Paris programme
Saturday 4 November 2023
Today, the programme takes place at the Jeu de Paume at 2pm and 4.30pm, at the Luminor Hôtel de Ville at 6pm and 8pm, and at the CWB Paris at 2pm, 4pm, 6pm and 8pm. Click on the corresponding tab to browse the programme for each venue.
+ Luminor Hôtel de Ville
Cinéma
Retrospective
Jeu de Paume
1 place de la Concorde - Jardin des Tuileries - 75001 Paris
Subway: Concorde, lines 1, 8 et 12, sortie n°1
Free admission for the general public, within the limits of available seats
Accreditation and badges: free priority access, within the limits of available seats
Reservations are not compulsory. You can attend a session without a reservation, subject to availability.
Yvonne Rainer retrospective (6/7)
Yvonne Rainer : Privilege - Experimental fiction | 16mm | color and b&w | 103:0 | USA | 1990
Yvonne Rainer
Privilege
Experimental fiction | 16mm | color and b&w | 103:0 | USA | 1990
“For Rainer, drama and style aren’t innocent, and the very concept of a story, and the way it’s told, is political”—Richard Brody. One of Rainer’s most narratively complex films, Privilege shifts from a documentary about women going through the process of menopause to a deadpan and delightfully anarchic autobiographical meta-film exploring the power dynamics underpinning experience, memory, and the manner in which women’s stories are told. Synopsis courtesy of The Metrograph.
When Yvonne Rainer made her first feature-length film in 1972, she had already influenced the world of dance and choreography for nearly a decade. From the beginning of her film career she inspired audiences to think about what they saw, interweaving the real and fictional, the personal and political, the concrete and abstract in imaginative, unpredictable ways. Her bold feminist sensibility and often controversial subject matter, leavened with a quirky humor, has made her, as the Village Voice dubbed her in 1986, "The most influential American avant-garde filmmaker of the past dozen years, with an impact as evident in London or Berlin as in New York. Rainer was born in San Francisco in 1934. She trained as a modern dancer in New York from 1957 and began to choreograph her own work in 1960. She was one of the founders of the Judson Dance Theater in 1962, the beginning of a movement that proved to be a vital force in modern dance in the following decades. Between 1962 and 1975 she presented her choreography throughout the United States and Europe, notably on Broadway in 1969, in Scandinavia, London, Germany, and Italy between 1964 and 1972, and at the Festival D'Automne in Paris in 1972. In 1968 she began to integrate short films into her live performances, and by 1975 she had made a complete transition to filmmaking. In 1972 she completed a first feature-length film, LIVES OF PERFORMERS. In all she has completed seven features: FILM ABOUT A WOMAN WHO... (1974), KRISTINA TALKING PICTURES (1976), JOURNEYS FROM BERLIN/1971 (1980, co-produced by the British Film Institute and winner of the Special Achievement Award from the Los Angeles Film Critics' Association), THE MAN WHO ENVIED WOMEN (1985), PRIVILEGE (1990, winner of the Filmmakers' Trophy at the Sundance Film Festival, Park City. Utah, 1991, and the Geyer Werke Prize at the International Documentary Film Festival in Munich, 1991), and MURDER and murder (1996). Rainer's films have been shown extensively in the U.S. and throughout the world, in alternative film exhibition showcases and revival houses (such as the Bleecker St Cinema, Roxy-S.F., NuArt-L.A, Film Forum-NYC, et al), in museums and in universities. Her films have also been screened at festivals in Los Angeles (Filmex), London, Montreux, Toronto, Edinburgh, Mannheim, Berlin, Locarno, Rotterdam, Creteil, Deauville, Toulon, Montreal, Hamburg, Salsa Majori, Figueira da Foz, Munich, Vienna, Athens (Ohio), Sundance, Hong Kong, Yamagata, and Sydney. A half-hour video tape entitled YVONNE RAINER: STORY OF A FILMMAKER WHO... was aired on Film and Video Review, WNET-TV in 1980. THE MAN WHO ENVIED WOMEN was aired on Independent Focus, WNET-TV in, 1989, and PRIVILEGE on the same program in 1992 and during the summer of 1994. In the Spring of 1997—to coincide with the release of MURDER and murder—complete retrospectives of the films of Yvonne Rainer were mounted at the Museum of Modern Art in San Francisco and at the Film Society of Lincoln Center in New York City. In 2006 MIT Press published Yvonne Rainer's memoir Feelings Are Facts: A Life
A dizzying collage of fiction and autobiography with a hybrid conception, "Privilege" imagines the making of another film, a documentary on the menopause, by a character named Yvonne Washington, in dialogue with her old friend Jenny. In a flashback, Jenny describes an experience from her early years in New York, and the two begin to untangle the knots of gendered and racialised power associated with this memory.
Yvonne Rainer is considered one of the most influential artists of the 20th century. A pioneering figure in the avant-garde movement, her artistic career spanned more than five decades, in both dance and film.
Using archives, reconstructions, photographs and unconventional audiovisual techniques, her films mobilise critical theory and scholarly analysis, while exploring deeply personal, political and social themes.
By 1972, when she made her first feature film, Yvonne Rainer, a founding member of the Judson Dance Theater, was already recognised as one of the leading choreographers of her generation; her contributions to film would prove just as radical. Her films opened up new possibilities for cinematic language, with new arrangements of narrative and melodrama, a disjunctive audiovisual syntax, but also thanks to her deadpan wit and acute political awareness.
Retrospective
Jeu de Paume
1 place de la Concorde - Jardin des Tuileries - 75001 Paris
Subway: Concorde, lines 1, 8 et 12, sortie n°1
Free admission for the general public, within the limits of available seats
Accreditation and badges: free priority access, within the limits of available seats
Reservations are not compulsory. You can attend a session without a reservation, subject to availability.
Yvonne Rainer retrospective (7/7)
Yvonne Rainer : Murder And Murder - Experimental fiction | 16mm | color | 113:0 | USA | 1996
Yvonne Rainer
MURDER and murder
Experimental fiction | 16mm | color | 113:0 | USA | 1996
Rainer’s last feature is also one of her most personal, inspired by the lows and highs of a breast cancer diagnosis in the early 1990s, and the surprise of a burgeoning lesbian relationship. The latter is playfully refracted here through the love story of two women from very different backgrounds: Yvonne’s sixty-something screen counterpart Doris (Joanna Merlin) who gleefully announces that she “loves eating pussy,” and the younger academic she’s soon to move in with, Mildred (Kathleen Chalfant). A comic romance whose emotions are amplified by Rainer’s structural tomfoolery and signature intellectual rigor—with the director providing running commentary and appearing intermittently to address the camera—MURDER and murder probes the pleasures, and attendant questions, of late-in-life love affairs. (Synopsis courtesy of The Metrograph.)
