Paris Programme
Tuesday, 25 November 2025
Today, Rencontres Internationales Paris/Berlin invites you to the Institut du monde arabe for four special screenings, free admission, at 2 pm, 4 pm, 6 pm and 8 pm.
Screening
Institut du monde arabe
1 rue des Fossés Saint-Bernard - 75005 Paris / Metro: Jussieu, line 7 / Cardinal Lemoine, line 10
Free admission for all, subject to availability
Professional accreditation and youth badges: free priority access subject to availability
Reservations are not compulsory. You can attend a session without a reservation, subject to availability.
"De natura"
Pink Twins : Firewalk - Animation | dcp | color | 9:35 | Finland | 2025
Pink Twins
Firewalk
Animation | dcp | color | 9:35 | Finland | 2025
A pre-apocalyptic midnight walk takes you through a burning forest to witness a looming destruction. A fire in the forest either marks an impending doom or serves as a metaphysical gateway between realities.
Helsinki based duo Pink Twins, Juha and Vesa Vehviläinen, have worked in the fields of media art, moving image and electronic music since 1997. The boundaries of human perception, immersion and physicality are central to their works. Pink Twins implement their complex animations through parametric design and programming. Their works are performed not only in exhibitions and festival screenings but also as live performances combining music and video projections. Pink Twins have been seen on all continents, and in all kinds of venues from concert halls, festivals, theaters to churches. In recent years, Pink Twins have also made audio and video works directly online, e.g. the sound piece Infinity for Kiasma’s online art collection.
Laurence Favre : Zerzura - Experimental doc. | 16mm | color | 11:0 | Switzerland | 2024
Laurence Favre
Zerzura
Experimental doc. | 16mm | color | 11:0 | Switzerland | 2024
Named after a mythical lost oasis, Zerzura addresses questions on our relations to the non human: How do we perceive 'nature'? Is it a 'thing' to which we humans are external? Or are we all part of a mesh where there is no centre nor periphery? Can an assemblage of sounds and images invite us to see 'nature' as living, sentient and endowed with agentivity? Following 'Resistance' (2017) and 'Osmosis' (2022), 'Zerzura' closes the trilogy 'Corpus Animale'.
Laurence Favre is an artist, filmmaker and researcher. Her practice revolves around analog images, sounds and writings. She makes experimental films, installations and film performances, looking for ways of triggering epistemic changes through sensory perception. Her films are shown internationally in film festivals (Locarno Film Festival, Visions du Réel, Rotterdam IFFR, Ann Arbor Film Festival and others), in art spaces as well as in informal spaces and in the frame of symposiums. She has been awarded several artist grants and residencies. Laurence is an active member of the artist-run filmlab LaborBerlin, and a co-funder of SPECTRAL, a platform for the creation and diffusion of Expanded Cinematic Arts.
Tianming Zhou : Gan Tang, The Lake - Experimental doc. | 4k | color | 13:48 | China, USA | 2024
Tianming Zhou
Gan Tang, The Lake
Experimental doc. | 4k | color | 13:48 | China, USA | 2024
In the summer of 2023, the government of Jiujiang launched the Gan Tang Lake Cleansing Project. Within weeks, this ancient lake with over two millennia of history was drained. Nearby in Gan Tang Park, a boy wakes up in the rain. There, the destiny of Gan Tang awaits.
Tianming Zhou (Alaric) works with lens-based media, sound, and installation. He explores the in-between of physical and conceptual landscapes. His works have been showcased at Antimatter, Mimesis, Interfilm, Experiments in Cinema, Non-Syntax, Leiden Shorts, RPM Festival, etc.
Mark Salvatus : Should The Source Of Fulfillment Be Seen With Our Eyes - Experimental video | hdv | color | 16:25 | Philippines | 2024
Mark Salvatus
Should the Source of Fulfillment Be Seen with Our Eyes
Experimental video | hdv | color | 16:25 | Philippines | 2024
Kung ang Makagiginhawa ay Matingnan ng Ating mga Mata (Should the Source of Fulfillment Be Seen with Our Eyes) 2024 Exploring the ethno-ecologies of Mt. Banahaw—how the surrounding more-than-human world shapes and are shaped by cultural imaginations. It weaves together Salvatus’s ongoing research on the vernacular histories of Mt. Banahaw and Lucban, convened from family archives, popular history, and mythical motifs. It looks at several trajectories of millenarian renewal that converge in Mt. Banahaw as mystical and ethno-ecological topos: from a revolution that aimed to encourage the native folk to find their own idiom of religious discernment, a history of marching bands and musicians and their place in a postcolonial regional modernity, to Salvatus’s very own practice of assembly and salvaging that situates us in this shared mystical world, animates in us a planetary political spirit.
