2019 Images Festival

Page 1

ApriL 11-18, 2019


Find out how to put your imagination to work in programs such as Photography, Digital Futures, Integrated Media, Indigenous Visual Culture and Criticism and Curatorial Practice at ocadu.ca/admissions


TABLE OF CONTENTS Tickets and membership p.4

Off Screen p.26-41

Map of Venues p.5

On Screen & Live p.52-75

Welcome and Acknowledgements p.6-12

The Tender Sorrow of Casey Wei by Tiziana La Melia p.76-80

Jury & Awards p.13

Advertisers Index p.88

Festival Calendar p.22-23

Artist Index & Biographical Appendix p.89-94

Public Programming and Education p.24-25

Title Index p.95-96

Gabi Dao, The Protagonists, 2018.


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QUICK GUIDE Off Screen

On Screen

MOCA • Basma Alsharif • Feb 14 - April 14 - p.28

Opening Night • Rory Pilgrim • Apr 11 - p.53

Vtape • Emilijia Škarnulytė • Apr 10 - May 3- p.37 Curated by Lisa Steele

still/here • Christopher Harris • Apr 12 - p.55

Mercer Union • Beatrice Gibson • Apr 11 - June 1 - p.39 Curated by Julia Paoli

Canadian Spotlight • KC Wei • Apr 13 & 24 - p.60, p.76-80


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On Screen

Live

Citizens of the Cosmos • Anton Vidokle • Apr 15 - p.67

We Are In A Non-Relationship Relationship Lido Pimienta • Apr 12 - p.56

Colectivo Los Ingrávidos • Apr 16 - p.69

Keynote Lecture • Charles Mudede • Apr 13 - p.57

Closing Night • Outer Worlds • Apr 18 - p.74-75 Curated by Janine Marchesseault

Heat • Aisha Sasha John • Apr 13 - p.61


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GETTING YOUR TICKETS On Screen programs $12 general admission $6 students/seniors/underemployed

Advance tickets Advance tickets are available online at imagesfestival.com starting March 6

Opening Night, Closing Night and Live $15 general admission $10 students/seniors/underemployed

Same Day Tickets Same day tickets (if available) will go on sale at the appropriate venue starting one hour before the event. Cash and credit cards accepted.

Pay What You Can Events $5–15 suggested donation Public Programs and Education (See p.24-25 for more details) FREE To reserve spaces for your class or group, contact: images@imagesfestival.com All ticket prices include HST.

Individual Membership - $60/$40 (Students/Seniors) • ONE Festival Pass • ONE limited edition Images Tote Bag • Preferred box office privileges (reserved tickets for members until 15mins before curtain) • Images Festival Membership is non-voting How to Order Your Festival Pass In person: at the Advance Box Office during the festival Email: membership@imagesfestival.com Online: www.imagesfestival.com/membership Payment: Visa, Mastercard, American Express, PayPal *Some restrictions apply. Festival Passes unfortunately do not guarantee admission to every presentation. Please see individual programs for more details regarding festival pass restrictions. Vouchers redeemable beginning April 11 at the Advance Box Office. Vouchers not redeemable via the Images Online Store. While admission with voucher is FREE, it doesn’t guarantee you a seat. We recommend arriving at least 30 minutes before the scheduled start time to redeem vouchers. Vouchers not valid for opening and closing night.

Please make charitable donations at canadahelps.org. Charitable registration number is #12741 8762 RR0001. STATEMENT ON AGE RESTRICTION Admittance to all screenings is restricted to those 18 years of age or older. Images Festival believes in freedom of artistic expression and is against discrimination on the basis of age. However, under the Ontario Theatres Act, film and video festivals are required to adopt a blanket adult rating in order to hold public screenings without having to submit all works for prior classification. Film and video are the only forms of expression subject to this kind of censorship system in Ontario. Images Festival complies with the Ontario Theatres Act under protest.

CODE OF CONDUCT All community participants, including members and guests of members, event hosts, sponsors, presenters, exhibitors and attendees, are expected to abide by the Images Festival Code of Conduct and cooperate with organizers who enforce it. Images Festival insists that everyone who uses the spaces remains mindful of, and takes responsibility for, their speech and behavior. We embrace respect and concern for the free expression of others, but will not tolerate words or actions that are racist, sexist, homophobic, ageist, classist, transphobic, cissexist, or ableist. Respecting physical and emotional boundaries, we do not accept oppressive behavior, harassment, destructive behavior, or exclusionary actions.


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Map 12.

Keele St

Dupont St

Bloor St W

Dundas St W

University Ave

St. George St Spadina Ave

6.

McCaul St

Bathurst St

Ossington Ave

Dovercourt Rd

Gladstone Ave

Trinity Bellwoods Park

Queen St W Richmond St W King St W

1.

14.

Duncan St

King St W

2.

Lisgar St

Brock Ave

Lansdowne Ave

Roncesvalles Ave

Queen St W

College St

Beverley St

8.

John St

11.

Harbord St

Manning Ave

Grace St

Shaw St

13.

Du nd as St W

Parkside Dr

7. Sussex Ave

Clinton St

9.

St Helens Ave

3.

Sterling Rd

10.

5. Front St W

16. Lake Shore Blvd W

1. 401 Richmond (accessible) A Space, 110 Bachir/Yerex Presentation Space, 440 Gallery 44, 120 Images Festival, 309 Trinity Square Video, 121 VTape, 452 Tangled Art + Disability, 122 2. Artscape Youngplace - 180 Shaw St (accessible) Koffler Gallery, 104-105 Critical Distance, 302 Small World Music Centre, 101 3. Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) (accessible) 158 Sterling Rd 4. Art Gallery of York University (AGYU) (accessible) 8 Accolade East Building, York University 4700 Keele Street 5. Goethe Institut-Toronto (accessible) Goethe Media Space 100 University Ave., North Tower, 2nd Floor

6. Super 8 Hotel (accessible) 222 Spadina Avenue 7. Innis Town Hall (accessible) University of Toronto 2 Sussex Ave 8. The Royal Cinema (accessible, except washrooms) 608 College St 9. Gallery TPW (accessible) 170 St Helens Ave 10. Mercer Union, A Centre for Contemporary Art (accessible) 1286 Bloor St W 11. The Baby G (accessible) 1608 Dundas St W 12. The Costume House (not accessible) 165 Geary Ave, 2nd Floor, Unit A 13. UNIT 2 (accessible) 163 Sterling Rd

