Paris Programme
Wednesday, 26 November 2025
Today, Rencontres Internationales Paris/Berlin invites you to the Musée de la Chasse et de la Nature for four special screenings, free admission, at 2 pm, 4 pm, 6 pm and 8 pm.
Screening
Musée de la Chasse et de la Nature
62 rue des Archives - 75003 Paris / Metro: Hôtel de Ville, line 1 / Rambuteau, line 11 / Arts et Métiers, lines 3 and 11 / Etienne Marcel, line 4
Free admission for all, subject to availability
Professional accreditation and youth badges: free priority access subject to availability
"Assignments"
Lucia Prancha : Charles - Experimental doc. | hdv | black and white | 2:38 | Portugal, USA | 2025
Lucia Prancha
CHARLES
Experimental doc. | hdv | black and white | 2:38 | Portugal, USA | 2025
Do you remember the scene in Killer of Sheep (1978) where the kids are playing on abandoned railroad tracks? The scene is set in the Watts neighborhood in California. Director Charles Burnett took the artist Lúcia Prancha to several filming locations from his works around Los Angeles.
Lúcia Prancha (1985, Lisboa) is an artist who lives and works in Barcelona. Lúcia graduated in Painting from FBAUL (2009, PT) and obtained her Masters in Arts from CalArts–California Institute of the Arts (2015, USA). Her work was exhibited at Pavilhão Branco, Museu da Cidade, Lisbon; 19 Crac de Montbéliard; Centro de Arte Oliva; Sesc-Pompeia, Sao Paulo; LACA – Los Angeles Contemporary Archives; Hordaland Kunstsenter, Bergen; Serralves Foundation, Porto; Galeria Dynamo, Porto; Galeria Leme, São Paulo; Berardo Museum and São Paulo Biennial. Her videos were screened at the Cinemateca Portuguesa; INTERSECCIÓN, Coruña; Curtas Vila do Conde; Rencontres Internationales Nouveau Cinéma et Art Contemporain de Paris and, Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin. Currently, she is part of "El vértigo de las imágenes", XVIII Bienal Internacional de Fotografía–Fotonoviembre at TEA–Tenerife Espacio de las Artes and Centro de Fotografía Isla de Tenerife, ES. From September to November, she will be in artistic residency at the Cité Internationale des Arts in Paris.
Ewa Effiom : When One Door Opens - Experimental doc. | mp4 | color | 10:44 | Belgium, United Kingdom | 2024
Ewa Effiom
WHEN ONE DOOR OPENS
Experimental doc. | mp4 | color | 10:44 | Belgium, United Kingdom | 2024
WHEN ONE DOOR OPENS emerges as an exploration of the intricate dynamics between authorship, representation, and history. Drawing inspiration from the groundbreaking methodologies of Arthur Jafa and the evocative aesthetics of Christian Marclay. Eschewing from the conventional confines of mainstream cinema, the filmwork delves deep into the rich tapestry of found footage, excavating and appropriating the untold narratives embedded within race films predominantly from the period immediately after the pre-Code era. In this respect it presents itself as a counterpoint to established somewhat one-dimensional work of Marclay. Through a, seemingly circuitous, narrative lens, WHEN ONE DOOR OPENS challenges conventional notions of identity and belonging, inviting viewers to confront the complexities of historical representation. Each frame serves as a portal to a bygone era, where characters navigate through the architectural spaces of both literal and metaphorical significance. The film's exploration of movement within these spaces resonates with profound symbolism, illustrating the transformative power of cinematic storytelling. Ultimately, standing as a testament to the enduring allure of cinema and the implied spaces as a medium for capturing and reimagining the complexities of human experience.
EWA EFFIOM is a London-based Belgo-Nigerian architect, writer and producer. Image Culture, Futurism and Mythology are recurring themes in his work with a focus on their association to space. He was a member of the Architecture Foundation’s New Architecture Writers’ second cohort which culminated in a critically acclaimed public programme and has been published in the Architect’s Newspaper, Dwell, the AJ, ICON, Wallpaper, Frame, OnOffice, Architecture Aujourd'hui, the Modern House magazine, A Daily Dose and Ex Libris amongst others. His piece Architecture, Buildings and Conservation in MAJA was nominated for best piece in the 2022 Estonian Architecture Awards a year after he came second place in the Tallinn Architecture Biennale’s 2021 Curatorial Competition with a proposal entitled Adaptive Re-use. His film Eagle Mansions was premiered at the 2021 Urban Film Festival in Perth and screened at 2022 Melbourne Design Week, before he was awarded the 2022 How To Residency at the Canadian Centre for Architecture entitled “How Not To Be A Developer.” 2022 was also the year that his second film “Beck Road” premiered at the Open City festival before screening at the 18th Venice Architecture Biennale. He was a 2023 LINA Fellow and awarded both the Film Lab residency at the MAXXI Museum in Rome where he made “When One Door Opens” which screened at Demanio Marritimo-278 before being shown at restless architecture exhibition curated by Diller Scofidio and Renfro at the MAXXI Museum. He also took part in the Theatrum Mundi Staging Ground Residency with his collaborative exploration of infrastructural change in Paris in the aftermath of the Olympics. He later returned to LINA to give the State of Architecture Address in 2025 which was met with critical acclaim which was a plea for the archtiecture industry to return to imagination. Though he hasn’t been a lecturer at MA in Architecture + Urbanism at the Manchester School of Architecture since 2022, he is still a visiting critic at the Estonian Institute of Technology and London Metropolitan University.
Maryam Tafakory : Razeh-del - Experimental doc. | 0 | color | 27:47 | Iran | 2024
Maryam Tafakory
Razeh-Del
Experimental doc. | 0 | color | 27:47 | Iran | 2024
In 1998, two schoolgirls sent a letter to Iran's first-ever women’s newspaper. While they waited to be published, they considered making an impossible film. Using citations and image intervention, Razeh-del journeys through parallel histories of war on images of women.