Mark Salvatus, a Filipino artist hailing from Lucban and residing in Manila, defines his extensive artistic approach as ‘Salvage Projects.’ This concept, echoing his surname, serves as a framework for his diverse investigations into the remnants of urban politics, the layered narratives of national history, and the ceaseless motion of contemporary life. Working across various disciplines—from objects and photography to video, installations, and participatory art—Salvatus crafts direct and indirect engagements that illuminate the multifaceted outcomes of energies, meanings, and experiences.
Saurav Ghimire : Songs Of Love And Hate - Experimental fiction | hdv | black and white | 16:52 | Nepal | 2024
Saurav Ghimire
Songs Of Love And Hate
Experimental fiction | hdv | black and white | 16:52 | Nepal | 2024
Prem, the charismatic host of a popular radio show offering advice on matters of the heart, is himself plagued by heartache. He seeks solace in the rugged mountains. As he goes through his own emotional upheaval, desperate calls from listeners asking him for advice echo through the wilderness. Both Prem and his audience try to navigate their way through the treacherous terrain of love. A gripping tale of emotional turmoil and self-discovery.
Saurav Ghimire is a Nepali audiovisual artist whose work explores boundaries in storytelling between fiction and documentary. His projects are edited using a mix of archival and live action footage, personal interviews, and collection of songs & poetry. Ghimire has been awarded the Visiting Artist Fellowship from the Laxmi Mittal South Asia Institute at Harvard University His short film, Songs of Love and Hate (17 mins, 2024), had its world premiere at the 74th Berlin International Film Festival where it was awarded Special Jury Mention. Similarly, his first short film, Barking Dogs (14 mins, 2021), was awarded Best Experimental Film at Tasveer South Asian Film Festival (USA) and Best Student Film at Pame Film Festival (Nepal). In addition to this, he has attended training programmes including the Locarno Basecamp Academy (Switzerland), the Odense Talent Camp (Denmark) and the Fantastic Film School BIFAN (South Korea).
Ali Yahya : Beneath Which Rivers Flow - Experimental doc. | mov | color and b&w | 16:0 | Iraq | 2025
Ali Yahya
BENEATH WHICH RIVERS FLOW
Experimental doc. | mov | color and b&w | 16:0 | Iraq | 2025
In the marshlands of southern Iraq, Ibrahim and his family live isolated from the rest of the world, deeply intertwined with the river, the reeds and the animals they tend. The quiet and withdrawn Ibrahim finds solace only in his buffalo, his one true companion. As Ibrahim’s world collapses, he must confront forces beyond his control that threaten not only his way of life but also the one living creature he truly understands.
Ali Yahya is an Iraqi filmmaker, born in 1994 in Baghdad, where he has lived and worked his entire life. His journey began after studying Psychology at the bachelor’s level. He later moved into visual arts, first as a graphic designer and then as a Creative Director at Becorp, one of Iraq’s leading creative agencies, where he continues to lead visual storytelling and cultural-visual projects. He is currently pursuing a master’s degree in Film. He uses film to explore the human experience, capturing the beauty and complexities of everyday life. Through his work, he brings the stories of his homeland to the world. His debut short film Beneath Which Rivers Flow (2025), shot in the marshlands of southern Iraq, blends poetic observation with lived reality, exploring the fragile relationship between a community and its disappearing landscape. The film premiered at the 75th Berlin International Film Festival, where it received a Special Mention from the jury.
Pink Twins deconstructs our perception of images, starting with a night-time walk through a forest on fire, pre-apocalyptic, a sign of a coming catastrophe, or a bridge between several realities. Laurence Favre raises the question of the relationship between nature and perception, and our belonging to a world where nature is endowed with sensitivity. Tianming Zhou films Gan Tang Lake, which was drained in the summer of 2023 on the orders of the Jiujiang provincial government – in just a few weeks, this thousand-year-old lake was dried up. Mark Salvatus explores the ethno-ecologies of Mount Banahaw in the Philippines. Drawing on family archives, folk tales and mythical motifs, he examines postcolonial regional modernity, in trajectories that converge towards the volcano, a mystical and shared topos. Saurav Ghimire scrutinises the functioning of relationships in Nepalese society, following the host of a radio programme devoted to love advice, who, heartbroken, disappears. In the marshes of southern Iraq, on the brink of environmental collapse, Ali Yahya follows Ibrahim and his only companion, a buffalo.
Screening
Institut du monde arabe
1 rue des Fossés Saint-Bernard - 75005 Paris / Metro: Jussieu, line 7 / Cardinal Lemoine, line 10
Free admission for all, subject to availability
Professional accreditation and youth badges: free priority access subject to availability
Reservations are not compulsory. You can attend a session without a reservation, subject to availability.
"On the Other Side"
Randa Maroufi : L’mina - Documentary | dcp | color | 26:0 | Morocco, France | 2025
Randa Maroufi
L’mina
Documentary | dcp | color | 26:0 | Morocco, France | 2025
Jerada is a mining town in Morocco where coal extraction, although officially halted in 2001, continues informally to this day. "L’mina" recreates the current work in informal mining pits using a set design created in collaboration with the town’s residents, who perform in their own roles.