When Yvonne Rainer made her first feature-length film in 1972, she had already influenced the world of dance and choreography for nearly a decade. From the beginning of her film career she inspired audiences to think about what they saw, interweaving the real and fictional, the personal and political, the concrete and abstract in imaginative, unpredictable ways. Her bold feminist sensibility and often controversial subject matter, leavened with a quirky humor, has made her, as the Village Voice dubbed her in 1986, "The most influential American avant-garde filmmaker of the past dozen years, with an impact as evident in London or Berlin as in New York. Rainer was born in San Francisco in 1934. She trained as a modern dancer in New York from 1957 and began to choreograph her own work in 1960. She was one of the founders of the Judson Dance Theater in 1962, the beginning of a movement that proved to be a vital force in modern dance in the following decades. Between 1962 and 1975 she presented her choreography throughout the United States and Europe, notably on Broadway in 1969, in Scandinavia, London, Germany, and Italy between 1964 and 1972, and at the Festival D'Automne in Paris in 1972. In 1968 she began to integrate short films into her live performances, and by 1975 she had made a complete transition to filmmaking. In 1972 she completed a first feature-length film, LIVES OF PERFORMERS. In all she has completed seven features: FILM ABOUT A WOMAN WHO... (1974), KRISTINA TALKING PICTURES (1976), JOURNEYS FROM BERLIN/1971 (1980, co-produced by the British Film Institute and winner of the Special Achievement Award from the Los Angeles Film Critics' Association), THE MAN WHO ENVIED WOMEN (1985), PRIVILEGE (1990, winner of the Filmmakers' Trophy at the Sundance Film Festival, Park City. Utah, 1991, and the Geyer Werke Prize at the International Documentary Film Festival in Munich, 1991), and MURDER and murder (1996). Rainer's films have been shown extensively in the U.S. and throughout the world, in alternative film exhibition showcases and revival houses (such as the Bleecker St Cinema, Roxy-S.F., NuArt-L.A, Film Forum-NYC, et al), in museums and in universities. Her films have also been screened at festivals in Los Angeles (Filmex), London, Montreux, Toronto, Edinburgh, Mannheim, Berlin, Locarno, Rotterdam, Creteil, Deauville, Toulon, Montreal, Hamburg, Salsa Majori, Figueira da Foz, Munich, Vienna, Athens (Ohio), Sundance, Hong Kong, Yamagata, and Sydney. A half-hour video tape entitled YVONNE RAINER: STORY OF A FILMMAKER WHO... was aired on Film and Video Review, WNET-TV in 1980. THE MAN WHO ENVIED WOMEN was aired on Independent Focus, WNET-TV in, 1989, and PRIVILEGE on the same program in 1992 and during the summer of 1994. In the Spring of 1997—to coincide with the release of MURDER and murder—complete retrospectives of the films of Yvonne Rainer were mounted at the Museum of Modern Art in San Francisco and at the Film Society of Lincoln Center in New York City. In 2006 MIT Press published Yvonne Rainer's memoir Feelings Are Facts: A Life.
"MURDER and murder" explores the early romance between Doris, an art teacher in her sixties, and Mildred, her first girlfriend, an academic in her fifties.
Two characters comment on and haunt this late romance: a teenage Mildred and Doris's mother. Also, Yvonne Rainer, elegantly masculine in a dinner jacket, provides her own commentary as director and mistress of ceremonies. The film, at once burlesque and sober, offers a mediation on female love and ageing, in a culture where youth and heterosexual love relationships are glorified.
Yvonne Rainer is considered one of the most influential artists of the 20th century. A pioneering figure in the avant-garde movement, her artistic career spanned more than five decades, in both dance and film.
Using archives, reconstructions, photographs and unconventional audiovisual techniques, her films mobilise critical theory and scholarly analysis, while exploring deeply personal, political and social themes.
By 1972, when she made her first feature film, Yvonne Rainer, a founding member of the Judson Dance Theater, was already recognised as one of the leading choreographers of her generation; her contributions to film would prove just as radical. Her films opened up new possibilities for cinematic language, with new arrangements of narrative and melodrama, a disjunctive audiovisual syntax, but also thanks to her deadpan wit and acute political awareness.
Screening
Luminor Hôtel de Ville
20 rue du Temple - 75004 Paris
Subway: Hôtel de Ville, line 1 / Rambuteau, line 11
Ticket price: 6 € / Ciné-cartes CIP, Cartes UGC Illimité, CinéPass
Accreditation and badge: free priority access, within the limits of available places
"Uranium"
Kristina Norman : Thirst - Experimental fiction | 4k | color | 16:7 | Estonia | 2022
Kristina Norman
THIRST
Experimental fiction | 4k | color | 16:7 | Estonia | 2022
The film Thirst is a post-human choreography of machines and displaced plants. Millions of tons of Estonian peat end up in greenhouses in the Netherlands, where it is used as a soil substrate for tropical Phalaenopsis orchids. Meanwhile, local communities in Estonia are left with dry wells and a lack of drinking water as their fragile wetlands are drained for peat extraction. The orchids from the Netherlands then find their way back to supermarkets and homes in Estonia. It is a thirst for luxury and abundance that keeps the capitalist machinery running. Thirst is one episode from Kristina Norman’s Orchidelirium film trilogy. Commissioned for the Estonian Pavilion at the 59th International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia. Author and director: Kristina Norman Cinematographer: Erik Norkroos Composer: Märt-Matis Lill Choreographer and cast: Mari Mägi Produced by Rühm Pluss Null in collaboration with CCA Estonia
Kristina Norman (b.1979, lives and works in Tallinn) is an artist whose interdisciplinary work includes video installations, sculpture, and projects in the city space, as well as documentaries and performance. She is interested in the issues of collective memory, the memorial uses of the public space, but also the subtle sphere of the body politic that transgresses the boundaries between the public and the private. In 2009 she represented Estonia at the 53rd International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia, with a solo project; a multilayered mixed media installation entitled After-War. The project was a study of a conflict around the relocation of a Soviet monument in Tallinn. In 2022 at the 59th edition, the artist again represented Estonia with an ecocritical exhibition “Orchidelirium. An Appetite For Abundance”, a duo show with Bita Razavi, curated by Corina Apostol. Norman’s experimental film trilogy commissioned for the Estonian Pavilion, offers multiple ways to reflect on the legacies of colonialism from a specifically Eastern European perspective.
