Manon Barbeau (born 1949) is a Québécois filmmaker and co-founder of Wapikoni Mobile, an organisation that helps First Nations youth learn the art of filmmaking. In 2006, she also founded Musique nomade, which provides recording studios to First Nations musicians. She has been Wapikoni MobileâÂÂs general director since 2004. In 2021, Manon Barbeau has been elected president of the Cinémathèque québécoise.
Manon Barbeau was born in Montreal, Quebec, on May 8, 1949. Her father is painter and sculptor Marcel Barbeau and her mother, Suzanne Meloche, is a poet and painter. She and her partner, cinematographer Philippe Lavalette, have a daughter, Anaïs Barbeau-Lavalette, author and film director, and a son, Manuel Barbeau-Lavalette, educator.
While doing research in the archives of the Université de Montréal for her documentary, Les Enfants de Refus global, Barbeau found correspondence detailing her motherâÂÂs love affair with Paul-ÃÂmile Borduas, the dissolution of her parentsâ romantic relationship, as well as evidence that they had abandoned her at the age of three.
Barbeau graduated in cinema and communications from the Université du Québec àMontréal (UQAM). She has written for TV and, in 1991, published a novel, Merlyne, with Boréal. For over thirty years, Barbeau has been working as a filmmaker, screenwriter and producer for numerous organizations, including Télé-Québec, the National Film Board of Canada, Vidéo Paradiso, La Maison des Cultures Nomades, Totam and Wapikoni Mobile. Barbeau was also president of the Documentary Network (LâÂÂObservatoire du Documentaire) from 2006 to 2008.
From 2010 to 2014, she was part of Culture MontréalâÂÂs Board of Directors, and in 2014 she was elected president of the organization. She has often spoken publicly about documentary filmmaking and Aboriginal youth at various events and venues including LâÂÂArt en Marge, organized by the Institut Universitaire en Santé Mentale de Québec, and at UNESCO for International WomenâÂÂs Day in 2014.
Since 2004, Barbeau has been the general director of Wapikoni Mobile, a mobile film studio that travels to remote First Nations communities. The organization has been credited with providing Aboriginal youth with an outlet to express themselves, as well as the tools and skills to do so.
In 2010, UQAMâÂÂs faculty of communication and media offered Barbeau an award (Prix Reconnaissance UQAM) for her contributions to documentary filmmaking and her commitment to Aboriginal youth.