Born in 1987 in Casablanca (Morocco), Randa Maroufi is a visual artist and filmmaker. She graduated from the Institut National des Beaux-Arts in Tétouan, the École Supérieure des Beaux-Arts d’Angers, and Le Fresnoy – Studio National des Arts Contemporains. In 2018, she became a fellow at the Académie de France à Madrid, Casa de Velázquez and the Villa Médicis in Rome in 2025. Her films Le Park (2015) and Bab Sebta (2019), awarded at several festivals, mark the beginning of a trilogy dedicated to three Moroccan cities. L’mina (2025) is the final chapter of this trilogy.
Kim Woong-yong : Gray Matter - Documentary | 4k | black and white | 16:42 | Korea, South | 2024
Kim Woong-yong
gray matter
Documentary | 4k | black and white | 16:42 | Korea, South | 2024
For Filipino migrant workers employed in factories on the outskirts of Seoul, home is both a place they have left behind and a paradoxical space of longing and fear—one that has been swept away by floods yet still haunts their memory. They are constantly being displaced, resettled, and set in motion, their sense of home inseparable from the movement of their own bodies.The sounds of factory machines, fragments of horror films, and mobile phone images intertwine into a narrative that unfolds within the migrant worker’s body itself. I began to imagine a home for those who are always drifting.
Woong Yong Kim studied film directing and contemporary art at the Geneva University of Art and Design (HEAD – Genève), Switzerland, and works across video installation and film. He has participated in several artist-in-residence programs, including the Digital Arts Studios in Belfast, CEEAC in Strasbourg, MMCA Goyang Residency, SeMA Nanji Studio, ACC, and as a visiting artist at the Rijksakademie. He completed the doctoral coursework in Film and Media Theory at Chung-Ang University’s Graduate School of Advanced Imaging Science. He also translated and published in Korean, Exhibiting the Moving Image (JRP|Ringier)
Mohamed Abdelkarim : Gazing...unseeing - Experimental fiction | mov | color | 7:50 | Egypt | 2021
Mohamed Abdelkarim
Gazing...Unseeing
Experimental fiction | mov | color | 7:50 | Egypt | 2021
The video speculates a future scenario demonstrated in a climate fiction narrative. The narrative is based on a pseudo interview with an imagined fugitive in a post-disaster era. Through different positions, ideological turns, and economic sovereignty, the interview imagines the future of the greens, governments, and private sectors in a post-flood city. The landscape and fiction narrative complicates the relationship between infrastructure, privatization, ecology, surveillance, and migration.
Abdelkarim is a visual artist, performer and cultural producer. After completing his M.A. at ECAV/Edhea, Switzerland, 2016 he turned towards producing text-based performances and became committed to performative practices based on multidisciplinary research, employing and reflecting on narrating, singing, detecting, doing, fictioning, and speculating. In Abdelkarim's performative works, the script bears witness to the research experience. The emphasis is on the process, as a reflection on production and cultural genealogy. This process is open-ended, and non-linear. His current umbrella project focuses on the agency of the landscape as a witness to "a history we missed and a future we have not yet attended" His performances have been included in Guild Master of Cabaret Voltaire, Manifesta 11, Zurich, 2016; Sofia Underground Performance Art Festival, Bulgaria, 2016; Photo Cairo 6th, Contemporary Image Collective (CIC), Egypt, 2017; Live Works Performance Act Award Vol. 5, 37° Edizione Drodesera, Trento, Italy, 2017; At the Crossroads of Different Pasts, Presents and Futures, Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Turin, Italy, 2018; Interazioni Festival, Rome, Italy, 2022; and Festival Internazionale della Performance, Performative 04, at MAXXI L'Aquila, 2024. As part of his performative practice, he established "Live Praxes", a performance encounter that includes workshops, seminars, and performance nights.
Resem Verkron, Marc Serena : As Aventuras Do Angosat - Fiction | mov | color | 35:0 | Angola | 2025
Resem Verkron, Marc Serena
AS AVENTURAS DO ANGOSAT
Fiction | mov | color | 35:0 | Angola | 2025
In 2017 Angola launched its first satellite into space… and it was shortly declared lost. As Aventuras do Angosat is thed dream born from that frustrated endeavour, in the form of a musical film written and performed by Isis Hembe, one of the leading names in Angolan urban music, here transformed into Man Ré. Filmed in a single take in the Cazenga district of Luanda with new emerging talents.
Resem Verkron (1999) is part of two leading prominent cultural movements in Luanda: the urban art collective Verkron Collective and Geração 80. His debut short, Lola & Mami (2021), explored toxic masculinity. Marc Serena (1983) codirected the award-winning documentary Tchindas (2015), broadcast on PBS in the United States. His feature El escritor de un país sin librerías premiered at l’Alternativa and won a DIG Award for outstanding European investigative journalism.