Queens Quay W

14. Td Arts Wall (accessible) TD Bay and Queen Branch 394 Bay St 15. Support (partially accessible) 260b Clarence St London, ON 16. Cinesphere (accessible) 955 Lake Shore Blvd W


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STAFF AnD BOARD EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Heather Keung

PROGRAMMING ASSISTANT Aaron Moore

Pause Ellis Sam

ARTISTIC DIRECTOR Steffanie Ling

BOX OFFICE MANAGER & FESTIVAL ASSISTANT Jeremy Saya

COVER IMAGE Cauleen Smith, Sojourner, 2018

OPERATIONS MANAGER Barbora Racevičiūtė PROGRAMMING COORDINATOR Sarah-Tai Black ADVERTISING SALES MANAGER Milada Kovacova COMMUNICATIONS COORDINATOR Emily Fitzpatrick COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT COORDINATOR Aaditya Aggarwal

GUEST SERVICES COORDINATOR Amanda Lindenbach VOLUNTEER MANAGER Victoria Kucher FRONT OF HOUSE Amanda Clarke EVENT MANAGER Brittany Higgens COPY EDITOR Andrew Wilmot

GRAPHIC DESIGN Sébastien Aubin

BOOKKEEPER Amanda Whitney (Young Associates)

PRINT PRODUCTION COORDINATOR Tetyana Herych

AUDITOR David Burkes, C.A.

WEB 1pm

TRAILER Stephanie Comilang

PRINTER TC Transcontinental Printing BOARD OF DIRECTORS Mélanie Lê Phan (Chair) Michael Chisholm (Treasurer) Julieta Maria (Secretary) Ariana Ayoub Jaclyn Bruneau Julia Huynh Manolo Lugo Mani Mazinani Dylan Reibling Max Rothschild ADVISORY BOARD Emelie Chhangur (Toronto) Sara Diamond (Toronto) Atom Egoyan (Toronto) Marc Glassman (Toronto) Shai Heredia (Bangalore) Janine Marchessault (Toronto) Robyn McCallum (Toronto) Charlotte Mickie (Toronto) Andrea Picard (Toronto) Jody Shapiro (Toronto) Michael Snow (Toronto) Staff Photos by Fraser Mccallum


AcknowLedgement

IMAGES FESTIVAL WOULD LIKE TO ACKNOWLEDGE The land on which we gather and organize is the territory of the Anishinaabe, Haudenosaunee, Huron-Wendat and the Mississaugas of the New Credit First Nation. Today, the meeting place of Toronto is the home to many Indigenous people. A territorial acknowledgement can demonstrate a coming to awareness, and provoke thought and reflection, all of which are essential in beginning to establish reciprocal relations. This acknowledgement should not function as closure, resignation, or acceptance of the structural conditions of settler colonialism that remain in effect today. The Images Festival will continue to ask what it means for us to keep open a spirit of sustained inquiry into the complexities of our situation. IMAGES FESTIVAL Images showcases artistic excellence in contemporary moving image culture through screenings, exhibitions and performances, while providing artists with a supportive and professional forum in which to present their work and to connect with each other, with curators and programmers, and audiences. The Images Festival is produced by Northern Visions Independent Film and Video Association, a registered charitable organization since June 10, 1988. OUR MISSION Images Festival is an artist-driven festival that expands traditional definitions and understandings of media art by experimenting with a multiplicity of artistic forms. Images Festival presents, promotes and pushes the boundaries of contemporary moving image culture. Images Festival raises the profile of independent media art to develop critical engagement for Canadian and international artists and audiences.

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This year marks a significant change at Images as we welcome an outstanding new team: Artistic Director Steffanie Ling, Operations Manager Barbora RaceviÄ?iĹŤtÄ—, and Programming Coordinator Sarah-Tai Black. It has been a personally transformative experience to work alongside these three amazing women, to imagine our future and to see the latest iteration of Images take shape. Thank you so much to all of our funders, partners, community, board, and staff who have devoted a tremendous amount of time and energy to make this year a success. While there are a lot of fresh faces, you can still count on the strength and range of programs that you have come to know and love. This week includes an array of experimental screenings and performances, with exhibitions happening throughout the spring season. Our showcase builds on conversations and connections between contemporary art and film, weaving in and out and breaking apart social, political, formal, generational, and geographical boundaries. Inspired by the 2019 artistic direction, the themes of solidarity and empathy resonate throughout all of our activities, including our free artists talks, tours, the festival hub, and more. Our goals this year are prioritizing access and inclusion, increasing our community outreach, and growing programs like Research Forum to further build relationships with new generations of artists, thinkers, and leaders. There is an urgency to this work! and our vision is simple: to provide artists and audiences with a supportive and critical forum to connect with each other. The time to come together is now. Welcome to the 32nd annual Images Festival!

Heather Keung, Executive Director

weLcome


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i am nervous and excited to welcome you to 32nd edition of the images festival. our programming team, sarahTai black, aaron moore, and myself are proud to have worked on this edition, which continues to engage moving image at the intersection of installation, media, experimental pedagogies, political form, and emerging practices. beyond the task of presenting, we admit to other agendas. What we want to explore this year are possibilities for artists, renters, collectives, and people with means and access to a community galvanized around moving image to locate mutuality in a province that has swung to the right. Through the texture of difference and radical friendship, is it possible to become a meaningful adversary against the primary effacement of all that could let us live, distinct and discursive, crispy and comfy, in communal luxury? i used to have this ongoing joke/complaint about a lack of quality nemeses because i mostly wanted to bicker recreationally about film, but it’s easy enough to login and trounce a nerd misogynist on film Twitter. in truth, it’s far easier, convenient, and natural to make enemies than allies. i want to laugh with my enemy. i want my enemy to be my friend and my friend to play my enemy, productively, meaningfully, interchangeably, as we broach capital, collusion, complicity, organizations, the sun, burning out, the sun burning out, alienation, joy, freedom, alleged freedoms, awkwardness, secrets, survival, sincerity, privilege, debt, reclamation, and misunderstandings. What do i mean by by radical friendship though? it’s just a term i made up because the inefficacy of “allyship” has been on my mind. a praxis of allyship strikes anxiety (if not indignant indifference, or static guilt) in the heart of the privileged. radical friendship must depart from this, as friendship is built on whatever means we have and whatever means necessary to be a singular adversary. how experimental moving image could actually attend to these inquiries is ultimately limited but none the less provoked in each of our programs, our means to convene and interrogate the convenient discourses. if we consider a material and class analysis, it deepens the notion of moving images and cinema as perhaps the most resonant art form in a screen-addled society. This relationship with moving images, whether streaming video, surveillance, self-check out, repertory cinema or the marvel universe, is precisely the fluency we already possess to parse the critical humanity extended in the thinking and necessary work of the artists participating in this year’s festival. We are excited to present works that employ humor as anti-capitalist technique, spiritual utopianism to counter neoliberal transparency, and poignant meetings with populism. To those of us wavering at the threshold of participation, these works offer brazen proposals to think, speak and act. Welcome, friends, at times my enemies, at times my friend, to the 32nd edition of images festival. We thank you in advance of for your kind attention. i’m excited by the possibilities that may come within, and without, the cinema.