Maryam Tafakory, born and raised in Iran, works with film and performance. Solo screenings of her work include MoMA, BOZAR, NGA, Washington DC, and Academy Museum, among others. Selected group events include Tate Modern, Cannes’ Directors Fortnight, New York Film Festival, Locarno Film Festival, Toronto International Film Festival. She was awarded the Gold Hugo at the 58th Chicago Int’l Film Festival, Tiger Short Award at the 51st IFFR, and Best Experimental Film at the 70th and 71st MIFF. She was the 2024 winner of the Film London Jarman Award.
Yana Osman, Anton Khamchishkin : Pwéra úsog - Experimental doc. | mov | color and b&w | 19:50 | Afghanistan, Russia | 2025
Yana Osman, Anton Khamchishkin
Pwéra úsog
Experimental doc. | mov | color and b&w | 19:50 | Afghanistan, Russia | 2025
Pwe?ra u?sog (2025). 19 min dir. Yana Osman, Anton Khamchishkin In 1945, in Paris, the Women’s International Democratic Federation (WIDF) was founded. According to historian Francisca de Haan, it was “the largest and probably the most influential international women’s organization of the post–World War II era.” Today, assessments of the organization’s legacy remain contested. Some scholars, citing reports from the FBI and the House Un-American Activities Committee, describe WIDF as a communist attempt to manipulate women. Others view it as a movement advocating for women’s rights, and researchers like Elizabeth Armstrong note WIDF’s role in anti-colonial and anti-racist struggles led by women in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. In 1987, during the Perestroika era, WIDF organized the World Congress of Women in Moscow, under the slogan: “Toward 2000 — Without Nuclear Weapons! For Peace, Equality, Development!” The congress brought together 2,800 women from 150 countries. Among them, there was the protagonist’s grandmother, an interpreter who collected words from global conversations that had no equivalents in other languages. Revisiting her notes, archival footage, and sites of official delegations, the protagonist is guided by these fragments to a question: what words can capture the present, when language itself slips away, dissolves, and borrowed slogans drown out one’s voice?
Yana Osman, Anton Khamchishkin (Afghanistan, Russia) — artists and filmmakers. Work with gaps in storytelling, filling in the unsaid and uncovering narratives suspended between real and imaginary, facts and speculation. Their films were selected at Hong Kong Film Festival, DOK Leipzig, Slamdance, Rencontres Internationales Paris/Berlin, as well as supported by CNC, Cité Internationale des Arts, Usage du Monde au 21ème siècle, Institut Français, among others.
Eline De Clercq, Anne Reyniers : Gesamthof / A Lesbian Garden - Experimental film | mov | color | 15:0 | Belgium | 2021
Eline De Clercq, Anne Reyniers
Gesamthof / A Lesbian Garden
Experimental film | mov | color | 15:0 | Belgium | 2021
This short film talks about the Gesamthof / A lesbian garden, an art-nature project in Antwerp between the walls of an old monastery. In this audiovisual time document, we follow a guided tour by Eline De Clercq, the driving force of the garden project. The garden provides an entry point to talk about diverse topics such as colonialism in botany, the ambiguity of naming, the social expectations of women and the search for a lesbian identity. This garden is inspired by the books of ecofeminists and other writers, like Donna Haraway, Robin Wall Kimmerer, Jamaica Kincaid, Virginia Woolf and many others. The collaboration between the two artists Anne and Eline started in the Gesamthof, where the two first met, and continues today in various gardens.
Anne Reijniers (1992, Belgium) is a filmmaker based in Antwerp. Her collaborative practice questions colonial history, the occupation of public space and the ethics of collaboration. Anne holds a Master's degree in Audiovisual Arts from LUCA School of Arts in Brussels and KASK in Ghent. Her collaborative films, made with Collectif Faire-Part, have been screened in several national and international film festivals and exhibitions. With the film Faire-part, she won several awards, including at the Montreal International Documentary Festival, the Congo International Film Festival, and the Brussels Art Film Festival. Eline De Clercq (1979, Belgium) in Antwerp I have a studio next to a monastery garden where I cared for the Gesamthof from 2019 to 2025. Trained as a painter I expand my practice in other mediums like gardening, film, writing, ceramics. I like to work in collaboration with other artists and often create community related events like the Homesick Tea Gathering. Several of my projects focus on antiracial and anti-misogynist topics, with extra care for intersectional realities. Since 2022 I work as an artistic researcher at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts Antwerp.
Erin Johnson : The Ferns - Experimental video | mov | color | 15:53 | USA | 2025
Erin Johnson
The Ferns
Experimental video | mov | color | 15:53 | USA | 2025
Set against the impending closure of Duke University’s century-old herbarium—home to over 825,000 dried plant specimens—The Ferns weaves together personal, political, and scientific narratives to explore the entangled histories of botany, identity, and resistance. At the film’s center are Kathleen Pryer, the herbarium’s director, and feminist theorist Banu Subramaniam. As one recounts naming a group of ferns after pop icon Lady Gaga—a decision rooted in queer identification—she opens deeper conversations about naming and categorization. The other traces how colonial sexual norms have long shaped botanical science, imposing binary gender onto plants and erasing more fluid, diverse reproductive systems. Woven between the two are drag performers who animate the herbarium’s archive, lip-syncing to Poker Face in glittering Gaga-inspired costumes among the rows of dried specimens. They become the Gaga ferns—blurring science and fantasy, taxonomy and play. Shot in North Carolina, where anti-LGBTQ+ legislation continues to threaten queer and trans lives, The Ferns situates the herbarium not just as a site of preservation, but as a stage for contesting dominant narratives. Special thanks to Dr. Banu Subramaniam and Dr. Kathleen Pryer for sharing their work, as well as performers Lotus Lolita, Portia Foxx, and Poison. Thank you to Assistant Director Vida Zamora and editor Rafe Scobey-tahl.