Emilija Skarnulyte : Kapinynas - Documentary | hdv | color | 60:0 | Lithuania, Norway | 2022
Emilija Skarnulyte
Kapinynas
Documentary | hdv | color | 60:0 | Lithuania, Norway | 2022
A python slithers and curls over the abandoned control room of Chernobyl’s sister, the Ignalina Nuclear Power Plant, its radioactive core an unleashed monster that will slither through time for a million years. From Etruscan ruins and sunken cities to the most modern of underground repositories, director Emilija Škarnulyt? follows our attempts to bury the immortal. Addressing the epochal effects of nuclear technology on all levels, Burial follows the cycle of power, an eternal return, another serpent eating its tail.
Emilija Škarnulyt? (b. Vilnius, Lithuania 1987) is an artist and filmmaker. Working between documentary and the imaginary, Škarnulyt? makes films and immersive installations exploring deep time and invisible structures, from the cosmic and geologic to the ecological and political. Winner of the 2019 Future Generation Art Prize, Škarnulyt? represented Lithuania at the XXII Triennale di Milano. Recent solo exhibitions include Tate Modern (2021), Kunsthaus Pasquart (2021), and the National Gallery in Vilnius (2021). Her films are in the IFA, Kadist Foundation and Centre Pompidou collections and have been screened at the Serpentine Gallery, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, and numerous film festivals. She is a founder and co-director of Polar Film Lab, and a member of artist duo New Mineral Collective.
Kristina Norman documents how millions of tonnes of peat taken from Estonia end up as a substrate for growing tropical orchids in greenhouses in the Netherlands, orchids that will be sent all over the world, including Estonia. Questioning the effects of nuclear technology, Emilija Škarnulytė scrutinises the radioactive heart of the Ignalina nuclear power station, sister to Chernobyl, a raging monster whose radioactivity will pass through time for a million years. We follow the invisible structures that make up the great systems of power and the human attempts to cover up and bury what endures and does not disappear, from Etruscan ruins and sunken cities to the most modern underground repositories. The cycle of power is like an eternal return, or a snake biting its own tail.
Screening
Luminor Hôtel de Ville
20 rue du Temple - 75004 Paris
Subway: Hôtel de Ville, line 1 / Rambuteau, line 11
Ticket price: 6 € / Ciné-cartes CIP, Cartes UGC Illimité, CinéPass
Accreditation and badge: free priority access, within the limits of available places
"Transmitted Images"
Nadia Ghanem : Three Disappearances And A Song - Experimental film | 4k | color | 27:6 | Egypt | 2021
Nadia Ghanem
Three Disappearances and a Song
Experimental film | 4k | color | 27:6 | Egypt | 2021
As my grandfather's presence in the country becomes increasingly problematic, my mother gradually decides to never touch a camera again, my father becomes obsessively convinced of his own disappearance, and something almost miraculous happens in 1976 in Montreux: Nina Simone comes back from retirement. In Three Disappearances and a Song, I revisit the family archive, pick up my camera, and film 3 people struggling to find new ways to be: my mother, my father, and myself.
Nadia Ghanem is a filmmaker who lives and works in Cairo. She recently finished her first short film as a director Three Disappearances And A Song (2021) which premiered at the 43rd edition of the Cairo International Film Festival, Images Festival, Cinema Árabe Feminino in Brazil and received the best short film award at Gabes Cinema Fen (Tunisia) as well as the audience and Jury awards for best short film at Manassat Film Festival in Cairo. Nadia is currently working on her first feature Looking for Spiderman which received development awards from A Kiss in the Desert, Rawiyat film collective, Two Stories Production, Dox Box and is part of the Studio Seen program. In parallel to being a filmmaker, Nadia Ghanem curated film programs for the 24th edition of the Videoex festival in Basel and since 2022 is a programmer for the Panorama of the European Film organized by Zawya Arthouse Cinema in Cairo. She also works as a Program Manager at Medrar for Contemporary Art where she coordinated the 10th edition of the Cairo Video Festival.
Bradly Dever Treadaway : Beatings Of The Devil - Experimental video | mov | color | 7:19 | USA | 2022
Bradly Dever Treadaway
Beatings of the Devil
Experimental video | mov | color | 7:19 | USA | 2022
"Beatings Of The Devil" is based on the concept and weather event called sunshowers, or, as my grandmother would often say when it rained while the sun was shining, “The devil is beating his wife”. This wildly inappropriate, and outdated colloquial phrase, which resonated deeply within me as a child, provides a point of departure and interpretation for this work. Created through a series of shoots spanning over four years, the piece has evolved into a memorial to my mother, and a reckoning for my father, who recently lost his wife of 51 years. The piece premiered at the 2022 Art of Brooklyn Film Festival, and won the Vanguard Award for Best Experimental Short.
Bradly Dever Treadaway is a Brooklyn based artist, educator and curator utilizing lens-based image making, moving images, sound, sculpture, installation and performance to comment on the breakdown of intergenerational communication and broken familial links due to natural disaster, technological evolution, mental health challenges, societal shifts and the continuance of interpersonal detachment occurring within American communities. His work is visualized through archival interventions, recontextualizing the archive to serve as form, medium, subject matter and concept, elevating domestic ephemera and rituals while questioning material significance within the photographic medium. Treadaway creates memorials, monuments and mnemonic devices to illustrate ancestral collisions with contemporary responses. His work has been exhibited at the Whitney Museum of Art, the Center for Photography at Woodstock, The International Center of Photography,The Ogden Museum of Southern Art in New Orleans, Agora Gallery in Chelsea, NY, The Mobile Museum of Art, The Ospedale degli Innocenti in Florence, Italy, and the Lishui Museum of Photography in China. His film/video work has been screened at the New Orleans Film Festival, the Carnegie Museum of Art, the National Centre for Contemporary Art in Moscow, Russia, Union Docs, Anthology Film Archives, the Art of Brooklyn Film Festival, the Nashville Film Festival, the Coney Island Film Festival, and at the Brooklyn Arts Council’s Scene: Brooklyn. Treadaway’s work has been curated by Vince Aletti, Kevin Jerome Everson, Jon Feinstein and Julian Cox and is part of the permanent collections at The Center for Photography at Woodstock, The Ogden Museum of Southern Art, The Masur Museum of Art, the Ewing Gallery at the University of Tennessee, the Brooklyn Public Library and the Mobile Museum of Art. Treadaway has recently held residencies at Trestle Art Space and BRIC Media Arts in Brooklyn, Kutztown University in Pennsylvania and the Contemporary Arts Center at Woodside in NY.