steffanie ling, artistic director


pubLic Funders

sponsors


Presentation Partners

Community Partners

PLEASURE DOME SINCE 1989

1979-2019


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THE FESTIVAL ACKNOWLEDGES THE ONGOING SUPPORT OF OUR PARTNERS IN THE PUBLIC SECTOR Youssef El Jai, Line Dezainde, Pao Quang Yeh, Linda Norstrom (CCA); Paula Shewchuk (Heritage); Mark Haslam, Carolyn Vesely & Lisa Wöhrle (OAC); Caroline Polgrabia (Ontario Ministry Tourism, Culture & Sport); Waqar Khan (Employment Ontario); John Dippong & Risa Veffer (Telefilm); Claire Hopkinson, Beth Reynolds & Peter Kingstone (TAC). SPECIAL THANKS TO SPONSORS & AWARDS SPONSORS Kim Fullerton (Akimbo); Greg Woodbury & Ross Turnbull (CSV); Lauren Howes, Genne Spears & Jesse Brossoit (CFMDC); Jennie Robinson Faber (DMG); Mia Nielsen (Drake Art); Justin Lovell (Frame Discreet); Henry Farber (Gamma Space); Phil Hoffman (Independent Imaging Retreat); Emmanuel Madan (IMAA); Jason Ryle & Soufian Jalili (imagineNATIVE); Chris Kennedy & Renata Mohammed (LIFT); Sara Diamond & Winnie Wong (OCADU); Tak Pham (OCADU Career Launchers); Annette Hegel & Zoë Mallet (SAW Video); Indu Vashist (SAVAC); Amar Wala (Scarborough Pictures); Luis Ferreira (Sheridan College); Lindsey Kesel & Tim McLaughlin (Steam Whistle); Susan Shackleton (Super 8 Hotel); Deanna Wong & Chris Chin (Reel Asian); David Plant (Trinity Square Video); Kass Banning & Corinn Columpar (U of T Cinema Studies); Deirdre Logue, Lisa Steele, Kim Tomczak & Wanda Vanderstoop (Vtape); Caitlin Fisher, Barbara Evans & Lauren O’Brien (York University). A HUGE THANKS TO OUR INDISPENSABLE LOCAL AND NATIONAL COLLEAGUES Margie Zeidler (401 Richmond); Emelie Chhangur & Alissa Firth-Eagland (AGYU); Rebecca McGowan & Vicky Moufawad-Paul (A Space Gallery); Cason Sharpe (Art Metropole); Sarah-Tai Black (Black Gold); Susan Jama (BAND); Caitlin McLean (Border Crossings); Kate Monro & Jaclyn Bruneau (C Magazine); Eve LaFountain (CalArts); Nicholas Brown (Canadian Art); Jesse Brossoit (CFMDC); April Thompson & Josh Mao (Cineworks); Jennifer Scott (Cinemascope); Shani K Parsons (Critical Distance Centre for Curators); David Burkes (David Burkes CA); Waseem Dabdoub (Costume House); Katy McCormick & Daniel Schrempf (Doc Now); Shannon Cochrane (FADO); Debbie Ebanks Schlums (Fabulous Festival of Fringe Film); Alana Traficante, Heather Rigg & Maegan Broadhurst (Gallery 44); Kim Simon & Daniella Sanader (Gallery TPW); Uwe Rau, Jutta Brendemühl & Sven Pinczewski (Goethe-Institut Toronto); Patrice James (IFCO); Eyan Logan (Innis Town Hall); Rachel Weldon (Kelp Management); Mona Filip & Tony Hewer (Koffler Gallery); Barbara Gilbert

thank yous

(Le Labo); November Paynter (MOCA); Ben Donoghue & Adriana Rosselli (MANO/RAMO); Peter Sandmark (MediaNet/FLUX Media Gallery); Julia Paoli, York Lethbridge & Aamna Muzaffar (Mercer Union); Holly Cunningham (Near North Mobile Media Lab); Tony Merzetti & Cat LeBlanc (NB Silver Wave Film Festival (NB Silver Wave Film Festival [SWFF]); Asad Raza (Necessary Angel Theatre Company); Denise Ryner (Or Gallery); Kelly Neall (Ottawa International Animation Festival); Amy Mitchell & Jessica Mulvogue (Outer Worlds); Theresa Stater (Pleasure Dome); Sabrina Russo (Prefix ICA); Simon Vidoczy (Royal Cinema); Dr. Blake Fitzpatrick (School of Image Arts, Ryerson University); Allan Lochhead (Slate Art Guide); Tegan Moore (Support); Stuart Keeler (TD Bank Group); Cyn Rozeboom & Sean Lee (Tangled Art + Disability); Ginger Carlson (TRUCK Contemporary Art in Calgary); Barbora Racevičiūtė (the8fest); Dale Duncan (U of T John H Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape & Design); Daniel Mack (UNIT 2); Shauna Oddleifson (the University of British Columbia); Daina Warren & Liz Garlicki (Urban Shaman Contemporary Aboriginal Art); Emma Hendrix (Video Pool Media Arts Centre); Video Out; Pablo de Ocampo (Western Front); Greg Klymkiw & Monica Lowe (Winnipeg Film Group); Scott Miller Berry & Sara Kelly (Workman Arts); Ana Barajas (YYZ Artists’ Outlet). AND THANKS TO THE FOLLOWING INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS Maxim de Nooij (andriesse eyck galerie); Julian Ross (International Film Festival Rotterdam), Helena Kritis (Beursschouwburg and International Film Festival Rotterdam); Michael Blair (Electronic Arts Intermix); Ekrem Serdar (Squeaky Wheel); Dalina Perdomo (Video Data Bank); Kristen Fitzpatrick & Colleen O’Shea (Women Make Movies); Vincent Paul-Boncour (Carlotta Films); Nicola Mazzanti, Daniella Vidanovski (Cinematek, Belgium) & Isabella Reicher (sixpackfilm); Théo Deliyannis (Collectif Jeune Cinéma). AND THE FOLLOWING INDIVIDUALS Faraz Anoushahpour, Lise Beaudry, Jesse Cumming, Adam Khalil, Iris Ng, Madeleine Molyneaux, Lily Jue Sheng, and Benson Black SPECIAL THANKS TO THE FOUNDING BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE IMAGES FESTIVAL Richard Fung, Marc Glassman, Annette Mangaard, Janine Marchessault, Paulette Phillips, Kim Tomczak, and Ross Turnbull.


