set to crash onto the shores of Asbury Park as local musician Carlotta Schmidt spearheads the Fourth Wave Fest, a vibrant music festival aimed at supporting both the arts and a noble cause. Scheduled for Sunday, March 3, 2024, at Asbury Lanes, this event promises a symphony of talent while channeling funds to 180 Turning Lives Around, a Monmouth County-based charity aiding survivors of domestic violence and sexual assault.
Taking center stage at Fourth Wave Fest are women-led bands hailing from the heart of New Jersey. From the soulful rhythms of Des and the Swagmatics to the electrifying beats of Ryver Bey, the lineup boasts a diverse array of musical genres. Other acts include the Gab Cinque Band, Teen Idle, A Real Human Jazz Band, Pepperwine, as well as performances by Carlotta Schmidt and Anointed Friends.
Beyond the music, Fourth Wave Fest aims to celebrate Women’s History Month with screenings of iconic female musicians’ videos, courtesy of a collaboration with Steve Van Zandt’s Teach Rock organization. Attendees can also anticipate door prizes valued at over $1,000, adding an extra layer of excitement to the festival experience.
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Tickets for Fourth Wave Fest are priced at $35 in advance, with a special buy-one-get-one offer currently available. Door tickets will be $40. Interested attendees can secure their spots via www.asburylanes.com, with further details accessible at www.fourthwavefest.org.
Carlotta Schmidt’s initiative underscores the power of music in fostering community, amplifying female voices, and supporting vital social causes. With Fourth Wave Fest, she not only orchestrates a day of entertainment but also orchestrates positive change, one note at a time.