Ana Vaz : A árvore - Experimental doc. | 16mm | color | 20:32 | Brazil | 2022
Ana Vaz
A árvore
Experimental doc. | 16mm | color | 20:32 | Brazil | 2022
Emerging from a regular and spontaneous practice of film, A Árvore is an encounter with and an homage to the filmmaker’s father Guilherme Vaz (1948-2018). Major Brazilian artist, composer, experimental musician and maestro, as well as one of the pioneers of conceptual and sound art in Brazil, his compositions often traverse the filmography of Ana Vaz in a constant dialogue between music, sound and place. Guilherme Vaz’s work is marked by his experience living at the recently inaugurated Brasília, where Ana was born, as well as the many years spent collaborating with remote indigenous communities in the Brazilian Amazon. A Árvore is a ghostly ritual woven through the fragments of a recorded conversation between father and daughter transposed to various significant geographies in life lines of both.
Ana Vaz (1986, Brazil) is an artist and filmmaker who works with cinema as an instrument. Her films, or rather her film-poems, travel through territories and events haunted by the perennial consequences of internal and external forms of colonialism, and their footprints on the earth as well as on human and different from human forms. Her practice can also take the shape of writing, critical pedagogy, installations, film programs or ephemeral events, which are expansions or developments of her films. Her works have been presented at film festivals, seminars and institutions such as Locarno Film Festival – Cineasti del presente; Berlinale Forum Expanded; IFFR, Rotterdam; Viennale; Palais de Tokyo, Paris; Pivô, São Paulo; Jeu de Paume, Paris; CPH:Dox; New York Film Festival – Projections; TIFF Wavelengths, Toronto; BFI, London; Cinéma du Réel, Paris; Tate Modern, London; LUX Moving Images, London; Tabakalera, San Sebastián; Whitechapel Gallery, London; MAM Museum of Modern Art, São Paulo; Matadero, Madrid; Jameel Arts Center, Dubai; Mostra de Cinema de São Paulo; Savvy Contemporary, Berlin; among others. She is a recipient of the Sundance Film Institute Nonfiction Grant (2019), the Film Society of Lincoln Center Kazuko Trust Award (2015), as well as grand prizes at Festival dei Popoli (2022), Entrevues Belfort (2022), FIDOCS (2022), Punto de Vista (2020), 25FPS (2020), Cinéma du Réel (2016), Media City Film Festival (2015), Fronteira Experimental and Documentary Film Festival (2015). Ana Vaz is also a founding member of the COYOTE collective, an interdisciplinary group working between ecology and political science through conceptual and experimental formats.
Teboho Joscha Edkins : Ghost - Experimental doc. | 4k | color | 8:41 | South Africa | 2023
Teboho Joscha Edkins
Ghost
Experimental doc. | 4k | color | 8:41 | South Africa | 2023
Ghosts is a short documentary film, in which ghosts, both real and imagined, haunt the lives of a rural community, in their small town in post-apartheid South Africa.
Teboho Edkins (*1980 in Tennessee, USA) grew up in Southern Africa and lives and works in Cape Town and Berlin. He studied photography and fine art at the Michaelis School of Fine Art, University of Cape Town, South Africa and film at Le Fresnoy Studio National des Arts Contemporains in Tourcoing, France. This was followed by a degree in directing at the Deutsche Film und Fernseh-akademie in Berlin (dffb). Teboho Edkins’s films have shown at many festivals, group and solo exhibitions, including at the Centre Pompidou, Paris; Tate Modern, London; South London Gallery; Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin; Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt; Berlinische Galerie, Berlin; Weserburg-Museum für Moderne Kunst, Bremen; Museum of Modern Art, New York City. Some of the over 500 film festivals his films have screened at include the International Film Festival Berlin (Berlinale); International Short Film Festival, Oberhausen; and International Film Festival (IFFR), Rotterdam. His films have also been acquired by several public and private art collections including the Goetz Collection in Munich, von Kelternborn Collection in Frankfurt and the Collection KAI 10 | Arthena Foundation in Düsseldorf.
Silvia Maglioni, Graeme Thomson : Late Gestures - Experimental video | hdv | color and b&w | 24:0 | Italy, France | 2022
Silvia Maglioni, Graeme Thomson
Late Gestures
Experimental video | hdv | color and b&w | 24:0 | Italy, France | 2022
In his famous text titled "On Late Style: Music and Literature Against the Grain", Palestinian writer Edward Saïd explores how the late style of certain composers, writers and artists constitutes a space of creative freedom unmoored from the conventions of their epoch that opens onto new horizons of artistic expression. Inspired by these thoughts, “Late Gestures” is a journey through scenes taken from the later, often neglected films of a number of great filmmakers that in their prophetic untimeliness look towards new possibilities for cinema and the moving image. Silvia Maglioni and Graeme Thomson invite us to explore the hauntology of images through a shape-shifting montage of these “late cinematographic gestures”.
Silvia Maglioni & Graeme Thomson are filmmakers and artists whose works explore the porous borders between fiction and documentary, the visible and the invisible, cinema and installation, theory and practice. Their production includes the creation of films (both features and shorts), mixed-media installations, sound works, performances, radio shows, vernacular technologies and books. The artists often make use of cinema to reactivate lost, forgotten, silenced or neglected archives and histories and to create new modes of collective vision and engagement with contemporary thought and politics. In constant dialogue with literature, philosophy, music, science and the history of cinema their projects are research-based, process-oriented and trans-disciplinary. Their work has been presented at film festivals, in museums and independent art spaces worldwide.
Nadia Ghanem revisits the family archives and films three people struggling to find a new way of being: her mother, her father and herself. In 1976, while her father was convinced of her own demise, Nina Simone emerged from her silence for a concert in Montreux. Bradley Dever filmed his birthplace for four years, and the idea of a downpour in the sunlight runs through the film, which becomes a tribute to his mother. Like a ghostly ritual based on fragments of a conversation between a father and daughter, Ana Vaz pays tribute to her father, Guilherme Vaz, a Brazilian artist, composer and experimental musician who pioneered conceptual art and sound in Brazil. Toboho Edkins films the post-apartheid rural community of a small town in South Africa, where ghosts, real or imagined, haunt the living. Silvia Maglioni and Graeme Thomson travel through scenes taken from late films by great filmmakers. These 'late cinematic gestures', often little known, have a timelessness that opens up new possibilities.
Screening
Centre Wallonie Bruxelles | Cinéma
Entrance via 46, rue Quincampoix - 75004 Paris
Subway: Rambuteau, line 11 / Les Halles, line 4 / Châtelet, lines 1, 4, 7, 11 et 14
Free admission for the general public, within the limits of available seats
Accreditation and badges: free priority access, within the limits of available seats
"Objective Camera"
Juan Desteract : Souviens-toi - Experimental video | mov | black and white | 1:31 | France, Argentina | 2022
Juan Desteract
Souviens-toi
Experimental video | mov | black and white | 1:31 | France, Argentina | 2022
La persistance d’une image fatidique et le besoin de s'y accrocher impliquent le dédoublement d’un souvenir. Ce dernier se trouve ainsi suspendu entre les multiples versions d’un même évènement, entre les représentations d’un passé et un présent déjà vécu, entre figuration et abstraction, entre mouvement et immobilité, entre film et photographie. Des impressions intrusives d'autres vies se superposent au souvenir, nous exposant ainsi à une réalité surveillée où nous nous demandons qui voit et que voir.