Randa Maroufi films Jerada, a mining town in Morocco where coal extraction, although officially halted in 2001, continues informally. She recreates the work in these mines, using a set created in collaboration with the town's inhabitants, who play themselves. In a workers' centre in Korea, Kim Woong-Yong translates the memories of Filipino migrant workers into gestures. Mohamed Abdelkarim imagines the futuristic scenario of a fictional climate story, based on a pseudo-interview with an imaginary fugitive in a post-apocalyptic world. In 2017, Angola launched Angosat, its first satellite, into space... which was lost. In a single sequence shot, Resem Verkron and Marc Serena reinterpret this dream with emerging artists from the streets of Luanda.
Special screening
Institut du monde arabe
1 rue des Fossés Saint-Bernard - 75005 Paris / Metro: Jussieu, line 7 / Cardinal Lemoine, line 10
Free admission for all, subject to availability
Professional accreditation and youth badges: free priority access subject to availability
Reservations are not compulsory. You can attend a session without a reservation, subject to availability.
"Absence"
Yosr Ben Messaoud : Envol - Video | hdv | color | 4:12 | Tunisia, France | 2024
Yosr Ben Messaoud
Envol
Video | hdv | color | 4:12 | Tunisia, France | 2024
In the dim light, the hand emerges like a fragment of presence, suspended between appearance and disappearance. It becomes a sensitive territory, brushed by a silent intimacy, unfolding like an open landscape, a place that welcomes what passes through without ever fully allowing itself to be grasped. The video then becomes a space of slowing down, where the gaze encounters a partial yet inhabited presence, crossed by a world in motion.
Yosr Ben Messaoud is a visual artist working between France and Tunisia. She is currently studying at the École des Beaux-Arts de Paris, after completing a degree in contemporary art and the humanities at the University of Vincennes. Her work includes video, photography, drawing, and installations, as well as hybrid forms that move between these different modes of expression. The variety of operative forms conveys an aesthetics of openness and suspension, where one is called upon to become a bridge, to welcome alterity in order to allow a new form of communion to emerge. In her practice, she examines questions related to the displacement of narratives and their survival, beginning from the intimate, through the creation of dispositifs conceived both as systems of reception, containers of experience, and circuits of narration—structures that become inhabited by what surrounds them. The axes shift incessantly between lived experience and affective facts, collected images and those that persist, the intimate and the collective voice, in order to reflect on the human condition—understood not as humanity at the centre of the world, but as part of its sensitive order, material, and social
Sina Khani : Watch With The Weary Ones - Experimental doc. | 4k | color | 7:29 | Iran | 2025
Sina Khani
Watch With the Weary Ones
Experimental doc. | 4k | color | 7:29 | Iran | 2025
Watch with the Weary Ones is a short documentary that looks at the American urban landscape while the filmmaker quietly drifts back to memories of Iran. It places the surfaces of U.S. cities next to the feelings of someone living far from home, caught between two places. The film reflects on the sorrow carried by those who left Iran searching for another life, and those who stayed and continue to fight for theirs. It’s about holding two worlds at once, the one in front of you and the one that never leaves you, and trying to make sense of that weight
Sina Khani (aka Sina Ahmadkhani) is a Tehran-born, Los Angeles–based filmmaker, writer, and editor. His feature debut won Best International Experimental Feature at the Portoviejo Film Festival and earned awards, nominations, and selections at Regina IFF, Toronto International Nollywood FF, New York City Indie FF, and many other international festivals. He recently completed his MFA at Virginia Commonwealth University and continues to create bold, character-driven stories.
Samy Benammar, Mohamad Awad : Adieu Ugarit - Documentary | 16mm | black and white | 15:45 | Canada | 2024
Samy Benammar, Mohamad Awad
Adieu Ugarit
Documentary | 16mm | black and white | 15:45 | Canada | 2024
In 2012, Mohamed had seen his best friend shot dead by an armed militia on the outskirts of Damascus, Syria; the blood spilled in the lake contaminated his memory. Ten years on, the reflections on the Laurentian waters revive Mohamed's trauma. I ask him if he'd like to dredge up the memories, repair the pain by retreating for a few days to the most distressing calm he can find. He talks about death, immigration and anger. We wonder how and why we should recount this story.
Samy Benammar is a filmmaker, photographer, and art critic based between Montreal and Marseille. Drawing from his Algerian roots and working-class upbringing, his work blends a reflective documentary approach with tactile experimentation. He seeks a form of visual reconciliation while underscoring the irreparable fractures left by fantasies of the past. Often hovering on the edge of disappearance, his images explore the tension between physical and imagined space, between memory, identity, and stone. He has served on the editorial boards of Hors Champ, 24 images, and Panorama-cinéma, and is currently pursuing a PhD on colonial photography in the Aurès region of Algeria.