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Awards

Thu april 18, 8pm

Join us for our annual images awards ceremony preceding closing night screening (p.73), where our esteemed jury announce the winners of the 2019 images festival awards. more WiTh less aWard sponsored by cfmdc, charles street Video, dames making games, gamma space, imaginenaTiVe, lifT, reel asian, saW Video, Trinity square Video, and anonymous. established in 2015 to honour scott miller berry (images staff from 2001-2015), this award goes to a work that best demonstrates a resourceful artistic intent, doing more with less. $1,500 cash. ocadu off screen aWard awarded to the best off screen installation in the festival. $500 cash.

Jury

michèle pearson clarke is a Trinidad-born artist who works in photography, film, video and installation. she is currently a contract lecturer in the documentary media studies program at ryerson university, and she is a finalist for the Toronto friends of the Visual arts 2019 artist prize.

sTeam WhisTle homebreW aWard honours excellence and promise in a local artist. $500 cash and a steam Whistle prize package. oVerkill aWard sponsored by an anonymous donor. established in 2000 to honour former executive director deirdre logue. To an artist whose work is impervious to constraints – willful, unruly and uncontrollable. $500 cash. marian mcmahon akimbo aWard sponsored by akimbo art promotion. awarded to a woman filmmaker to honour strong work in autobiography, complexity of “subject” and the spirit of marian mcmahon. The recipient is funded to attend the annual independent imaging retreat (film farm) and workshop in mount forest, ontario. $500 in-kind transfer services courtesy of frame discreet. york uniVersiTy aWard for besT sTudenT Work on screen sponsored by york university’s department of cinema & media arTs. awarded to the best student work on screen. $500 cash.

priya sen works as a filmmaker and artist across film/ video, sound and installation. she has worked with experimental media practices in collectives, as well as taught experimental film. her work with film and sound tends to centre around questions of form and urban ethnography; she is trying to explore itinerant and egalitarian film forms. ‘yeh / This freedom life’ is her first feature documentary. she lives and works in new delhi.

lydia ogwang is a writer, and a member of Tiff's festival programming team based in Toronto, ontario, canada. she was formerly a senior editor at cléo journal and has written for cinema scope, The brooklyn rail, Tiff’s The review, bamcinématek, and others.


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April 11–18, 2019

Du 11 au 18 avril 2019

Dear Friends: I am pleased to extend my warmest greetings to everyone attending the 32nd Images Festival.

Chères amies, chers amis, Je suis heureux de présenter mes salutations les plus chaleureuses à celles et ceux qui assistent au 32e festival Images.

This festival gives artists from across Canada and around the world an opportunity to showcase their work. I am certain that everyone in attendance will be inspired by the screenings, exhibitions, and performances planned for this event. I would like to thank the organizers for bringing this event to the community. Please accept my best wishes for a memorable festival. Sincerely,

The Rt. Hon. Justin P.J. Trudeau, P.C., M.P. Prime Minister of Canada

Ce festival permet à des artistes de partout au Canada et du monde entier de présenter leurs œuvres. Je suis convaincu que les visiteurs seront inspirés par les représentations, les expositions et les performances prévues lors de cet événement. Je remercie les organisateurs de présenter cet événement à la collectivité. Je souhaite à toutes et à tous un festival des plus mémorables. Cordialement,

Le très hon. Justin P. J. Trudeau, C.P., député Premier ministre du Canada


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The arts have the power to unite us, to spark dialogue, and to offer unforgettable human experiences. They are crucial to our individual and collective actualization.

Les arts ont le pouvoir de nous réunir, de susciter des échanges et de nous faire vivre des expériences humaines marquantes. Ils sont essentiels à notre épanouissement individuel et collectif.

With its growing support for a dynamic, renewed, and diverse artistic scene, the Canada Council for the Arts contributes to making Canadian creativity accessible to all Canadians and to extending its outreach beyond all borders.

Avec son soutien croissant à une scène artistique et littéraire dynamique, renouvelée et diversifiée, le Conseil des arts du Canada contribue à rendre la création d’ici accessible à tous les citoyens et à la faire rayonner au-delà de toutes les frontières.

The Canada Council for the Arts is pleased to support Images Festival and sends along its best wishes for success.

Le Conseil des arts du Canada est heureux de soutenir Images Festival et vous souhaite d’en profiter pleinement.

Director and CEO Simon Brault, O.C., O.Q.

Le directeur et chef de la direction Simon Brault, O.C., O.Q.


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Welcome to the 2019 Images Festival, an event that expands the boundaries of media and moving image art. For eight days, the city will host numerous showcases featuring new works by talented local, Canadian and international artists. Our government understands the power of the arts in telling the many diverse stories that make up the Canada experience, which is why we are proud to support this annual event. As Minister of Canadian Heritage and Multiculturalism, I’d like to thank the organizers, artists and volunteers who helped organize this dynamic festival. Bienvenue à Images 2019, un festival qui repousse les frontières des médias et de l’art de l’image en mouvement. Pendant huit jours, Toronto accueillera quantité de vitrines mettant en vedette les nouvelles œuvres de talentueux artistes des scènes locale, nationale et internationale. Notre gouvernement sait que les arts sont un outil puissant pour raconter les histoires qui nous définissent en tant que Canadiens, et c’est pourquoi nous sommes fiers d’appuyer ce rendez-vous annuel. À titre de ministre du Patrimoine canadien et du Multiculturalisme, je tiens à remercier les organisateurs, les artistes et les bénévoles qui assurent la présentation de ce dynamique festival.

