Degree:
MFA 12 Film
Filmmaker, cinematographer and music video director Jon Jon Augustavo (MFA ’12 Film), recognized for his dynamic and evocative narrative style, is a three-time MTV Video Music Award-winner best known for his collaborations with rap duo Macklemore and Ryan Lewis on their Grammy Award-winning “Thrift Shop” and chart-topping hit, “Same Love.” The latter alone has generated hundreds of million views on YouTube.
Augustavo is proudest of “Same Love,” a marriage equality anthem whose chart-topping ascent was noted by the New York Times. “I originally thought I just needed to make a great story and didn’t think there were any social ramifications,” said Augustavo. “Months afterward, the emails I received, the people I met who said that it was so important to them — I’ve never had that experience in my life. I could stop making anything right now and I’d be happy to at least have done that.”
I realized that if I wanted to get better, and wanted to get into filmmaking, I needed to learn more.
Augustavo’s impulse toward strong visual narratives began early.
“My parents are both artists. I painted and did all the general fine art things you do. But when I was thirteen or fourteen, my dad got me a camera and I just started making random videos of stuff,” he said. “It’s just something I’ve always liked doing, showing people moving images and seeing if that can get them to have an emotional reaction, a sort of cathartic thing.”
Before coming to ArtCenter, Augustavo graduated from Washington State University’s Murrow College of Communication, worked briefly as a TV news writer/producer, then switched his focus to making music videos with artists in the vibrant Seattle scene.
“I started to have a little bit of success at it,” he said, “but I realized that if I wanted to get better and if I wanted to get into filmmaking, I needed to learn more.”
Augustavo enrolled in ArtCenter’s Graduate Film program and began honing his voice as a visual storyteller. “It seems like a very simple thing, but in fact, using moving images to tell a story is difficult,” he said. Among the professors at ArtCenter who helped him become a better filmmaker, Augustavo lists Victoria Hochberg and her narrative directing class, and Jean-Pierre Geuens, “who challenges you to look at things in a different way. Obviously, everybody needs the technical things, but it’s always good to have a teacher who asks you to watch things outside of the box.
“ArtCenter College of Design is the kind of school where you get what you put in,” he said. “I took tons of classes outside of film: fine art, photo, design. ArtCenter has a lot to offer that will affect you in the film world whether you realize it or not. So, all gas, no brakes,” he advises anyone enrolling in the program. “Just get out there and always be shooting. If you’re not working on a production, then do something creative, because if you’re not grinding, there are tens of thousands of other people around the world waiting to take your spot.”
Whenever he can, Augustavo works with peers with whom he collaborated at ArtCenter. “If you’re looking to meet people and build a great team, it’s a great school,” he said. “There’s a certain amount of freedom that can allow you to blossom if you’re willing to be open to working with other people and engage with your professors. I know I can trust these people to deliver above and beyond strangers for hire.”
Augustavo doesn’t plan to stop making music videos (other directing projects include Mike Posner’s “Top of the World” with Def Jam artist Big Sean and English rapper Tinie Tempah’s “Children of the Sun”) but he is increasingly involved in feature films, working from his own scripts and others.
Augustavo submitted his poignant original short film, How to Disappear Completely, to festivals. “It’s something to show that I don’t just do flashy videos,” he said. “A nice Pygmalion story,” the film began as part of his portfolio project at ArtCenter.
“I’ve experienced a lot of success pretty early on,” Augustavo added, “which has been great. But as an artist, you have to understand that there is business involved, and you have to balance your creative with the ability to understand that other people get to have an opinion. You can’t always be just an artist. But if I’m not paying with my own money, it’s just convincing people that what you can do is what they want.”
Striking a balance between fine art and commercial work, he said, “is my goal in life.”