Mariam Ghani : There S A Hole In The World Where You Used To Be - Video | 35mm | color and b&w | 15:31 | USA, Afghanistan | 2025
Mariam Ghani
There S A Hole In The World Where You Used To Be
Video | 35mm | color and b&w | 15:31 | USA, Afghanistan | 2025
THERE'S A HOLE IN THE WORLD WHERE YOU USED TO BE is a short film about memory and mourning. It departs from the premise that both grief and black holes are so dense and intense that they bend space and time around their specific gravity - each absence both a wound in the heart and a hole in the world.
Mariam Ghani is an artist and filmmaker. Her films, public projects, and installations have been presented worldwide, notably in Times Square and LaGuardia Airport; the Tate Modern, Guggenheim, MoMA, Smithsonian, Secession, CCCB, and Metropolitan Museums; Documenta 13 and the Liverpool, Lahore, Yinchuan, and Sharjah Biennials; the Berlinale, Rotterdam, CPH:DOX, SFFILM, DOC NYC, Jih.lava, BlackStar, and Ann Arbor film festivals; theatrically and streaming on Ovid, Criterion and Docuseek.
Taiki Sakpisit : The Spirit Level - Experimental video | 4k | color and b&w | 20:30 | Thailand | 2024
Taiki Sakpisit
The Spirit Level
Experimental video | 4k | color and b&w | 20:30 | Thailand | 2024
The Spirit Level meditates on the trauma and violence in the troubled Thailand reflected through the artist’s road trips across the northeastern region of Thailand along the Mekong River. The film begins with a downstream river that descends from Than Thong waterfall and flows into the Mekong River and explores the mythic underground cave that according to legend was a subterranean kingdom below the Mekong River where the divine Naga resides in the netherworld. At the heart of The Spirit Level is a frantic sequence of a spirit medium in the midst of possession. This epileptic episode emulates the optic feedback eliciting the trancelike revenant images as the spirited entity registers the medium’s body. Gradually the hallucinatory double images are disrupted by a freeze frame. This suspension of time occurs to commemorate the dislocated spirits of the three anti-government activists whose mutilated bodies were found in Mekong River in December 2019. The three men had been in exile since the 2014 coup d'état, until they were kidnapped by an officially sanctioned death squad. Their bodies were found handcuffed, disemboweled and stuffed with concrete blocks, wrapped in brown rice sacks and dumped into the Mekong River. It is one of countless forced disappearances and assassinations of political dissidents by the state since the 1970s and still ongoing and unresolved. The Spirit Level alludes to the undercurrents of darkness that ripple beneath the surface of problematic Thailand.
Taiki Sakpisit (???? ?????????????) is a filmmaker and visual artist based in Bangkok, renowned for his innovative approach to storytelling and his profound exploration of Thailand’s complex history. Through the lens of cinema, Sakpisit unpacks the nation's turbulent past, infusing his experimental films with a subtle yet resounding political commitment. His works delve into the underlying tensions, conflicts, and anticipations of contemporary Thailand, meticulously crafted through precise and sensorially overwhelming audio-visual assemblage. Utilizing a diverse array of sounds and images, Sakpisit creates immersive experiences that challenge conventional narratives and provoke thought. His feature-length film The Edge of Daybreak won the FIPRESCI award at the International Film Festival Rotterdam for its for its “Mysterious atmosphere and rich imagery in depicting trauma and violence, for its capacity of dealing with 40 years of political turmoil through a powerful and hypnotic cinematic journey, and for its compromise with the past in order to confront the present and the next future.” His recent works have been showcased at the 14th Gwangju Biennale, the Museum of Contemporary Art Busan, the 2024 Bangkok Art Biennale, the 14th Mercosul Biennial and Thailand Biennale.
Haythem Zakaria : Interstices Op.iii - Experimental video | 4k | black and white | 23:5 | Tunisia | 2024
Haythem Zakaria
Interstices Op.III
Experimental video | 4k | black and white | 23:5 | Tunisia | 2024
Opus III explores the landscape of the Atlas Mountains as both a physical territory and a symbolic topos. Filmed between Tunisia and Morocco, the work expands the research initiated in Opus I and II by confronting the visible landscape with its mythological echoes. The piece considers the Atlas not only as a geographical massif but as an archetypal figure shaped by recurring narratives, beliefs and collective memories. Through a slow and contemplative visual language, Opus III becomes a passage between the material presence of the mountains and the intangible layers of meaning that inhabit them. The work invites the viewer to shift perspective and enter a space where landscape, myth and perception intertwine.