The Honourable / L’honorable Pablo Rodriguez

On behalf of the board and staff of the Ontario Arts Council (OAC), I wish you all a very warm welcome to the 32nd edition of the Images Festival. Since its inception, the Images Festival has prided itself on presenting daring, thought-provoking and exploratory works in moving image culture. The festival’s screenings, performances and events provide a platform for emerging and established artists from across the province to showcase their work and network with peers from other regions in Canada and abroad. The Ontario Arts Council is proud to support a festival that connects Ontario audiences and creators with groundbreaking works. Congratulations to the festival’s organizers and all featured artists. Au nom du conseil d’administration et du personnel du Conseil des arts de l’Ontario (CAO), je vous souhaite tous une très chaleureuse bienvenue à la 32e édition du festival Images. Depuis sa création, le festival Images présente avec fierté des œuvres audacieuses, exploratoires et aptes à susciter la réflexion dans le domaine de la culture des images en mouvement. Les projections, performances et événements du festival servent de plate-forme permettant aux artistes émergents et établis des quatre coins de la province de mettre en valeur leurs œuvres et de travailler en réseau avec des collègues provenant d’autres régions du Canada et de l’étranger. Le Conseil des arts de l’Ontario est fier d’appuyer ce festival, qui fait connaître aux publics et aux créateurs de l’Ontario des œuvres révolutionnaires. Félicitations aux organisateurs du festival et à tous les artistes invités.

Rita Davies Chair, Ontario Arts Council Présidente, Conseil des arts de l’Ontario


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Welcome to the 32nd annual Images Festival. Toronto Arts Council is delighted to support this groundbreaking, interdisciplinary festival. The City of Toronto, through Toronto Arts Council, invests public funds in the arts to bring the highest quality artistic programming to millions of Toronto residents and visitors. We recognize the work that Images Festival does to nurture local and Canadian independent media artists, and applaud it for providing a forum for exceptional narratives and exploratory forms of creation through the screenings, exhibitions and performances that it showcases. Congratulations to the artists, staff and volunteers at Images Festival. Enjoy the shows! Je vous souhaite la bienvenue à la 32ème édition du festival Images. Le Conseil des Arts de Toronto est heureux de soutenir ce festival innovateur et interdisciplinaire. La Ville de Toronto, par le biais du Conseil des Arts, investit dans les arts afin d’assurer que la programmation artistique du plus haut calibre puisse être accédée par de millions de résidents et de visiteurs à chaque année. Nous reconnaissons le travail que fait le festival Images pour épanouir les œuvres d’artistes indépendants Torontois et Canadiens et nous l’applaudissons pour la création d’une plateforme à travers laquelle une myriade d’histoires exceptionnelles et nouvelles formes de création peuvent être explorées. Félicitations aux artistes, à l’équipe et aux bénévoles. Bon festival!

Claire Hopkinson, M.S.M. Director and CEO, Toronto Arts Council Directrice Générale, Conseil des arts de l’Ontario

Festivals play a vital role in ensuring that Canadian films from all corners of our country are discovered and enjoyed. At Telefilm Canada, we are committed to seeing even bigger. We are committed to diversity, which is one of our great Canadian traits. We encourage the next generation of artists to create their first feature films. We are thrilled to see Indigenous filmmakers have increasingly more support, and that our industry has come together around the shared goal of gender parity. These voices will make Canada’s rich cultural heritage even more dynamic. Thank you, and congratulations to the Images Festival and to all those who work to bring our diversity to the screen! Les festivals de films jouent un rôle essentiel en donnant la chance aux cinéphiles de tous les coins du pays de découvrir et d’apprécier les films canadiens. À Téléfilm Canada, nous nous sommes engagés à voir plus grand encore. Nous misons principalement sur la diversité, une grande richesse canadienne. Nous encourageons la relève qui peut ainsi oser réaliser ses premiers longs métrages. Les cinéastes autochtones bénéficient d’une aide plus importante, et l’industrie tout entière s’est mobilisée pour que nous puissions atteindre notre objectif commun de la parité hommes-femmes. Nous sommes confiants que les voix des différentes communautés sauront dynamiser ce riche héritage culturel. Merci et félicitations au Festival Images ainsi qu’à tous ceux et celles qui portent notre diversité à l’écran!

Christa Dickenson Executive Director, Telefilm Canada Directrice générale, Téléfilm Canada


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SARAHABBOTT DANIELADAMS HIBA ALI SANDY AMERIO MIEKE BAL SHARLENE BAMBOAT JEREMIAH BARBER DANIELBARROW COOPERBATTERSBY LOUISE BOURQUE SUZANNECAINES COLIN CAMPBELL MADELYNE BECKLES LISE BEAUDRY LISABIRKE KEVIN LEE BURTON NAO BUSTAMANTE JENNIFERCHAN LESLEYLOKSI CHAN VINCENT CHEVALIER DANIEL COCKBURN JONATHANCULP THIRZA CUTHAND MARIE DAUVERNÉ FANG DI CAROLYN DOUCETTE CALLA DUROSE-MOYA STEVENEASTWOOD SHAHRAM ENTEKHABI VERA FRENKEL LINDSAY FISHER RICHARD FUNG JOHAN GRIMONPREZ MONA HATOUM ISABELLE HAYEUR ALEXANDRA HICKOX MARLA HLADY ZOE LEE HOPKINS OLIVER HUSAIN THE HOLIDAY MOVIE INITIATIVE KATHERINE JERKOVIC GUNILLA JOSEPHSON JESI JORDAN ALISON S.M.KOBAYASHI MARY KUNUK WILL KWAN JEAN-MARC LARIVIÈRE SERENA LEE MARIA LEGAULT DEIRDRE LOGUE TERRA JEAN LONG JORGE LOZANO ALVIN LUONG MAHA MAAMOUN NAHED MANSOUR JULIA MELTZER ALLYSON MITCHELL ELLEN MOFFAT GORDON MONAHAN KENT MONKMAN TOVA MOZARD YOSHIKI NISHIMURA ALISON O’DANIEL ARIELLA PAHLKE MARNIE PARRELL ANDREW JAMES PATERSON GUILLERMO GÓMEZ PEÑA STEVE REINKE CHERYL RONDEAU BELIT SAG˘ LYNX SAINTE-MARIE LARISSA SANSOUR YUDI SEWRAJ TOM SHERMAN SKAWENNATI ISABELL SPENGLER KAREN TAM DAVID THORNE EVAN TYLER NADINE VALCIN EMILY VEY DUKE MAXIMILLIAN SUILLEROT WILKE MARTHA WILSON G0RD0N WONG PAUL WONG ANGELA WILLETTS WINSTON XIN AKRAM ZAATARI CURATED BY NOOR ALÈ VIBRAFUSIONLAB: DAVID BOBIER BUNKER 2 CALL AGAIN: HENRY HENG LU&WINNIE WU MEL DAY DR. LAUREN FOURNIER MASAKI KONDO ALMUDENA ESCOBAR LÓPEZ LEWIS KAYE SOPHIE & ISABELLE LYNCH CLAUDIA . MATTOS CAROLINA REIS ˘– THE SHELL PROJECTS: BARBORA RACEVICIUTE & MAEGAN BROADHURST DANIELLA SANADER TORONTO ANIMATED IMAGE SOCIETY SINCE APRIL 2017 All part of our FREE public programming since moving into new digs. Don’t miss another thing! Go to vtape.org and see What’s On