Erin Johnson is an artist and filmmaker based in New York, NY. Johnson received an MFA and a Certificate in New Media from the University of California, Berkeley in 2013, attended the Skowhegan School of Painting & Sculpture in 2019, and has participated in residencies at the Jan van Eyck Academie (Maastricht, NL), Lower Manhattan Cultural Council (New York, NY), Hidrante (San Juan, PR), Lighthouse Works (Fishers Island, NY), among others. She was a 2024 Working Artist Fellow at Pioneer Works (Brooklyn, NY). Her work has been exhibited or screened at venues including e-flux (New York, NY), BOAN1942 ARTSPACE (Seoul, KR), BOFFO (Fire Island, NY), Rencontres Internationales (Paris, FR / Berlin, DE), BIENALSUR (Buenos Aires, AR), MOCA (Toronto, CA), Munchmuseet (Oslo, NO), Sanatorium (Istanbul, TR), Times Square Arts (New York, NY), etc. galerie (Prague, CZ), Cinalfama (Lisbon, PT), deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum (Lincoln, MA), Billytown (The Hague, NL), Galleria Eugenia Delfini (Rome, IT), and REDCAT (Los Angeles, CA). Johnson is the Undergraduate Director and faculty member of the Studio Art Program at New York University.
Yana Osman and Anton Khamchishkin examine the legacy of the International Democratic Federation of Women, founded in Paris in 1945 and very active during the Cold War. In 1987, at the height of Perestroika, the FDIF organised a World Women's Congress for Disarmament in Moscow, which brought together 2,800 women from 150 countries. A translator noted down untranslatable words that conveyed a unique truth. Maryam Tafakory tells the story of Zan, Iran's first women's newspaper, whose brief publication in the late 1990s inspired two students to propose a film. Images of women appear and dissolve, stifled by inscriptions quoting angry responses from male readers and words of support from women dreaming of an impossible cinema. Erin Johnson uses the herbarium as a stage to challenge dominant narratives, in which sexual and colonial norms have long shaped botanical science. Eline De Clercq and Anne Reyniers present a garden that serves as a starting point for addressing colonialism in botany, the ambiguity of names, and the search for a lesbian identity. Ewa Effiom explores notions of identity and belonging based on American film sequences from the 1930s. Lucia Prancha is taken by Charles Burnett to the locations of his films in Los Angeles for a critical examination of railway lines as imagery of progress.
Screening
Musée de la Chasse et de la Nature
62 rue des Archives - 75003 Paris / Metro: Hôtel de Ville, line 1 / Rambuteau, line 11 / Arts et Métiers, lines 3 and 11 / Etienne Marcel, line 4
Free admission for all, subject to availability
Professional accreditation and youth badges: free priority access subject to availability
"Existential"
Andro Eradze : Flowering And Fading - Experimental film | 0 | color | 16:22 | Georgia | 2024
Andro Eradze
Flowering And Fading
Experimental film | 0 | color | 16:22 | Georgia | 2024
A dog and a human share sleep in the twilight of a calm house. Suddenly, the shapes of reality start to blur, and slowly, dream and fantasy take over. In his latest work, Andro Eradze shapes a new vision of surrealism, where impeccable image composition and a stunning sound work strike directly at the subconscious, submerging the senses in an ocean of absolute beauty.
Andro Eradze (b. 1993, Tbilisi, Georgia) is an artist and filmmaker whose multidisciplinary practice investigates the intersection of presence, memory, and spectrality. Through photography, installation, video, and experimental cinema, Eradze explores the agency of non-human entities within landscapes that blur the boundaries between human and non-human experiences. His projects often evoke liminal spaces, exploring the unexpected actions and relations among objects, plants, and animals. He took part in several solo and group exhibitions and screenings in international institutions including MoMA PS1, New York; The 59th Venice Biennale, Venice; The New Museum, New York; WIELS Contemporary Art Center, Brussels; GAMeC, Bergamo; 22nd Biennial Sesc_Videobrasil, Sao Paulo; 14th Kaunas Biennial, Lithuania; Fondation Vincent van Gogh Arles.
Claire Lance : A Homeward Bound - Experimental fiction | hdv | black and white | 9:9 | France | 2024
Claire Lance
A Homeward Bound
Experimental fiction | hdv | black and white | 9:9 | France | 2024
Through a hypnotic single-shot sequence, we are transported to the heart of a house, where negative black and white unveil an indefinite space between memory and bewilderment. Fluctuating beneath the social veneer, the gaze undergoes a metamorphosis as the house reveals its secrets; the walls themselves seem to whisper forgotten tales and unspeakable truths.
Claire Lance (born in 1987, France) is an artist who uses mediums closely related to human optics. Her projects explore cognition and the persistence of cultural images in perception through video, installation, and photography. Evolving over time, Lance's works often operate in a manner reminiscent of Rorschach tests, revealing what is generally invisible or described as intangible or non-objective. The global city, where scales and dimensions intersect in successive layers, creates virtual, intangible spaces accessible only to the eye. These indeterminate yet familiar places invoke the metaphor and persistence of images that we individually and culturally carry within us as viewers. Her works have been exhibited at the Ofr gallery in Paris, at the 39th FIFA in Montreal, Kurzfilmvoche Regesnburg, Germany, and have been featured multiple times in the British magazine Carpark. In 2023, she was invited by the CIRM (Centre International de Recherche Mathématiques) for a workshop titled 'Maths and Art: Common Creation'. She holds a master's degree in Practice and Theory of Contemporary Art from the Université Paris 8 Sorbonne. She has collaborated with various film directors as cinematographer on set, and commissioned works with press titles such as L’Obs, Trax, Technikart.