Haythem Zakaria is a transdisciplinary artist and sound performer born in 1983 in Tunisia and based in France. Working across video, installation, photography, drawing and sound, he explores how landscapes, myths and forms of memory shape perception, and how the visible can open onto more elusive dimensions of experience. His practice is grounded in field research, slow temporalities and a refined attention to the resonance of places. Since 2010, his work has been presented internationally in major exhibitions, biennials and independent art spaces across Europe, North Africa, the Middle East, Asia and North America, including documenta 15, the Venice Biennale, the Japan Media Arts Festival, Cairotronica, Dream City, Kunstraum Kreuzberg/Bethanien, Casa Árabe and numerous institutions in Paris, London, Berlin, Beijing, Rabat, Tokyo and San Francisco. Recipient of the Grand Prize at the Japan Media Arts Festival for Interstices, Zakaria continues to develop research-based projects where image, sound and matter intersect, forming a space of inquiry into archetypes, memory and the thresholds between the visible and the unseen.
Yosr Ben Messaoud scrutinises familiar spaces that seem haunted by disappearance. Sina Ahmadkhani explores an American urban landscape, reflecting on her native country, grappling with the weight of grief and responsibility linked to the collective anguish that has affected Iranians. Samy Benammar follows the story of Mohamad, who in 2012 saw his best friend shot dead by a militia near a lake in the suburbs of Damascus, Syria. The spilled blood contaminated his memory. Ten years later, in Canada, reflections on a lake rekindle the trauma. Mariam Ghani questions memory and mourning, starting from the premise that grief, like black holes, is so dense that it bends space and time around its specific gravity—each absence being both a wound in the heart and a hole in the world. Taiki Sakpisit explores a mythical underground cave on the banks of the Mekong River, which, according to legend, was an underground kingdom where the divine Naga resided in the underworld. There he meets a shaman who seems possessed by the spirits of dissidents who died violent deaths. Haythem Zakaria explores the landscape of the Atlas Mountains, both as a place and as a subject.
Special screening
Institut du monde arabe
1 rue des Fossés Saint-Bernard - 75005 Paris / Metro: Jussieu, line 7 / Cardinal Lemoine, line 10
Free admission for all, subject to availability
Professional accreditation and youth badges: free priority access subject to availability
Reservations are not compulsory. You can attend a session without a reservation, subject to availability.
"The Melancholy of Birds"
Christoph Girardet : One Hundred Years Later - Experimental film | mov | black and white | 7:55 | Germany | 2025
Christoph Girardet
One Hundred Years Later
Experimental film | mov | black and white | 7:55 | Germany | 2025
In 1939, a second unit with a double and extras filmed scenes for the Hollywood classic “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington” in the Lincoln Memorial. The succession of the long, sorted-out plan sequences undermines the classic cinematic narration; the plot does not seem to progress. The neoclassical architecture remains the setting for a recurring and questionable ritual, in which the protagonist is lost.
Christoph Girardet, born in 1966, is a German video artist and filmmaker. Girardet makes both the accidentally found and the extensively researched found footage from the archives of film history the subject of his art. Montage, omissions, and repetitions reveal the actual structures and inner mechanism of the depicted cinematic reality. Beyond the analysis of the material and its clichés, his work deals in essence with a melancholic state of absence, thus creating an individual pictorial world. From 1988 to 1994, Girardet studied Visual Arts at the Braunschweig University of Art (HBK) in the film class of Birgit Hein. Since 1989 he has produced films, videos and video installations, some of them in collaboration with video artist Volker Schreiner (1994 – 2004), and, more frequently, in collaboration with filmmaker Matthias Müller (1999 – ongoing). Girardet has participated in group shows at the Stedelijk Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, MoMA PS1, New York, Palais de Tokyo, Paris, Hirshhorn Museum, Washington, and Eye Filmmuseum, Amsterdam, among others. He had solo exhibitions at institutions such as FACT, Liverpool, Kunstverein Hannover and West, The Hague. He has taken part in major film festivals worldwide, including the festivals at Cannes, Venice, Berlin, Toronto, Locarno, Oberhausen and Rotterdam. His work is included in public and private collections. He has received numerous awards, among them a stipend for the International Studio and Curatorial Program in New York (2000) and a scholarship at Villa Massimo in Rome (2004). He lives and works in Hanover, Germany.
Carlos Irijalba : Wanderers - Experimental doc. | 4k | color | 3:38 | Spain, Netherlands | 2025
Carlos Irijalba
Wanderers
Experimental doc. | 4k | color | 3:38 | Spain, Netherlands | 2025
Wanderers is a film centered in the way that matter (and our bodies as a result) are driven by magnetism, pulse or rhythm carried by the earths inertia. A primal movement of mineral origin, pre-life and pre-human. To do so, the film casts a universal perspective on the dynamics of birds, migration of bodies, and humans fascination with flying as a challenge for those laws. The film covers this abstract notion with two different contemporary phenomena, modern falconry flown on commercial airplanes and the passion of RC Replica airliner pilots, depicting the dichotomy between natural evolution, our physical materiality and the detachment from mundane reality and general force and gravity, those.
