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This artist turned a forgiveness journey into a film – with the help of Steven Spielberg

It took a phone call with Steven Spielberg to reassure Titus Kaphar that he was OK. While directing a scene in his debut movie, Mr. Kaphar had endured a breakdown.

Mr. Kaphar’s drama “Exhibiting Forgiveness,” which opens in theaters Oct. 18, is inspired by his own life. He wrote the script. It’s the story of a famous painter who encounters his abusive father, a former drug addict, for the first time in 15 years. Actor André Holland’s performance as the artist unlocked something within Mr. Kaphar. He reached out to Mr. Spielberg, a new mentor.

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A story focused on

As his new movie debuts, artist Titus Kaphar reflects on what it takes to arrive at forgiveness – and to share it with the world.

“He told me, ‘I cried every day when I did my last film, “The Fabelmans.”’ It was really, really encouraging. And it gave me so much hope in the process,” says Mr. Kaphar.

To tell the story, Mr. Kaphar – a recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship, often called the “genius grant” – had to reexamine his interpretation of grievances he’d been holding on to. The visually sumptuous movie examines what it takes to pardon wrongdoing.

By the end, he says, he had “developed a new compassion and sympathy for my father.”

It took a phone call with Steven Spielberg to reassure Titus Kaphar that he was OK. While directing a scene in his debut movie, Mr. Kaphar had endured a breakdown.

“I literally said, ‘Cut’ and started sobbing,” he recalls. “I had to leave the set, locked myself in a dark room, and just lay there on the floor crying, letting these waves of heaving tears just roll over me.”

Mr. Kaphar’s drama “Exhibiting Forgiveness,” which opens in theaters Oct. 18, is inspired by his own life. He wrote the script. It’s the story of a famous painter who encounters his abusive father, a former drug addict, for the first time in 15 years. A reckoning is overdue.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

As his new movie debuts, artist Titus Kaphar reflects on what it takes to arrive at forgiveness – and to share it with the world.

André Holland’s performance as the artist unlocked something within Mr. Kaphar. As a child, he hadn’t been allowed to cry. This was new. He reached out to Mr. Spielberg, a new mentor.

“He told me, ‘I cried every day when I did my last film, “The Fabelmans.”’ It was really, really encouraging. And it gave me so much hope in the process,” says Mr. Kaphar during a video call from his Connecticut home.

Today, the filmmaker has many reasons to smile. The premiere for “Exhibiting Forgiveness” attracted attendees such as Serena Williams and Oprah Winfrey. Mr. Kaphar, a recipient of what’s often called the “genius grant” through the MacArthur Foundation, has had his paintings displayed at the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery in Washington. He also launched an exhibition of artworks from the movie at the Gagosian gallery in Beverly Hills, California.

Mario Anzuoni/Reuters

Titus Kaphar, artist and writer-director of “Exhibiting Forgiveness,” attends a September red carpet event for the film.

Reexamining grievances

But critical acclaim for “Exhibiting Forgiveness” isn’t as important to the director as his filmmaking journey. It transformed him. To tell the story, Mr. Kaphar had to reexamine his interpretation of grievances he’d been holding on to. The visually sumptuous movie examines what it takes to pardon wrongdoing. 

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