Denis CÔtÉ : Jours Avant La Mort De Nicky - Experimental fiction | dcp | color and b&w | 19:30 | Canada | 2024
Denis CÔtÉ
Jours avant la mort de Nicky
Experimental fiction | dcp | color and b&w | 19:30 | Canada | 2024
Behind the wheel of her little car, Nicky seems to be on a mission. Roads pass by but the ideas in her head remain unfathomable. A meal, the discovery of a rifle, chance encounters: the mystery remains unsolved.
In the 90s, he shot some fifteen short films, then worked as a journalist and film critic before directing his first feature Les états nordiques in 2005. His 4th feature, Carcasses (2009), was presented at the Directors' Fortnight in Cannes, while Curling, won top honors at the Locarno Festival in 2010. Vic+Flo ont vu un ours (2013) won the Silver Bear at the Berlinale in Germany for its innovation. Also at the Berlinale, he presented four features in the Official Competition. Denis Côté's singular films have been shown at hundreds of cinematic events, as well as being the subject of some forty retrospectives around the world.
Cathy Lee Crane, John Di Stefano : Tra - Video | hdv | color | 5:35 | USA, Canada | 2024
Cathy Lee Crane, John Di Stefano
Tra
Video | hdv | color | 5:35 | USA, Canada | 2024
‘Tra' is an ode to Italian filmmaker Pier Paolo Pasolini. ‘Tra' synthesizes the narrative of his film ‘Teorema' (1968) by highlighting its interstitial moments. The act of running that appears throughout the film is isolated and deployed to expose the film’s subtextual currents.
John Di Stefano is an artist/filmmaker, writer, and curator whose work reconciles the personal with the social, the everyday with history through hybrid forms of documentary practices and the essayistic form. His work often deals with his immigrant past seen through a queer lens, including the feature-length 'You Are Here' (2009) which premiered at the Festival International du Documentaire (Marseille). His award-winning work has also been featured at the Videonale (Bonn), Whitechapel Gallery, Tensta Konsthall, Barcelona Museum of Modern Art, Para/Site (Hong Kong), and Anthology Film Archives. His critical writings appear in various international publications. He teaches at Concordia University (Montreal). Cathy Lee Crane is an experimental filmmaker whose work mines the historical archive to produce lyrical films of speculative history. She was a Guggenheim Fellow, and in 2015 her work enjoyed its first survey at the National Gallery of Art (Washington DC). Crane’s award-winning films –including 'Pasolini’s Last Words' (2012)– have screened at Viennale, Cinematheque Francais, BFI, and Arsenal/Berlin. Her interest in borders saw the release of 'Crossing Columbus' (2020) about the border town of Columbus, New Mexico which was supported by the Rockefeller Foundation and the Harun Farocki Institut in Berlin. She teaches at Ithaca College (New York).
Louis Rizzo Naudi : In Here - Experimental fiction | mov | color and b&w | 8:50 | United Kingdom | 2024
Louis Rizzo Naudi
In Here
Experimental fiction | mov | color and b&w | 8:50 | United Kingdom | 2024
“We dream of travelling through the universe… is the universe, however, not within us? We do not know the depths of our spirit. The mysterious path leads inwards. Eternity, with its worlds of past and future, is in us or nowhere. The outward world is the world of shadow; it throws its shadow into the realm of light. At present, it indeed appears so dark, lonely, formless inside; but how completely different it will seem to us when this eclipse has passed, and the body and shadow have moved away. We will enjoy more than ever, because our spirit has been deprived.” — Novalis, ‘Pollen’ (1798). Translated and adapted from the original German publication, with assistance from W. Hastie’s English translation in ‘Hymns and Thoughts on Religion’ (1888).
Louis Rizzo Naudi is a British-Maltese filmmaker. His practice explores the experience of the sublime and the constructed nature of visual perception, with his camera often focussed on natural phenomena, landscapes, and technology. He holds a B.A. in Film Studies from King’s College London, where he was awarded the Film Studies dissertation prize for his essay on the sublime in footage of the International Space Station, and an M.Sc. in Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology from the University of Oxford, where he researched how sublime experiences may lead to increased prosocial behaviours, such as generosity. His films have screened across Europe, including International Film Festival Rotterdam, Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, the British Film Institute, and the Tate St. Ives, and have also been used as relaxation aids in hospitals for patients undergoing medical procedures.
Stefan Koutzev : Restbestand - Documentary | 16mm | color | 19:24 | Bulgaria, Germany | 2025
Stefan Koutzev
Restbestand
Documentary | 16mm | color | 19:24 | Bulgaria, Germany | 2025
Within the haunting cycle of coffin mass production, human labor contrasts with the never-ending factory stock of coffins. In light of computer-aided manufacturing and the excessive overexploitation of natural resources, Unsold Copies longs for a moment of rest from the assembly line, while mankind continually buries itself in the remnants of a material world.
Stefan Koutzev is a Bulgarian filmmaker working and living in Cologne. His work focuses on narrative storytelling born between screenwriting and documentary practices, as well as the production of experimental films and sound design. His short films including RESTBESTAND (2025), HAUSPAUSEN (2024) or SCHWÄRMEN (2020), have been screened at DOK Leipzig, Odense International Film Festival, Beijing International Short Film Festival, Stockholm International Film Festival or Rencontres Internationales Paris/ Berlin. In 2026, he's about to present the world premier of his feature debut WHY HASN’T EVERYTHING DISAPPEARED YET, a hybrid, multilingual exploration of belonging, origin and migration.