Carlos Irijalba Pamplona (SP) 1979 Resident at the Rijksacademie Van Beeldende Kunsten (Amsterdam) in 2013/2014, and Graduated at the UDK University with Professor Lothat Baumgarten, Irijalba has been awarded multiple art prizes like in 2023 the NYC Culture Pair Program with the Department of Design and Construction DDC, the Mondriaan Fonds 2022 in Amsterdam, the Sifting Foundation Art Grant 2015 in San Francisco y Marcelino Botin 2007/08 among others. He exhibited internationally in the Shanghai Biennale 2021, CAB Art Center Brussels, Guangzhou Triennale 2017 or MUMA Melbourne in Australia. To the question “Does the world need this new object?”, most of the times the answer would be “no”. Therefor the work of Irijalba moves by the principle of pertinence, trying to remain context responsive. In projects like Skins (2013), Hiatus (2022) and Pannotia (2016-ongoing) he works with geology and industrial time sensitive materials that give us perspective on the dominant narratives in Western history. His work is present in public collections as Museo Nacional Reina Sofia, The Netherlands National Collection, Sammlung Wemhoener Foundation in Germany, the Taviloglu Art Collection in Istambul and Acciona Foundation in Spain. His presence on private collections internationally is extensive in both North and South America, Europe and Asia like collection Pilar Citoler, Kells Collection, David Breskin Collection among many others.
Margit LukÁcs, Persijn Broersen : Lion S Court - Video | 0 | color | 20:0 | Netherlands | 2025
Margit LukÁcs, Persijn Broersen
Lion S Court
Video | 0 | color | 20:0 | Netherlands | 2025
Lion’s Court is a cinematic short opera in which the Binnenhof—the seat of Dutch Parliament in The Hague—is reimagined as a virtual stage where history dissolves into myth. Inspired by the discovery of 14th-century lion bones at the site and by stranded whales as omens, Lukács & Broersen collaborated with composer and political scientist Bram Kortekaas to reinterpret Goethe’s Faust’s vision of redemption. At its center stands the lion Faust, sung by baritone Michael Wilmering—a despot in pursuit of a freedom that consumes itself, a mirror of imperial ambition on the verge of collapse. The artists also drew on the 1650 writings of Johan de Witt, the republican Grand Pensionary, whose words are voiced by the whale (alto-mezzo Carina Vinke), rising from beneath the flooded foundations of the Binnenhof. De Witt believed that a true republic is not ruled by the whims of a single individual, but rooted in the principles of freedom and equality—the very foundations of democracy. In Lion’s Court, a digital hortus conclusus unfolds: a fluid, enclosed world where power, morality, and prophecy converge, and where the myths of the past reverberate through the politics of the present.
Margit Lukács and Persijn Broersen are an Amsterdam-based artist duo exploring the entanglements between nature, culture, and technology. Their work includes films, digital animations, and spatial installations that investigate how media shapes our perception of the natural world. Graduates of Graphic Design at the Gerrit Rietveld Academie, they completed their MFA at the Sandberg Institute and were artists-in-residence at the Rijksakademie in Amsterdam. Broersen & Lukács’ practice is rooted in media theory, art history, and mythology. Drawing from cinematic, scientific, and historical sources, they reimagine landscapes and natural phenomena through digitally layered environments. Their work often reflects on the politics of representation and the appropriation of nature, reconfiguring dominant narratives through fragmented, multi-perspective storytelling. Their installations and films have been widely shown internationally, including at the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam (NL), Centre Pompidou (FR), FOAM (NL), MUHKA (BE), Centraal Museum (NL), MacKenzie Art Gallery (CA), WRO Biennale (PL), Biennale of Sydney (AU), Rencontres Internationales (HKW Berlin, Louvre/Grand Palais/CWBP, Paris), and Wuzhen Biennale (CN). In 2024, they represented the Netherlands at the Gwangju Biennale. Their film I Wan’na Be Like You was nominated for the Tiger Award/IFFR 2024.
Lin Htet Aung : A Metamorphosis - Experimental fiction | 0 | color | 16:36 | Myanmar | 2024
Lin Htet Aung
A Metamorphosis
Experimental fiction | 0 | color | 16:36 | Myanmar | 2024
In the houses, after parting, Mothers were made up of tears. Sons were transformed into empty glass cups. And the lullabies became a curse. The film examines the suffering and resilience of the Burmese people by using the distinct political elements that have floated for several years on the ocean of political opera under repetitive military dictatorships in Myanmar. The visual composition draws on the colors of Myanmar’s national flag, adopted in 2010 during the country’s so-called transition period. This flag, rooted in the 2008 Constitution forced upon the country by a former military dictator, contrasts sharply with the earlier 1974 State Flag Law, as it includes a formal definition of the flag. The film deconstructs and questions the existing definition of the flag by playing with the colors, objects, and sequences, by using a form of Government Propaganda Television Footage showing different generations under repetitive military dictatorships, by mixing the chilling voice of the current dictator, Min Aung Hlaing, narrating haunting lullabies through AI technology. The film also revisits the song which was sung from the last footage of actual footage of a birthday party celebration for Myanmar’s former dictator, General Ne Win, held at Sedona Hotel in Yangon on March 21, 2001, one year before his death.