CALL (416) 351-1317

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LAURA SHINTANI

STEPHANIE AVERY

an Ontario government agency un organisme du gouvernement de l’Ontario

RENDEZVOUS WITH MADNESS FESTIVAL

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LEALA HEWAK & LAURA SHINTANI MAY 3 - JUNE 15; OPENING: MAY 3, 6-8 PM A TANGLED ARTS + DISABILITY & WORKMAN ARTS CO-PRESENTATION WORKMANARTS.COM | TANGLEDARTS.ORG


RITA MCKEOUGH : WORKS This critical monograph documents McKeough’s collaborative artistic process and pedagogy from the late 1970s on; her interactions with visual and media arts communities in Halifax, Toronto, Vancouver, and Calgary, particularly alternative music and performance scenes; and the audio, installation and performance work that is her ongoing contribution to the contemporary Canadian art community.

EDITOR: Diana Sherlock AUTHORS: Anthea Black, Eli D. Campanaro, Elizabeth Diggon, Johanna Householder, Areum Kim, Cheryl L’Hirondelle, Deidre Logue, Jude Major, Rita McKeough, Jeanne Randolph, Mary Scott PUBLISHERS: EMMEDIA Gallery & Production Society, M:ST Performative Art Festival, TRUCK Contemporary Art in Calgary Includes publication and vinyl record with five audio works drawn from installations and performances, and one new composition. A limited number of publications include an artist multiple by Rita McKeough called “Good Grief” (2018).

To order visit www.truck.ca/shop OwensArtGallery MountAllisonUniversity

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web-only features and digital issues available online at www.cinema-scope.com


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change the world through your creativity

BA BFA MA MFA PhD Film Production Media Arts Screenwriting Cinema and Media Studies

GOETHE FILMS @ TIFF Bell Lightbox

Photo © Schramm Film Koerner & Weber

Bringing the best of German film to Toronto audiences

The Shirley Card Sonya Mwambu, BFA Hon. 19 Best Alternative Film Award at Cinesiege

cma.ampd.yorku.ca

“One of Toronto’s better-kept arthouse secrets.” – blogTO.com Past Forward: Directors before Cannes May 7, 9, 14: Maren Ade, Valeska Grisebach, Ulrich Köhler www.goethe.de/canada/germanfilm


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Thu April 11

12pm

Fri April 12

ARTIST TALK Emilija Škarnulytė Bachir/Yerex Presentation Space p.37

1pm

Sat April 13

GALLERY TOUR Led by Geneviève Wallen 401 Richmond Suite 440 p.24-25 ARTIST TALK Pamila Matharu A Space p.31

GALLERY TOUR Artscape Youngplace p.24-25

KEYNOTE Charles Mudede Innis Town Hall p.57

ARTIST TALK KC Wei in conversation with Merray Gerges Small World Music Centre p.60

ON SCREEN Notes on Being Innis Town Hall p.58-59

ON SCREEN Byron Peters: Anti-Racist Mathematics and Other Stories Innis Town Hall p.62

2pm

3pm

4pm

5pm

ON SCREEN Feeling Resistance Innis Town Hall p.54

6pm

7pm

8pm

ON SCREEN OPENING NIGHT Software Garden The Royal Cinema p.53

OPENING RECEPTION Beatrice Gibson Mercer Union p.39 ON SCREEN still/here Innis Town Hall p.55

Sun April 14

ON SCREEN Canadian Spotlight: Murky Colours Innis Town Hall p.60

ARTIST TALK Nicole Kelly Westman Critical Distance p.38

ON SCREEN Empty Metal Innis Town Hall p.63

9pm

10pm

11pm

AFTER PARTY DJ ETcallshome Korea Town Acid The Baby G

LIVE Lido Pimienta MOCA p.56

LIVE Aisha Sasha John The Costume House p.61

AFTER PARTY Dre Ngozi Unit 2

AFTER PARTY DJ set by Stephanie Comilang The Costume House

ON SCREEN The Diaspora Suite Innis Town Hall p.64


Mon April 15

Tue April 16

ARTIST TALK Sarah Pupo in conversation with Nasrin Himada Bachir/Yerex Presentation Space p.36

Wed April 17

Thu April 18

ON SCREEN Michael Keshane Bachir/Yerex Presentation Space p.70

ARTIST TALK Arnait Video Collective in conversation with Candice Hopkins Bachir/Yerex Presentation Space p.40

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12pm

1pm

2pm

PUBLIC PRESENTATION IMAGES RESEARCH FORUM Gallery TPW p.24-25

ON SCREEN Domestic Cinema Innis Town Hall p.71

3pm

4pm

ON SCREEN Matter Innis Town Hall p.65

5pm ON SCREEN All That Is Solid Innis Town Hall p.68

OPENING RECEPTION Arnait Ikajurtigiit Women Helping Each Other AGYU p.40

STUDENT PROGRAM Innis Town Hall p.72-73

6pm

7pm ON SCREEN GARY Innis Town Hall p.66

ON SCREEN Interior Mythologies Innis Town Hall p.69

ARTIST TALK + RECEPTION 4 Waters: Deep Implicancy Denise Ferreira da Silva and Arjuna Neuman Gallery TPW p.30

CLOSING NIGHT + AWARDS Outer Worlds Cinesphere p. 74-75

8pm

9pm ON SCREEN Squere Innis Town Hall p.67

AFTER PARTY Myst Milano Cinesphere

10pm

11pm


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EVENTS, PUBLIC PROGRAMS AND EDUCATION All Week 12-5PM

FESTIVAL HUB + MEDIATHEQUE

Closed SUN-MON

The festival hub is the perfect spot to meet up before, between, and after events to grab a snack and hang out!