Anouk Chambaz : Di Notte - Experimental film | 16mm | color | 8:10 | Switzerland, Slovenia | 2025
Anouk Chambaz
Di Notte
Experimental film | 16mm | color | 8:10 | Switzerland, Slovenia | 2025
It’s almost night on the mountain. A solitary car moves along the road. At the wheel, someone starts singing a strange lullaby
Anouk Chambaz (Renens, 1993) works with moving images, exploring the thresholds between spaces, dreams, and individuals. She holds a degree in cinema from ECAL, Lausanne, and in philosophy from La Sapienza, Rome. She received the Combat Prize (video) in 2022, and special mentions at the Francesco Fabbri Prize in 2023 and the Rio de Janeiro International Film Festival in 2024. In 2025 she is finalist for The Talent Prize.
Andro Eradze offers a surreal vision of a peaceful house at dusk. Claire Lance traverses a house in a single shot, treating it as a cinematic space where an undefined space concealing unspeakable truths is revealed. Denis Côté follows Nicky, who seems to be on a mission behind the wheel of his car. The thoughts in his head remain unfathomable. Cathy Lee Crane pays tribute to Pier Paolo Pasolini and his film ‘Theorem’, based on interstitial moments from the film. Louis Rizzo Naudi is interested in the constructed nature of visual perception of nature. Stefan Koutzev films human labour at a time of excessive overexploitation of natural resources, while humanity continually buries itself in the remains of a material world. Anouk Chambaz follows a solitary car driving along a mountain road at night. The driver begins to sing a strange lullaby...
Special screening
Musée de la Chasse et de la Nature
62 rue des Archives - 75003 Paris / Metro: Hôtel de Ville, line 1 / Rambuteau, line 11 / Arts et Métiers, lines 3 and 11 / Etienne Marcel, line 4
Free admission for all, subject to availability
Professional accreditation and youth badges: free priority access subject to availability
"Vivid Nature"
Bea De Visser : The Sonic Gaze - Multimedia installation | 0 | color | 6:10 | Netherlands | 2025
Bea De Visser
The Sonic Gaze
Multimedia installation | 0 | color | 6:10 | Netherlands | 2025
A horse is placed in an enclosed space on an aqua trainer treadmill, doubly enclosed by only the sound of splashing water. We hear much more than we see due to the recorded frequencies and the ambient range of the horse's hearing. Through pitch compression, specialized recording equipment and sound recordings far from the set, the horse's auditory experience has been made audible to humans. Its result is an acoustic representation of the animal's subjective perspective. Through the horse's sonic filter, we hear a different world, yet equally real, than the one we see on screen. While we watch with our human gaze, we hear the horse's complex sonic reality.
Bea de Visser is known for her film art, installation work and sound performances. Her work can best be described as a digital media-based practice -from the perspective of a painter and storyteller who sees the world through different lenses. AnimaIs are a recurring motif in her work. Her latest works focus on non-anthropocentric storytelling. She mixes fiction with the everyday and emphasizes structures of power, dominance and control. Her work seduces the viewer through a rich audiovisual language, exploratory in its narrative. Bea de Visser comes from a background of painting and a study electro acoustic sound. She initially began her career as a sound and performance artist in the trendy club scene and artist’s spaces, early 1980-ies. Bea de Visser attended the Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten in Amsterdam (1993-1995).
Eginhartz Kanter : Misdirected Impulse - Experimental film | 16mm | color | 2:50 | Germany, Austria | 2025
Eginhartz Kanter
misdirected impulse
Experimental film | 16mm | color | 2:50 | Germany, Austria | 2025
Misdirected Impulse shows deserted natural and park landscapes in long, static shots. Picturesque arrangements of trees and bushes unfold quietly, until the sudden appearance of a smoking light ruptures the calm. The following staccato of short shots, in which the light is directed equally at the camera and the viewer, is an attack on gaze and perspective, dissolving romanticized notions of nature.
Eginhartz Kanter (*1984, Leipzig) studied Fine Arts, Cultural Studies and Photography at the University of Arts and Design Linz, the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna and the E?cole Nationale Superieure des Beaux-Arts in Lyon. In his artistic approach he questions the boundaries and conventions of everyday life and living environments. His (sub)urban interventions negotiate aspects of the public and often have a direct relation to architecture. Previous films: Conveyor (2025); Prelude (2022); Taking Away (2018); Aufstieg (2016); Transient II (2013) Downloads
Sonia Levy : We Marry You, O Sea, As A Sign Of True And Perpetual Dominion - Experimental doc. | 4k | color | 19:28 | France, United Kingdom | 2025
Sonia Levy
We Marry You, O Sea, as a Sign of True and Perpetual Dominion
Experimental doc. | 4k | color | 19:28 | France, United Kingdom | 2025
We Marry You, O Sea engages with Venice and its lagoon “from below,” with the aim of focusing attention on the city’s submerged, life-giving, and altered bio-geomorphological processes rather than on its often-recounted political and military histories. Underwater filmmaking opens new ways of knowing the materialities of the Venice Lagoon and exposes a fractured and troubled environment that complicates mainstream historical narratives that start above the water’s surface. By attuning to the ebb and flood of the lagoon, we start sensing the interplay between land and water, life and decay, and the intimate processes shaping this environment. Noticing the kinds of life made possible in this damaged watery space compels us to delve into the ways it has been profoundly transformed. We Marry You O Sea as a Sign of True and Perpetual Dominion takes its title from the words uttered during the Venetian ritual The Marriage of the Sea, which was held annually on Ascension Day between the eleventh and eighteenth century. During the event, the Doge, the patriarch of the Venetian Republic, would wed the lagoon by casting a golden ring into the water, declaring dominance over the sea. The artist reframes Venice’s enduring relationship with its permeating waters by reflecting on this ongoing legacy of quests for mastery over watery environments. How, this work asks, might we imagine different futures for Venice if we begin to experience the lagoon as a lively place populated by manifold ways of living and dying? In the lagoon, a space requiring continuous modifications for human settlement, wetlands and infrastructures have long been intertwined. Venice’s consolidation as a trading hub and epicenter of naval advancement during the Middle Ages prompted major hydrological engineering to maintain the lagoon’s shallow depths for defense purposes. However, in the twentieth century, harrowing modernization transformed parts of the wetland into petroleum refineries and one of Italy’s largest container terminals as part of an effort to turn the lagoon into an industrial frontier. Urban anthropologist Clara Zanardi has described how these transformations spatialized class divisions in a new way, while also causing irreversible ecological degradation that has profoundly altered the lagoon’s lifeways. The film presents these histories of modernization by interweaving rare historical photographs from Venice’s Giacomelli Photographic Archive with submerged perspectives of the present conditions of the lagoon. The historical significance of these photographs is emphasized by the negative black-and-white reversal of the submerged perspectives, connecting past and present and unfolding futures within the lagoon’s contaminated waters. An original score, created by a chorus of human voices and underwater sound recordings, further emphasizes the links between submerged spaces and human domains. The composition captures the lagoon’s pulses and the impact of industries—from aquatic sounds drowned out by boat noises to the rhythmic poundings of industrial activity amid surging tides—as it gestures toward the profound interplay between human activities and the lagoon’s shallows.