Lin Htet Aung (b. 1998) is a filmmaker from Myanmar. He began with avant-garde poetry before transitioning to filmmaking in 2017. His short films have been selected at several international film festivals, including New York Film Festival, Vancouver, Tirana, Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, International Film Festival Rotterdam and won several awards, including the TIGER SHORT AWARD at International Film Festival Rotterdam IFFR. An alumnus of TIFF Directors’ Lab, Berlinale Talents, Locarno Filmmakers Academy, Asian Film Academy, and a Prince Claus Seed Awardee 2023, he is now developing his debut feature, Making A Sea, which received the Asian Cinema Fund and Red Sea Award at Asian Project Market (APM). After the coup in 2021, he joined the CDM (Civil Disobedience Movement) for his Engineering study in Myanmar, and currently studying at Städelschule art School, Germany.
Antoine Chapon : Al Basateen - Documentary | dcp | color | 24:41 | France | 2025
Antoine Chapon
Al Basateen
Documentary | dcp | color | 24:41 | France | 2025
In 2015, the Basateen al-Razi district of Damascus was razed to the ground as punishment for the population’s uprising against Bashar al-Assad’s regime. This area is set to be replaced by Marota City, a modern and connected district featuring 80 skyscrapers. Ten years later, having lost everything, two former residents reflect on their neighborhood, where their homes and the oldest orchards in Damascus once stood. Through their testimonies and the repurposing of regime-produced 3D animations, memory is awakened and resists this deliberate erasure.
Antoine Chapon (b. 1990, France) is a filmmaker and multidisciplinary artist. His work creates hybrid forms using cinema, CGI animation and archives. His first short film "My Own Landscapes" premiered in Visions du Reel where it won the Best Short Film Award. It was then selected in more than 40 festivals, such as Sundance, Telluride, Palm Springs, Sarajevo and Premiers Plans. His work has been showcased at ZKM|Karlsruhe, Centre Pompidou, the 17th Venice Architecture Biennale and the Singapore Art Museum. He is a Berlinale Talents alumnus and he is currently writing his first feature documentary.
Dina Mimi, Mimi : The Melancholy Of This Useless Afternoon Ii - Experimental film | mov | black and white | 13:0 | Palestine | 2022
Dina Mimi, Mimi
The Melancholy of this useless afternoon II
Experimental film | mov | black and white | 13:0 | Palestine | 2022
The Melancholy of this Useless Afternoon, chapter 2 (2023, 11:25) explores the shared gestures between the fugitive and the smuggler, and their relationship to being seen. The melancholy of this useless afternoon researches the links between the fugitive and the smuggler, their shared gestures and relationships to being seen. By escape and flight, risking capture or death, the fugitive works to keep themself hidden. The smuggler, however, moves with stealth, using gestures to hide things, often close to their body.
Dina Mimi is a Palestinian visual artist and filmmaker who is based between Palestine and the Netherlands. Mimi works with experimental filmmaking and lecture performances that research the question of how and when bodies become sites of resistance. This question finds its material interest in moving images, especially found footage, that is discarded and therefore deemed invaluable. Understanding editing as a playground, Mimi plays with opacity in moving images by seeking to brush up against footage which desires to be ungraspable or is in the act of vanishing. This is a continuous attempt at non-linear narration as a way of disfiguring one’s.
Christoph Girardet sape la narration cinématographique habituelle du film classique hollywoodien « Mr. Smith au Sénat ». L'intrigue ne progresse pas, l'architecture néoclassique du Lincoln Memorial devient le décor d’un rituel, où le protagoniste se perd entre les piliers du bâtiment. Carlos Irijalba examine les mouvements entre matière animée et inanimée, et leurs déplacements sous l’effet de la gravité ou au travers de cycles géologiques. Broersen & Lukács représente le Parlement néerlandais à la Haye en ruine numérique, et, en son centre, le lion Faust, figure spectrale en quête d'une liberté qui se dévore elle-même, au bord de l'effondrement. Lin Htet Aung examine la souffrance et la résilience du peuple birman, au travers d’extraits d’émissions diffusées à la télévision nationale. En 2015, à Damas, le quartier de Basateen al-Razi et ses vergers ont été rasés pour punir la population qui s'était soulevée contre le régime. Antoine Chapon filme deux anciens habitants qui se souviennent de leur vie dans ce quartier. Dina Mimi, dans son film tourné en Palestine, en Jordanie et aux Pays-Bas, explore les gestes communs au fugitif et au passeur.