BACHIR/YEREX PRESENTATION SPACE 401 Richmond St W Suite 440 Artists talks at this venue are co-presented with Vtape.

Thu Apr 11 AFTER PARTY

DJ ETCALLSHOME KOREA TOWN ACID

THE BABY G 1608 Dundas St W

12PM

ARTIST TALK

EMILIJA ŠKARNULYTĖ P.37

BACHIR/YEREX PRESENTATION SPACE 401 Richmond St W Suite 440

10PM

PERFORMANCE

LIDO PIMIENTA P.56

MOCA 158 Sterling Rd

10PM-2AM

AFTER PARTY

DRE NGOZI

UNIT 2 163 Sterling Rd

12PM

TOUR

Gallery Tour led by Geneviève Wallen

401 Richmond St W Suite 440

1PM

ARTIST TALK

PAMILA MATHARU P.31

A Space 401 Richmond St W Suite 110

3PM

KEYNOTE

CHARLES MUDEDE P.57

INNIS TOWN HALL 2 Sussex Ave

10PM

PERFORMANCE

AISHA SASHA JOHN P.61

THE COSTUME HOUSE 165 Geary Ave 2nd Floor, Unit A

11PM

AFTER PARTY

DJ set by STEPHANIE COMILANG

THE COSTUME HOUSE 165 Geary Ave 2nd Floor, Unit A

TOUR

Gallery Tour led by Geneviève Wallen

ARTSCAPE YOUNGPLACE 180 Shaw St

11PM-2AM

Fri Apr 12

Sat Apr 13

Sun Apr 14 1PM


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1:30PM

ARTIST TALK

NICOLE KELLY WESTMAN P.38

CRITICAL DISTANCE 180 Shaw St Suite 302

3PM

ARTIST TALK IN CONVERSATION

KC WEI with MERRAY GERGES p.60 & p.78-80

SMALL WORLD MUSIC CENTRE 180 Shaw St, Studio 101

IN CONVERSATION

SARAH PUPO with NASRIN HIMADA P.36

BACHIR/YEREX PRESENTATION SPACE 401 Richmond St W Suite 440

12PM

ARTIST TALK + SCREENING

MICHAEL KESHANE P.70

BACHIR/YEREX PRESENTATION SPACE 401 Richmond St W Suite 440

3PM

PUBLIC PRESENTATION

IMAGES RESEARCH FORUM

GALLERY TPW 170 St. Helens Ave

Tue Apr 16 12PM

Wed Apr 17

An open discussion hosted by the participants of 2019 Images Research Forum. Research Forum is an educational initiative that invites a cohort of moving image practitioners to partake in seminars, collective conversations and research in the context of the festival. Led by Ekrem Serdar. 7:30PM

ARTIST TALK + OPENING

DENISE FERREIRA DA SILVA AND ARJUNA NEUMAN P.30

GALLERY TPW 170 St. Helens Ave

12PM

IN CONVERSATION

ARNAIT VIDEO COLLECTIVE with CANDICE HOPKINS P.40

BACHIR/YEREX PRESENTATION SPACE 401 Richmond St W Suite 440

8PM

AWARDS

32nd Images Festival Awards Ceremony. P.13

CINESPHERE 955 Lake Shore Blvd W

11PM-2AM

AFTER PARTY

MYST MILANO

CINESPHERE 955 Lake Shore Blvd W

EDUCATION

CANADIAN ART SPRING SCHOOL HOP For the eleventh year, Images Festival is pleased to partner with Canadian Art for its annual School Hop, which introduces Toronto-area high school students to contemporary visual art!

Visit canadianart.ca for more information!

Thu Apr 18


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off screen


29

RECEPTIONS Wed Feb 13 7PM

BASMA ALSHARIF P.28

MOCA 158 Sterling Rd

OUTLIERS ON TOUR P.29

TANGLED ART + DISABILITY 401 Richmond St W Suite 122

TOUCHING FROM A DISTANCE II TRANSMEDIATIONS IN THE DIGITAL AGE P.32

GOETHE-INSTITUT TORONTO Goethe Media Space 100 University Ave., North Tower, 2nd Floor

SHARONA FRANKLIN P.33

GALLERY 44 — Virtrines 401 Richmond St W Suite 120

ZHIZI WANG P.34

SUPPORT 260b Clarence St London, ON

NEVET YITZHAK P.35

KOFFLER GALLERY 180 Shaw St Suite 104-105

SARAH PUPO P.36

TRINITY SQUARE VIDEO 401 Richmond St W Suite 121

6PM-9PM

PAMILA MATHARU P.31

A SPACE 401 Richmond St W Suite 110

6PM-8PM

EMILIJA ŠKARNULYTĖ P.37

VTAPE 401 Richmond St W Suite 440

6PM-8PM

NICOLE KELLY WESTMAN P.38

CRITICAL DISTANCE 180 Shaw St Suite 302

BEATRICE GIBSON P.39

MERCER UNION 1286 Bloor St W

6PM-9PM

ARNAIT IKAJURTIGIIT: WOMEN HELPING EACH OTHER P.40

AGYU 8 Accolade East Building, York University 4700 Keele Street

7:30PM

DENISE FERREIRA DA SILVA AND ARJUNA NEUMAN + ARTIST TALK P.30

GALLERY TPW 170 St Helens Ave

Fri, Mar 8 7PM

Fri Mar 22 6:30PM

Fri Mar 29 6PM-8PM

Sat Mar 30 3PM-5PM

Thu Apr 4 7PM-9PM

Fri Apr 5 6PM-9PM

Wed Apr 10

Fri Apr 12 7:00PM-11PM Wed Apr 17


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off screen February 14 - April 14