Sonia Levy is an artist filmmaker with a Berber-Polish background. Her work, marked by site-specific and interdisciplinary inquiries, delves into the implications of Western expansionist and extractive logics, exploring how these forces manifest in the transformation and governance of hydrosocial worlds. Her practice aims to probe the thresholds that have shaped and influenced the conditions necessary for life to flourish.
Martí Madaula : Tramuntana - Experimental film | dcp | black and white | 18:27 | Spain | 2025
Martí Madaula
Tramuntana
Experimental film | dcp | black and white | 18:27 | Spain | 2025
In a remote area of northern Spain, the wind has a name: Tramuntana. Tramuntana takes what it wants—clothes, trees, boats, and the people of the landscape who live with the endless threat of being carried away by its force. This film is a lyrical portrait of this furious wind, woven from the stories passed down by local villagers.
Martí Madaula is an artist and filmmaker based in Madrid. He holds a degree in Fine Arts from the University of Barcelona, a Master of Visual Arts from the LUCA School of Arts of Ghent (Belgium) and a Master of Fine Arts in Film, Video, New Media, and Animation from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. In 2019, he received the Extraordinary Prize of Fine Arts (University of Barcelona). In 2021, he was awarded a prestigious “la Caixa” Foundation fellowship to pursue his studies in the United States. Madaula’s latest film, “Tramuntana,” had its World Premiere at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York, as part of Doc Fortnight 2025, MoMA’s prestigious Festival of International Nonfiction Film and Media. His first film, “The Living Wardrobe,” had its World Premiere at the Opening Scenes section at Visions du Réel 2024, one of the most important documentary and nonfiction film festivals in the world. Madaula has participated in art residencies at prestigious institutions like Centre Pompidou in Paris or Haus der Kulturen der Welt in Berlin. He has exhibited his work in international solo and group shows.
Arjuna Neuman : Promise - Experimental doc. | 16mm | color | 2:30 | Canada, Germany | 2025
Arjuna Neuman
Promise
Experimental doc. | 16mm | color | 2:30 | Canada, Germany | 2025
What is the possibility, barbarism or folly of making art, poetry, film while a genocide is happening in front of our eyes?
Arjuna Neuman is an artist and writer. He has presented solo mid-career surveys at MACBA in Barcelona, Munch Museum in Oslo, and Belkin Gallery in Vancouver and forthcoming at Kunsthalle Bern. He has presented solo exhibitions at Kunsthalle Vienna; CCA Glasgow; Showroom Gallery, London; TPW Gallery, Toronto; Whitechapel Gallery, London; Istanbul Modern, Turkey; MAAT, Portugal amongst many others. He has participated in the Berlin Biennial, Sharjah Biennial, Bergen Assembly, the 56th Venice Biennial, Qalandia Biennial, Ural Industrial Biennial, Hacer Noche in Mexico and many other large group exhibitions. He has been included in film festivals such as Berlinale, Images Festival, Docsliboa, Third Horizon. In 2024 he won the Artist Moving Image prize at Les Rencontre International Festival; in 2024 he was a fellow at Villa Aurora and in 2022 a fellow at the Flaherty Seminar. His work is kept in the Belkin Collection, Kunsthalle Bern Collectors Circle; IAC Lyon and Platform UK. He has a forthcoming monograph published with Archive Books. As a writer, he has published essays in Relief Press, Into the Pines Press, The Journal for New Writing, VIA Magazine, Concord, Art Voices, Flaunt, LEAP, Hearings and e-flux. He is the founder of Archive of Belonging, a platform and resource list supporting migrants and refugees.
Léonard Pongo : Tales From The Source - Experimental film | 0 | color | 38:19 | Belgium, Congo (RDC) | 2024
Léonard Pongo
Tales From The Source
Experimental film | 0 | color | 38:19 | Belgium, Congo (RDC) | 2024
Tales from the Source offers a gaze on the landscapes of the Democratic Republic of Congo to translate a sense of its unfathomable power, diversity and knowledge. The scenery is presented as a character acting as a living entity and inhabited by the symbolism of Congolese traditions. The visual approach borrows techniques from multispectral imaging, resulting in an otherworldly experience with surreal lights and colour. Combined with an original musical composition by Bear Bones, Lay Low, we enter into a sensory dialogue with the landscape, an intelligent, ageless being in constant transformation that challenges our perception.