Juan Desteract est né à Saint-Germain-en-Laye (France) en 1997. Il vit actuellement à Buenos Aires, en Argentine. Il a étudié le design graphique à l’Université de Buenos Aires. Il a poursuivi sa formation en photographie et arts visuels au cours de divers séminaires, ateliers et résidences artistiques à Buenos Aires. Parallèlement, il s'est formé en écriture, composition musicale puis en improvisation musicale. A partir de 2021, il participe à des expositions collectives dans des espaces artistiques et des musées d'art contemporain en Argentine, au Chili, Uruguay, Espagne et en France. Son travail associe des disciplines diverses telles que la post-photographie, l'audiovisuel expérimental, le design graphique et l'improvisation musicale, en se focalisant sur certains traits distinctifs du cinéma structurel et du réemploi d’archives. Depuis 2020, Juan travaille dans le domaine du design graphique en tant que Professeur à l’Université de Buenos Aires et en tant que graphiste au Musée d'art moderne de Buenos Aires.
Bill Morrison : Incident - Experimental doc. | 0 | color | 29:49 | USA | 2023
Bill Morrison
Incident
Experimental doc. | 0 | color | 29:49 | USA | 2023
INCIDENT reconstructs a police shooting in Chicago in 2018, reassembling the event and its immediate aftermath from a variety of viewpoints, including surveillance, security, dashboard, and body-worn cameras as a continuous, synchronized split-screen montage.
Bill Morrison has been called “the poet laureate of lost films” (New York Times, 9/22/21). He makes films that reframe long-forgotten moving images. He has premiered feature-length documentary films at the New York, Sundance, Telluride and Venice film festivals. Morrison had a mid-career retrospective at MoMA in 2014. His found footage opus Decasia (2002) was the first film of the 21st century to be selected to the Library of Congress’ National Film Registry. Dawson City: Frozen Time (2016) was named one of the best films of year by more than 100 critics, and among the best of the decade (2010s) by the Associated Press, Los Angeles Times, and Vanity Fair, among others. In 2021 Morrison became a member of the documentary branch of the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences.
Sirine Fattouh, Sandra Fatté, Victor Bresse, Chrystel Élias : Behind The Shield - Video | 0 | color | 57:42 | Lebanon | 2022
Sirine Fattouh, Sandra Fatté, Victor Bresse, Chrystel Élias
Behind the Shield
Video | 0 | color | 57:42 | Lebanon | 2022
Behind the Shield paints a filmic portrait of the city of Beirut over the past three years. It documents key moments in the country’s recent history – from the October Revolution to the port explosion of August 4th – while also shedding light on the mundane and commonplace facets of everyday life. Behind the Shield is a reflection on the city and the dichotomies that exist within it, juxtaposing the impactful and the mundane; the colossal and the minute; the urban and the rural. The work also highlights the camera as both a silent observer and a silent participant in the events the city has witnessed. Crucially, it explores the video camera’s transformation from a device that is used to surveil, control, and oppress of the masses, to a tool that gives people agency and grants them a voice.
Sirine Fattouh is a Lebanese artist living in Paris. Interested by histories from below, her personal work, as a researcher and artist consists of examining the consequences of violence and displacements on people’s identities. She holds a doctorate in Visual Arts and Aesthetics from the University Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne and a Master degree from the École Nationale Supérieure d'Arts of Paris Cergy.
Juan Desteract examines the doubling of memory in the face of the persistence of the image. Using a variety of sources of recorded images - surveillance cameras, on-board cameras, pedestrian cameras - Bill Morrison reassembles images of a police shooting - a young black man killed by a police officer - that took place in Chicago in 2018. In Lebanon, Sirine Fattouh uses images filmed by a Dash Cam installed in her car between 18 October 2019 - the date on which the popular uprisings began - 4 August 2020 and the days following the explosion. The images reflect the political, economic and social upheaval that Lebanon is going through.
Screening
Centre Wallonie Bruxelles | Cinéma
Entrance via 46, rue Quincampoix - 75004 Paris
Subway: Rambuteau, line 11 / Les Halles, line 4 / Châtelet, lines 1, 4, 7, 11 et 14
Free admission for the general public, within the limits of available seats
Accreditation and badges: free priority access, within the limits of available seats
"The Witnesses"
Miryam Charles : Tous Les Jours De Mai - Experimental doc. | 16mm | color | 6:44 | Canada | 2023
Miryam Charles
Tous les jours de Mai
Experimental doc. | 16mm | color | 6:44 | Canada | 2023
Following the shooting of a documentary on the death of her daughter, a mother reflects on her own life and especially on the passing of time.
From Haitian descent, Miryam Charles is a director, producer and cinematographer living in Montreal. She has produced several short and feature films. She is also the director of several short films. Her films have been presented in various festivals in Quebec and internationally. She has just completed the direction of her first feature film This House. Her work explores themes related to exile and the legacies of colonization.
Marina Stanimirovic : Des Carcasses De Tout - Experimental doc. | mov | color | 4:15 | France, Germany | 2022
Marina Stanimirovic
Des carcasses de tout
Experimental doc. | mov | color | 4:15 | France, Germany | 2022
Recorded in France and Germany, "CARCASSES OF ALL KINDS" is a wild recording of a discussion with my mother before it was too late. My mother, who was ill, told me about our first return to Bosnia and Herzegovina, the year following the end of the war. But this piece is not so much about war as about fragility, our memories, scars and departure. The voice and the words are used as sculptural material and mixed with additional recorded sounds. It uses recordings made in the cancerology department of the Argenteuil hospital center, rubbing of clothes, cutting of glass and metal, hammering, an industrial printer and vocals. Every summer, my mother used to cut lavender from her garden and place it in used stockings. After she died, I collected it all in the same bag. The video is a dive into that bag.
Marina Stanimirovic (1988, Argenteuil) is a French born artist based in Berlin. She studied Contemporary Jewellery at the Ecole Boulle, in Paris (2007 - 2011), and London, were she completed a Master at the Royal College of Arts (2011 - 2013). From violence against women to social disparities or dysfunctional economic systems she observes the ugly, the beautiful, the sad, the absurd and translate it through sculptures, installations, photography, video and sound experimentations. In 2022 she initiate DERIVAT, a platform that invites to reflect on the contemporary art market. Since 2023, she is part of the curatorial board of the project space Gr_und, Wedding Berlin.
