PIERRE BOIS (President of the Board of Directors) is the Special Projects Manager at the Ontario Museum Association (OMA) since 2007 and guest instructor at Fleming College in Peterborough and Centennial College in Toronto. He specializes in museum technology and communications, and in cultural administration. He graduated from Laurentian University with a BA in History, and obtained a certificate in Museum Management and Curatorship from Fleming College. Pierre is a franco-ontarien from northern Ontario.

CHRISTOS TSIRBAS (Vice-president) is an award-winning filmmaker, photographer and writer whose work has been featured in the National Post, fab, Instinct, and on CBC Radio, among others. He was a finalist in 2009 edition of the National Film Board’s Concours Tremplin competition for emerging francophone filmmakers. His short film Smile won first place at the 2008 Toronto Urban Film Festival and best animation at Nokia MobiFest 2009. In 2007, he was honoured as Toronto Mobile Filmmaker of the Year at Mobifest for the short film Upgrade. An alumnus of Université de Montréal, Tsirbas embraces the democratizing power of digital technologies to invigorate existing art forms and to create entirely new modes of expression all the while enjoying and celebrating the possibilities afforded by older technologies that some have deemed obsolete.

EROL OZBERG (Tresorer)

AURÉLIE LACOUCHIE (Secretary) arrived in Toronto in September 2011. For the past ten years, she has been working as a photo editor, in charge of a photo library in Paris (France). She was much involved in photography, through associations (FreeLens, Gens d'Images), festivals or galleries. ANI's secretary for several years (photo editors' association), she put up portfolio reviews, wrote a book on her job, organised meetings with photographers, took part in debates, etc. She is much interested in how photography tends to evolve towards multimedia (with POM or web-documentaries). She is currently working on a project on these new trends with students from Lycée Français de Toronto where she is currently working.

CLAUDE MARTEL is a specialist in communications, with an interest in the Media arts. Before working in the department of communications at the Office of francophone affairs and at TFO (Télévision franco-ontarienne), he travelled across Ontario as agent for National Film Board. He also teaches at Collège Boréal.
Claude is also a photographer. His creative work is based on a decade of darkroom experience in (both black and white and colour). He has published various articles about photography.

DENIS LEFEBVRE is a cultural administrator for over 20 years. He has worked as a coordinator for the Association of Canadian Publishers, in charge of communications for Théâtre français de Toronto, as well as in several departments of the Ontario Arts Council and graphic designer for Radio-Canada. He developed his skills in creating and managing programs at Mary Rowe and Associates. He is currently in charge of communications for the Laidlaw Foundation.

Based in Toronto for 10 years, JÉRÔME LAFLAMME works for the Ministry of Tourism of Ontario.He has worked for the Government of Ontario since 2004 in different fields: francophone affairs, culture and tourism. He participated in the organization and management of the Ontario House at the Vancouver Olympic games. Jérôme has community experience as member of Toronto Franco-Fête, the franco-ontarian historical and geneological society, as well as an food cooperative.
He has a Master's degree in history from York University (master degree in history) and a bachelor's degree in history from Laval University.

Co-founder of Zazie Films Inc, producer, director and screenwriter, DOMINIC DESJARDINS was trained as an actor at the prestigious National Conservatory of Dramatic Arts in Paris. In 1997, he made his directing debut as a contestant in LA COURSE DESTINATION MONDE, a Canadian television show that enabled him to direct and produce 18 short documentaries in 11 countries around the world. He recently won two seasons of the television show FAIS ÇA COURT, where he wrote and directed five short films in this televised competition between emerging filmmakers. After working for many years as a television director on different shows for CBC, SRC, TVO, TFO, and Télé-Québec, he founded ZAZIE FILMS (based in Toronto, Ontario) with producer Rayne Zukerman to make independent films. Together, they produced his first independent feature film, Le Divan du Monde. La Sacrée, his second feature, financed with the help of Téléfilm Canada, Radio-Canada, TFO and the OMDC was released in cinemas in Québec and Ontario in the fall of 2011.