Léonard Pongo (b. 1988, Liège, Belgium) is a visual artist and filmmaker who lives and works between Belgium and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Pongo's work explores the complexities of perception, and representation while challenging conventional portrayals of the DRC with a focus on traditional narratives and symbols, and their connection to the land. Initially trained as a photojournalist, Pongo's artistic journey began in 2011 when he traveled to the DRC to cover the presidential elections. This experience profoundly transformed his approach to photography, shifting from objective documentation to a more subjective and experiential mode of expression. His family and local communities challenged his initial perspective, encouraging him to develop a more nuanced and intimate portrayal of Congolese life. Pongo is renowned for his mixed-media installations that integrate textiles, photography, diverse printing techniques, and moving images. His work draws deeply from Congolese cosmologies and oral traditions, particularly embracing the concept that "not everything is visible." Using specialized techniques including full-spectrum photography that captures wavelengths beyond human vision, he reveals aspects of landscapes and experiences typically hidden from view. His long-term project "The Uncanny" (2011-2017) explores daily life in the DRC through evocative black-and-white imagery that creates a dreamlike atmosphere, while "Primordial Earth" (2017-ongoing) focuses on the land using color photography, textiles, and video installations to evoke a sense of spirituality and interconnectedness. His latest film, "Tales from the Source" (2021-2024), extends his focus on traditional narratives, focusing on the luba cultures and highlighting the intertwined nature of culture and environment. Pongo's collaborative approach involves working closely with communities across the DRC, drawing inspiration from their knowledge, stories, and traditions and creating visuals that align with the lineage of Luba traditions by creating contemporary forms connected to ancestral concepts and visions. His work has been exhibited internationally at prestigious venues including the Bozar Centre for Fine Arts in Brussels, the Tate Modern in London, the Dakar biennale in Senegal, and the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University. In 2023, his first monograph "The Uncanny" was published by Gostbooks, and in 2025 he was selected as one of ArtReview's "Future Greats" by photographer Roger Ballen.
Bea De Visser films a horse in the enclosed environment of an aquatic training device and lets us hear what the horse hears. Eginhartz Kanter takes us on a journey through landscapes and challenges naturalistic and romantic representations of nature. Sonia Levy explores the Venice lagoon, which was kept shallow in the Middle Ages for defensive reasons and then transformed into an industrial frontier. Martí Madaula portrays the ‘Tramuntana’, a violent wind whose force is evident in the landscape: it bends tree trunks and erodes the vegetation that dares to grow under its influence. Arjuna Neuman films a landscape from which emerges an invocation of freedom. Léonard Pongo engages in a visual dialogue with the land of the Democratic Republic of Congo and its ancestral narratives, the landscape becoming a living entity, inhabited by the symbolism of traditions.
Screening
Musée de la Chasse et de la Nature
62 rue des Archives - 75003 Paris / Metro: Hôtel de Ville, line 1 / Rambuteau, line 11 / Arts et Métiers, lines 3 and 11 / Etienne Marcel, line 4
Free admission for all, subject to availability
Professional accreditation and youth badges: free priority access subject to availability
"Collision, Crash, Impact"
Aidan Timmer : Tarik En Ik - Experimental doc. | 4k | color | 21:48 | Netherlands, Belgium | 2025
Aidan Timmer
Tarik en Ik
Experimental doc. | 4k | color | 21:48 | Netherlands, Belgium | 2025
Looking back on the footage of a hijacking at the Dutch national news broadcast, back in 2015. Aidan Timmer, who now shares the age of the culprit, reflects on the incident. While watching the young man struggle to recite a letter on live television, Aidan gets emotionally closer to the boy who took his father hostage.
Aidan Timmer (b. Amsterdam, The Netherlands) his work is mainly based in the audio-visual field. He has increasingly immersed himself in documentary, essayistic and hybrid filmmaking. Most of his films or works arise from this obsessive fascination for all that attempts to convey truth or verity. He sees his films as essayistic explorations of objectivity and the illusion of impartiality. ‘Tarik en Ik' portrays the emotional and obsessive relationship with a fear from the past.
Gael Peltier : Percussion Mécanique - Performance | mov | color | 2:2 | France | 2018
Gael Peltier
Percussion mécanique
Performance | mov | color | 2:2 | France | 2018
For Gaël Peltier, video is above all a means of recording a performance that cannot be repeated. It is an art of the instant which, as here, culminates in violent mechanical destruction. Its proximity to cinema lies in the procedures behind the actions he undertakes, willingly putting himself in danger and, like a stuntman, accepting the constraints and risks of an operation prepared with meticulous care. Beyond this technical kinship and the references that inevitably come to mind — Crash by David Cronenberg, after J. G. Ballard’s novel, for instance — everything in this work stands in opposition to cinema. There is no narrative: the focus rests on an accident, on the acceleration that leads to it, and on the brutal impact to which the performer submits himself. He places himself entirely within reality; only the driver’s protective gear and harness distinguish this deliberate crash from a fortuitous event of the kind that so often occurs on the road. This resemblance unsettles the viewer’s eye and reveals the presence of a latent desire — not only to watch, but to take part in something that is usually perceived solely as a dramatic event, frequently with fatal consequences.
Gaël Peltier develops a practice in which attitude takes precedence over the production of objects, ready-mades or films, placing his work in the lineage of artists without oeuvre. He describes himself as an “infra-conceptual artist by default,” adopting a lateral position in which a protocol applied to reality becomes the material itself. His projects involve precise forms of commitment: gaining 30 kg in New York for a role that did not exist (La Conjuration, 2010), a car crash staged as critical action (Percussion Mécanique, 2018), or interventions that subtly disturb an otherwise ordinary situation. Video records these processes not in order to produce an effect, but to render visible the conditions of their emergence within real-world circumstances. His work has been exhibited in France and abroad since 2002.
