Annie Woods graduated from the New York Film Academy’s Documentary Conservatory Program. A native Californian, Annie has always had a love for cinema and passion for creating visual art on a daily basis.
Her first film school project, Long Beach Boys, was picked up and sold to Current TV. After gradating film school in 2008, she became very involved with the Obama Campaign, in which she and her sister started the ObamaMobile Movement, a project that reached such press outlets as the New York Post, Denver Post, ABC, CBS and many more.
After the success of ObamaMobile she continued with her creative intuition and co-founded BamaBus, a national art project in which she traveled around in a 1981 VW Bus and spray-painted artwork on tee shirts at rallies, college campuses and middle-of-nowhere America. Through the BamaBus project Annie was able to work alongside such companies as Tom’s Shoes and participate in the Shepard Fairey Manifest Hope Galleries. BamaBus traveled off the road and onto major press outlets such as Time and The Huffington Post.
Since then Annie has worked at the Metropolitan Museum of Art as an assistant teacher for an exclusive high school documentary program. Most recently she shot and produced a video for Rolling Stone.
Annie lives in Brooklyn and continues to create on a daily basis. Whether it’s a 30-second fly-on-the-wall video grabbed via iPhone or a 2-minute vignette shot on super8 … wherever she goes, she is always looking for a story to tell.