Daryna Mamaisur : I Stumble Every Time I Hear From Kyiv - Documentary | mov | color | 17:17 | Ukraine | 2022
Daryna Mamaisur
I Stumble Every Time I Hear From Kyiv
Documentary | mov | color | 17:17 | Ukraine | 2022
“I have no words to say” is the phrase one can often hear when the reality of the war is so striking that language seems to be incapable to describe it. While studying in Brussels, Daryna Mamaisur is caught up in the russian full-scale invasion of her country. In the springtime, when chestnut trees are blooming at the same time in Brussels and Kyiv, she makes a film capturing that spring in the distance. Keeping a visual correspondence with a friend from Kyiv, she faces the question: while making a film about war, how to speak about the wound that is fresh and ongoing?
Daryna Mamaisur is a visual artist and filmmaker, born in Kyiv, Ukraine. Having a background in art theory and philosophy, she developed her practice at the intersection of different disciplines. Her works were related to transformations of public space, and landscape due to their connection to visual culture and memory. Besides, she is particularly interested in situations when language and vocal expression appear fragile and incapable of seizing reality. In 2022, she graduated from the DocNomads, a joint master’s program in documentary filmmaking, based in Lisbon, Budapest and Brussels. Her films participated in the film festivals as Kassel Dokfest, Visions du Réel, FIDMarseille, Docudays UA etc.
Macbeth Ewan : Prison With Songbirds - Experimental doc. | 35mm | color | 12:30 | Netherlands | 2022
Macbeth Ewan
Prison with Songbirds
Experimental doc. | 35mm | color | 12:30 | Netherlands | 2022
An unseen narrator tells his experience of wrongful imprisonment in an unnamed country and his random release. Based on a letter sent to Amnesty International, by the filmmaker’s father, and a surreal interview given about it. ‘Prison with Songbirds’ is a documentary and fiction hybrid in which dream-nightmare and digital-celluloid collide.
Ewan Macbeth (born 1992, UK) is a Scottish artist filmmaker based in Rotterdam. After studying Fine Art Photography at Glasgow School of Art he did an MA in Lens-Based Media at The Piet Zwart Institute. His work has been seen in International Film Festival Rotterdam, Ji.hlava International Documentary Film Festival, EYE Filmmusuem Amsterdam, EMAF Osnabrück, CCA Glasgow, RSA Edinburgh; amongst others. He is currently a member of Time Window collective and developing his first feature film.
Kim Mooyoung : Hwang Ryong San - Experimental doc. | mov | color | 18:35 | Korea, South | 2021
Kim Mooyoung
Hwang Ryong San
Experimental doc. | mov | color | 18:35 | Korea, South | 2021
The film depicts the massacre of civilians in Geum-jeong-gul Cave in Gyeonggi-do in October 1950. This massacre, in which more than 153 people were killed in a village by South Korean military and police, was compensated by South Korean government in 1993 when it became known to the world through the efforts of the victims' bereaved families, but there is still no place for their remains in their home town.
As well as making movies, Kim Mooyoung also creates research-based media art, which is being exhibited in several countries. After four short films, SLOW DAY (2010), CONCRETE (2012), LAND WITHOUT PEOPLE (2016), and DAY AND NIGHT(2017), he directed his first feature film, NIGHT LIGHT (2018), which was invited to Busan International Film Festival 2018 and Seoul Independent Film Festival 2018.
Eliane Esther Bots : In Flow Of Words - Documentary | dcp | color | 22:15 | Netherlands | 2021
Eliane Esther Bots
In Flow of Words
Documentary | dcp | color | 22:15 | Netherlands | 2021
In Flow of Words follows the narratives of three interpreters of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. They interpreted shocking testimonies from witnesses, victims and perpetrators, without ever allowing their own emotions, feelings and personal histories to be present. Contrary to their position at the tribunal, this film places their voices and experiences center stage.
Eliane Esther Bots (1986, The Netherlands) graduated cum laude from the Master of Film at the Netherlands Film Academy in Amsterdam. Her films have been screened at ‘IDFA’ (NL) ‘Berlinale’, Berlin (DE), ‘Cinema du Reel’, Paris (FR), ‘New York Film Festival’ (USA), ‘International short film festival Oberhausen’ (DE), ‘Go Short’, Nijmegen (NL), Kassel Dokfest (DE). She works as a lecturer ‘Moving image’ at the University of the Arts in Utrecht (NL).
Myriam Charles films a mother reflecting on her own life and the passage of time after making a documentary about her daughter's death. Marina Stanimirovic records a conversation she had with her mother, who was ill, recounting their first return to Bosnia-Herzegovina, the year after the end of the war. The voices and words are used as sculptural material, cut up, edited and mixed with other recorded sounds from the cancer ward at the Argenteuil hospital. As a film student in Brussels at the time, Daryna Mamaisur kept up a visual correspondence with a friend in Kiev during the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The news was broadcasting the atrocities of war, and cinema seemed the least appropriate thing to do in the face of the ultimate danger to her loved ones. But the trees are blossoming at the same time in both towns, and the film attempts to capture this spring in the distance. Starting with a report written by his father to Amnesty International, detailing the torture he suffered in prison and his arbitrary release, Ewan Macbeth follows the story of the same experience of wrongful imprisonment, in an unnamed country, in a Kafkaesque world of nightmarish bureaucracy and a faceless state. Kim Mooyoung talks about the massacre of civilians in the Geum Geumjeong cave in October 1950, in which 153 people were killed by South Korean militia and police. The film questions the way in which memories survive in the present of South Korean society. Eliane Esther Bots follows the stories of three interpreters from the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, where they interpreted the harrowing accounts of witnesses, victims and perpetrators, without ever allowing the slightest emotion to show through. The film places their voices and experiences in the foreground.
Carte blanche
Centre Wallonie Bruxelles | Cinéma
Entrance via 46, rue Quincampoix - 75004 Paris
Subway: Rambuteau, line 11 / Les Halles, line 4 / Châtelet, lines 1, 4, 7, 11 et 14
Free admission for the general public, within the limits of available seats
Accreditation and badges: free priority access, within the limits of available seats
Carte blanche to Pedro Costa
Rencontres Internationales Paris/Berlin offers a carte blanche to Pedro Costa, whose ascetic and radical works are marking the contemporary cinematographic landscape.
Pedro Costa : Ventura (Cavalo Dinheiro)
1:45:00 | Portugal | 2014
Ventura, a retired Cape Verdean laborer, wanders through a labyrinthine, nightmarish Lisbon. He recalls how he and his friends in the Fontainhas district lived through the Carnation Revolution, in fear of repression. In his wanderings, Ventura meets Vitalina, who tells him her own story of exile.