Clement Roussier : Myrninerest - Experimental doc. | hdcam | color | 14:16 | France | 2025
Clement Roussier
MYRNINEREST
Experimental doc. | hdcam | color | 14:16 | France | 2025
A woman performs Butoh alone in her bedroom; a foreigner wanders the buzzing streets of Tokyo; a poet speaks of rivers, pity and ghosts.
Clément Roussier was born in 1984. He is the author of two poetry collections (Now It Is Always Three O’Clock and Fondane), published in 2025 by Derrière la salle de bain, as well as a novel, Sullivan and the Fiery Skies of the Savannah Evenings, published in 2020 by L’École des Loisirs. In Silence and clamour, his first film, won the Grand Prize of the French Competition at FID Marseille 2023.
Ruth HÖflich : The Flood - Experimental film | 4k | color and b&w | 19:15 | Germany, Australia | 2024
Ruth HÖflich
The Flood
Experimental film | 4k | color and b&w | 19:15 | Germany, Australia | 2024
The Flood reframes a historic 1960s flooding event—one that submerged and partially destroyed a greenhouse nursery and adjacent property—within contemporary urban infrastructure and its ongoing debt to land intervention. As internal and external imagery collide, flooding takes on a double meaning: both physical inundation and psychic surfacing.
Ruth Höflich is a visual artist working in moving image and photography born in Munich and currently based in Naarm/Melbourne. Her work as been screened and exhibited internationally including at National Gallery of Victoria, Gertrude Contemporary, Rotterdam International Film Festival, Images Festival, Pravo Ljudski Film Festival and Art Gallery of NSW. She is currently a research fellow at Powerhouse Museum Sydney where she is developing a new film. She holds an MFA from Bard College, New York.
Mohamed Bourouissa : Généalogie De La Violence - Fiction | dcp | color | 15:15 | France | 2024
Mohamed Bourouissa
Généalogie de la violence
Fiction | dcp | color | 15:15 | France | 2024
Imagine a film about police brutality, with no brutality. A film where nothing happens, yet you’re left baffled. Invisible violence, disguised under lawful humiliation. Domination wrapped in polite protocols. I started talking about making this short film back in 2018, but the idea of it was haunting me probably since the late 90s, when I started being constantly stopped by the police for “random identity checks”. I felt a certain urgency to tell this very personal story. With the series of sculptures in cast aluminium that can be read as an esquisse to Généalogie de la Violence wider project, Mohamed Bourouissa aims to convey the intimate sensations that a formal procedure can induce, the traces that a systematic judicial practice can leave, both on and in the body. These sculptures represent moments of palpation during body searches. They evoke a tension between body parts and the hands that palpate it and reveal a point of contact between social bodies and a state body. The artist reveals an intimate experience of what the notion of control imposes in terms of bodily dispossession. The interiority of this experience is reflected by the void in the works. Through them, Mohamed Bourouissa represents an emotional dynamic that involves the enactment of two male bodies, highlighting the power dynamics and domination by one body over another.
Mohamed Bourouissa was born in 1978 in Blida (Algeria), and lives and works in Gennevilliers. He is represented by the Mennour, Paris and Blum Los Angeles galleries. Exhibited in 2010 by the Palais de Tokyo and the Musée d’Art Moderne on the occasion of Dynasty, an original association between the art center and the Musée de la Ville de Paris to highlight a new generation of French artists, Mohamed Bourouissa has since exhibited in numerous museums and international biennials (Rencontres internationales de la photographie d’Arles ; Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris; Centre Pompidou, Paris; New Museum, New York; Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia; Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Frankfurt am Main; Bal, Paris; Haus der Kunst, Munich; Biennales de Sydney, Sharjah, Havana, Lyon, Venice, Algiers, Liverpool, Berlin; Milan Triennale… ). Mohamed Bourouissa’s work is included in numerous public and private collections (Centre Pompidou, Paris; SF Moma, San Francisco; LACMA, Los Angeles; Pinault Collection; Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris; The Israel Museum, Israel…).
Chun Wang : Budapest Is Grey And Blue, But Hell Is Purple - Experimental film | 0 | color and b&w | 16:10 | Taiwan, Hungary | 2023
Chun Wang
Budapest Is Grey And Blue, But Hell Is Purple
Experimental film | 0 | color and b&w | 16:10 | Taiwan, Hungary | 2023
These images appear in this world all because of an 18-year-old gypsy boy, Pisti. A chance encounter an existing gap in our chain of cause and effect. Like opening the door but realising there is no end, and now it cannot be closed no matter what. “I” is a place where events take place, an existential exploration.
WANG Chun (b. 1988, Taiwan) is a video production worker and film producer. His practice is based on transformations between different creative languages (those of image, text, sound, and body), searching for the limits of language and seeking to measure the distance in the act of viewing.
Aidan Timmer watches footage of an armed young man storming onto the set of a Dutch news programme in 2015 to read a letter. He is now the same age as the young man was at the time. Gael Peltier stages a performance without narrative, leading to violent mechanical destruction. Clément Roussier films a tourist wandering the bustling streets of Tokyo, a poet talking about rivers, pity and ghosts, and a woman dancing Butō alone in her room. Between different narrative threads, including a parked car, a bioscience laboratory and a garden, Ruth Höflich analyses an invisible flood that submerged a greenhouse nursery, with water acting both as an actor and a conceptual framework. Mohamed Bourouissa films a young man undergoing an identity check while in the car with his girlfriend. Chun Wang films apparitions in Hungary, an 18-year-old gypsy boy and Béla Tarr.