While studying history at University of Lisbon, Costa switched to film courses at the Lisbon Theatre and Film School (Escola Superior de Teatro e Cinema) where he was a student of António Reis, Paulo Rocha and Alberto Seixas Santos. After working as an assistant director to several directors such as Jorge Silva Melo, Vítor Gonçalves and João Botelho, he made a first feature film O Sangue (The Blood) in 1989.
Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian called Pedro Costa «the Samuel Beckett of cinema». He is acclaimed for using his ascetic style to depict the marginalised people in desperate living situations. Many of his films are set in a district of Lisbon inhabited by socially disadvantaged and shot in a natural and low-key way in documentary format.
In 1994, Casa de Lava was selected in the "Un certain regard" section of the Cannes Film Festival. A nurse accompanies a comatose Cape Verdean bricklayer to his island home. In 1997, Ossos won the prize for photography at the Venice mostra. He then shot Où gît votre sourire enfoui, a film in the Cinéma de notre temps series, based on the editing of a second version of Straub and Huillet's Sicilia!
He collected the France Culture Award (Foreign Cineaste of the Year) at 2002 Cannes Film Festival for directing the film In Vanda’s Room. Colossal Youth was selected for the 2006 Cannes Film Festival and earned the Independent/Experimental prize (Los Angeles Film Critics Association) in 2008.
His film Vitalina Varela wins the Golden Leopard at the 2019 Locarno International Film Festival.
Special screening
Centre Wallonie Bruxelles | Cinéma
Entrance via 46, rue Quincampoix - 75004 Paris
Subway: Rambuteau, line 11 / Les Halles, line 4 / Châtelet, lines 1, 4, 7, 11 et 14
Free admission for the general public, within the limits of available seats
Accreditation and badges: free priority access, within the limits of available seats
"Exhibit, exploit"
Assaf Gruber : Never Come Back - Experimental fiction | 0 | color | 14:0 | Germany, Austria | 2023
Assaf Gruber
Never Come Back
Experimental fiction | 0 | color | 14:0 | Germany, Austria | 2023
Museum depots are places where things are kept out of sight, but also protected from all-too-schematic historical judgments. In his new film, Assaf Gruber continues his ongoing investigation of the backstage areas of art institutions to engage with Neue Galerie Graz’s holdings. In the cage-like space of the repository, we see a naked musician working intensely on a composition. He is inspired by artists who belong to a gray area between modernist aspirations and enthusiasm for Nazism, and whose works combine a taste for the exotic with local patriotism, religious fervor, and eroticism. Our mysterious protagonist tentatively plays a familiar melody. It's a song known to many of us, recognisable from dance floors across Europe - but how many of us have ever bothered to listen to its remarkably rascist and imperialistic lyrics?
Assaf Gruber (b. Jerusalem, 1980) is a sculptor and filmmaker living and working in Berlin. The dynamic relationship between individuals and institutions is at the center of his practice, which aims to explore both how the political orientation of legacy establishments impact the lives of individuals and how these organizations choose to represent and communicate facts and their attendant artifacts. Gruber’s solo exhibitions include the Berlinische Galerie, Berlin (2018) and the Muzeum Sztuki, ?ód? (2015). His films have been featured in festivals including the International Film Festival Rotterdam (2023) and FID Marseille (2022). He studied at Cooper Union in New York and is a graduate of the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris and of the Higher Institute of Fine Arts (HISK) in Ghent. Gruber is currently one of the fellows of the Berlin Artistic Research Grant Programme 2022/23 (gkfd).
Jasmina Cibic : The Gift - Experimental fiction | 4k | color | 27:56 | Slovenia, France | 2021
Jasmina Cibic
The Gift
Experimental fiction | 4k | color | 27:56 | Slovenia, France | 2021
The Gift is a film about the use and abuse of culture in times of political and ideological crisis. It tells the story of a competition for a perfect gift that could heal a broken nation. The Gift is composed entirely of historical ready-mades that include some of the most perturbing examples of art, music and architecture deployed as trojan horses of political powers. The film’s locations include iconic buildings which were all political gifts themselves - including Oscar Niemeyer’s French Communist Party HQ in Paris, the Palace of Nations in Geneva, Mount Buzludzha in Bolgaria and the Palace of Culture and Science in Warsaw.
Jasmina Cibic is a Slovenian artist currently based in London, who works in film, performance and installation. She represented Slovenia at the 55th Venice Biennial with her project “For Our Economy and Culture”. Her recent exhibitions include solo shows at: Museum der Moderne Salzburg, The Highline New York, macLyon, Museum Sztuki ?ód?, Museum of Contemporary Art Ljubljana, CCA Glasgow, Phi Foundation Montreal, BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art Gateshead, Ludwig Museum Budapest, Kunstmuseen Krefeld along with group exhibitions at MAXXI Rome, Steirischer Herbst ‘19, MOMA NY, Marta Herford and Guangdong Museum of Art China. Cibic’s films have been screened at the Barbican London, Whitechapel Gallery, CCA Montreal, Pula Film Festival, HKW Berlin, Louvre, Les Rencontres Internationales Paris, Aesthetica, Berwick Film and Media Arts Festival, BFI London Film Festival, Dokfest Kassel and Copenhagen International Documentary Festival. Cibic was the winner of the MAC International Ulster Bank and Charlottenborg Fonden awards (2016), the B3 Biennial of the Moving Image Award (2020) and the Film London Jarman Award (2021).
Iván Argote : Levitate - Experimental doc. | 0 | color | 24:0 | France, Italy | 2022
Iván Argote
Levitate
Experimental doc. | 0 | color | 24:0 | France, Italy | 2022
What do monuments want, do, and stand for in our memories and public spaces? Levitate, a new film by Colombian artist Iván Argote, questions the histories, functions and possible futures of colonial icons that still today define the identity of modern European cities. In what the artist calls three anticipatory actions, organized as grand-scale performances in the centers of Rome, Madrid, and Paris, we are confronted with three emblems of control and domination that still exert, undisturbed, their symbolic power from atop their pedestals. The Flaminian obelisk in the Piazza del Popolo, which came to Rome at the behest of Emperor Agustus in 10 B.C.; the statue of Christopher Columbus erected to commemorate the day of the "discovery" of the Americas; and the statue of French military officer and colonial administrator Joseph Gallieni, are suspended, displaced from their position as vertical markers of power and tools for propaganda. Their disruption, albeit ephemeral, immediately opens up a space of public discussion.
Iván Argote is a Colombian artist and film director based in Paris. Through his sculptures, installations, films and interventions, he questions our Relation with others, with power structures and belief systems. He develops strategies based on tenderness, affect and humor through which he generates critical approaches to dominant historical narratives. In his interventions on monuments, large-scale ephemeral and permanent public artworks, Iván Argote proposes new symbolic and political uses of public space. Iván Argote studied graphic design, photography and new media at the Universidad Nacional de Colombia in Bogotá and holds an mfa from the Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-art (Ensba) in Paris. His work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at Albarrán Bourdais Gallery (Madrid, 2022), Dortmunder Kunstverein (Dortmund, 2021), Perrotin Gallery (New York, 2021 & Paris, 2018), Artpace (San Antonio, TX, 2021), Asu Museum (Phoenix, 2019), Malba (Buenos Aires, 2018), Museo Universitario Del Chopo (Mexico City, 2017), Galeria Vermelho (Sao Paulo, 2017), Palais De Tokyo (Paris, 2013) And Ca2m (Madrid, 2012). Works by the artist are included in the permanent collections of numerous prestigious institutions worldwide, including the Guggenheim Museum (New York, Us); Centre Pompidou (Paris, France); Asu Art Museum (Phoenix, Us); Cisneros Fontanals Art Foundation (Miami, Us); Colección De Arte Del Banco De La República (Bogotá, Colombia); Kadist (San Francisco, Us); Macba (Barcelona, Spain).
Clemens Von Wedemeyer, Paula Ábalos, Emerson Culurgioni, Charlotte Eifler, Deborah Jeromin, Mikhail Tolmachev : Ausbeutung, Oder Wie Man Die Oberfläche Durchbricht - Video | 0 | color | 14:30 | Germany, Chile | 2021
Clemens Von Wedemeyer, Paula Ábalos, Emerson Culurgioni, Charlotte Eifler, Deborah Jeromin, Mikhail Tolmachev
Ausbeutung, oder wie man die Oberfläche durchbricht
Video | 0 | color | 14:30 | Germany, Chile | 2021
Ausbeutung oder wie man die Oberfläche durchbricht (Exploitation or How to Break Through the Surface) tells the story of a restorer who studies the history of mining, guided by Hans Hesse's painting on the back of the mountain altar in St Anne's Church in Annaberg-Buchholz. The protagonist sinks deeper and deeper into her research, trying to get behind the surface of the painting and into the present of extraction of new resources.
PAULA ÁBALOS Born in 1989 in Santiago, Paula Ábalos lives and works in Leipzig (Germany). Her work has been presented at the 18th Videonale of the Kunstmuseum Bonn (2021), at the 37th Kasseler Dok Fest (Kassel, 2020), at the City Screen of the LOOP Barcelona festival (2017), at the Kunst-Film-Festival of the GEH8 (Dresden, 2020) and at the Galería Concreta Matucana 100 (Santiago, 2019). In 2020, she received the GOLDEN CUBE award from the 37th Kasseler Dok Fest, as well as the Rundgang 50Hertz award from the Hamburger Bahnhof Museum (Berlin, 2021). In 2021, one of her video works was acquired by the Kulturstiftung collection of Freistaats Sachsen. EMERSON CULURGIONI Born in 1986 in Munich (Germany), Emerson Culurgioni lives and works between Berlin and Leipzig (Germany). Director and visual artist, iI recently completed his second feature film. Trained in photography and classical documentary, he developed a research based mode of filmmaking that includes actors and non-actors. CHARLOTTE EIFLER Born in 1986 in Rostock (Germany), Charlotte Eifler lives and works between Leipzig (Germany), Berlin and Karlsruhe (Germany). Her work is located at the intersection of cinema, sound and technology. In her videos and multimedia installations, she questions the politics of representation, abstraction and computation. With a focus on feminist approaches and elements of science fiction, Charlotte Eifler explores the processes of image production and the imaginaries of alternative futures. She currently teaches image politics and editing practice at the Hochschule für Gestaltung in Karlsruhe. Her work was presented: at the Short Film Festival in Oberhausen (2021), at the International Art Festival in Sapporo (2020), at the Siggraph Congress (Los Angeles, 2020 and 2015), at the Ann Arbor Film Festival (2020), ISCP (New York, 2019), IMPAKT (Utrecht, 2019), Grassi Museum (Leipzig, 2016), Haus der Kulturen der Welt (Berlin, 2015; to come in 2022), at the Museum of Literature in Tblisi (2015), at the Folkwang Museum (Essen, 2014), among others. DEBORAH JEROMIN Born in 1987 in Flensburg (Germany), Deborah Jeromin lives and works between Leipzig (Germany) and Crete (Greece). She develops a research on mainly historical topics and makes them accessible through different media. She focuses on textile handcraft processes, feminist history and sites of National Socialism. MIKHAIL TOLMACHEV Born in 1983 in Moscow, Mikhail Tolmachev lives and works between Leipzig (Germany) and Moscow. After studying photojournalism in Moscow and media arts in Leipzig, he began to develop a research-based practice and became interested in the ever-changing status of a document and the politically mediated production of truth and reality. He collaborates with writers, historians and artists to explore the fractures of representation and to rethink the conventions of spectatorship. His practice encompasses sound installations, videos, photographs and spatial interventions. CLEMENS VON WEDEMEYER Born in 1974 in Göttingen (Germany), Clemens von Wedemeyer lives and works between Berlin and Leipzig (Germany). He has participated at the Chicago Architecture Biennial in 2020, the Cologne Film Festival in 2008, documenta 13 in Kassel (2012), the Berlin Biennale (2006) and the first Moscow Biennale (2005). Monographic exhibitions have also been devoted to him, notably at Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin (2021), at the Auditorium du Louvres, Paris (2019), at MIEFF, Moscow (2019), at Tate Modern, London (2015), at MAXXI, Rome (2013-2014), at MoMA, New York (2007), and at ARGOS Centre for Art and Media, Brussels (2007).
In the storerooms of the Neue Galerie in Graz, Assaf Gruber films a naked musician playing a familiar melody, in front of works that belong to a grey area between modernist aspirations and Nazi enthusiasm, combining a taste for the exotic and local patriotism, religious fervour and eroticism. Jasmina Cibic questions the use of culture in times of political and ideological crisis, filming, for example, at the PCF headquarters in Paris, built by Oscar Niemeyer, the story of a competition for the perfect gift that could heal a broken nation. It examines both the ideals of the past and their collapse in the face of the rise of populism, and the concept of the nation, weakened as a political category but reactivated by right-wing populism. In Rome, Madrid and Paris, Iván Argote has created three 'anticipatory actions', performances that open up a space for public discussion. In so doing, he questioned the history, functions and possible futures of monuments, like so many colonial icons that still define the identity of modern European cities today. In the collective film "L'exploitation ou comment percer la surface", a restorer analyses a Renaissance painting. Working on the subject of mining, she goes beyond the surface of the painting to ask questions about the contemporary extraction of resources.