Basma ALSharif Basma Alsharif’s exhibition at MOCA intertwines four major works, each one presented as a staged setting. Using many different media, she takes us on journeys into the collective subconscious, exploring the tools we all use to understand the ghosts of history. At the centre of the exhibition is a new work, A Philistine, 2018, that invites visitors to settle into an armchair and enter a story that moves backwards in time. The core element is a story broken into three genres: history, fantasy, and erotica. Beginning in present-day Lebanon, the narrative travels through 1935 Palestine, and ends in New Kingdom Egypt (16th-11th century B.C.E). Alsharif stages each of her works in a familiar, domestic setting, often including plants and furniture. These intimate scenarios, invite us to spend time with the more nuanced content that is the focus of the work — in literature, images, and video. By editing together both sourced and created materials, Alsharif exposes those times in history that seem irrational and impossible to tell from one point of view. Alsharif’s exhibition opens at the same time as that of seminal filmmaker Chantal Akerman. The artists share many concerns — geopolitical definitions, the collapsing of histories, and how we form individual versus collective memory. A Philistine by Basma Alsharif is supported by The Consortium Commissions—a project initiated by Mophradat with institutional partners including MOCA, Hammer Museum, LA; CCA, Glasgow and KW, Berlin. 2011-2019

MOCA 158 Sterling Road Wed-Mon 10-5pm Fri 10-9pm

Reception Wed Feb 13, 7-10pm

Public Programs featured during the exhibitions of Chantal Akerman and Basma Alsharif are co-presented with MOCA. p.24-25

Basma Alsharif, ‘Trompe l’Oeil’, 2016 (detail)


off screen March 8 - April 19

MICHAEL KESHAnE, CHRISTInE nEGUS, MICHAEL DUMOnT AnD EUGEnE LEFRAnCOIS, CHRIS BInKOWSKI, VibraFusionLab

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OutLiers on Tour Outliers on Tour is bringing the outsiders in. Stemming from Tangled Art + Disability’s Tangled on Tour program that ran from 2014 to 2017, this exhibition invites disability-identified artists from across Ontario to consider how the city has been built and constructed as a concept by those on the periphery. Featuring VibraFusionLab of London, Michel Dumont and Eugene LeFrancois of Thunder Bay, Chris “Bucko” Binkowski of Ottawa, and Michael Keshane of Tangled Peterborough’s programming, Outliers on Tour will present visual and tactile works in the gallery, an off-site film screening, and public engagements. This multimedia and multisensorial group show centres the artists’ perspectives as outliers in every sense of the word. Outliers on Tour draws a parallel between the movement of Disability Arts as an outlier to the contemporary art world, and cities outside the downtown core as outliers to the urban identities that shape our understanding of inclusive city futures.

Canada 2018

Tangled Art + Disability 401 Richmond St W Suite 122 Tue-Sat 12–5pm

Film Screening and Artist Talk Michael Keshane, at Bachir/Yerex Presentation Space. See p.70 Wed Apr 17, 12pm

Co-presented with Tangled Art + Disability.

Michael Keshane, 9 Rules: from Safety Precautions, 2018.


32

off screen March 9 - April 20

Denise Ferreira da SiLva and Arjuna neuman

4 Waters: Deep ImpLicancy 4 Waters: Deep Implicancy is an experiment in collaboration that traces the striking possibility of a state without value. The artists’ research crosses four bodies of water — the Mediterranean Sea; and the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian oceans — to connect four disparate islands: Lesvos, Haiti, Marshall Islands and Tiwi. Each island holds within it stories of tremendous violence, but also the potential for otherwise. The film assembles fragments that touch on a kind of knowledge embedded in a moment preceding human history or geological timescales — a moment of total entanglement described by the artists as Deep Implicancy. In excavating the link between geological shifts and material realities, they ask: Can an earthquake release the knowledge for a revolution in the very way we know the world? While the artists consider natural disaster, resource extraction, and colonial violence, they compose a framework of elements that displaces the privileged role of value in ethics, relations and knowledge. In its place, the film asks what kind of ethical program could exist without time, accumulation, and measurement — hence value. An events program will activate a study room hosting materials culled from the artists’ research (on coral islands, bacterial communication, and earthquake-triggered liquefaction in Haiti, amongst other subjects). — Curated by Steffanie Ling

Canada/Germany 2018 18 min

Gallery TPW 170 St Helens Ave Tue-Sat 12-5pm

Artist Talk + Closing Reception Wed Apr 17, 7:30pm Talk with Denise Ferreira da Silva and Arjuna Neuman followed by closing reception

Co-presented with Gallery TPW and Goethe-Institut Toronto. Arjuna Neuman is a guest of the GoetheInstitut Toronto.

Smithsonian Museum: Department of Fishes: S.I.A. image number: 141832


off screen March 15 - April 20

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PamiLa Matharu

One of These Things is not Like The Other This debut solo exhibit explores the politics of archives, decolonial aesthetics, and selfpreservation. Pamila Matharu has created two installations at A Space Gallery that incorporate new media, archived texts, collected artworks, and a baithak (Punjabi/Urdu/Hindi for “lounge”). Using discarded videotapes from archives as a starting point for critical analysis that examines the role of institutional critique and memory, systemic erasure, and cultural safety, Matharu’s recent projects ask how we survive in archives and how we are erased. Vergangenheitsbewältigung connects the recently rediscovered video documentation of the AGO’s literary symposium Identity in a Foreign Place with the exhibition Perspective 93. The adjacent gallery will hold space for Dear Amrita: How can I forget history when I was just starting to remember? This installation is an homage to the deceased modern Indian painter Amrita SherGil (1913 - 1941). Sher-Gil’s career was just beginning to emerge when she died from a botched abortion at age 28. Together, the projects explore the impact of the absences of non-hegemonic cultural production in the ongoing project of archives. — Curated by Vicky Moufawad-Paul

Canada 2019

A Space 401 Richmond St W Suite 110 Tue-Fri 11am-5pm Sat 12-5pm

Reception Wed Apr 10, 6-9pm Artist Talk Sat Apr 13, 1pm

Co-presented with A Space.

Dalip Singh (Amrita Sher-Gil: A Portrait in Letters & Writings,Tulika Books, New Delhi, 2010.)


34

Jonas BLume, Manja Ebert, OrneLLa Fieres, Aron Lesnik, Lorna MiLLs, Sarah Oh-Mock, JuLia CharLotte Richter , Anna RidLer, The Swan CoLLective, Tina WiLke

off screen March 22 - May 23

Touching From A Distance II Touching From A Distance II presents recent digital artworks immersed within the bookshelves and media hardware at the Goethe Media Space. The 10 featured works build bridges between literature, language, digital art, or VR. Ornella Fieres explores the transitions between analog and digital imagery; Anna Ridler transforms Edgar Allan Poe’s The Fall of the House of Usher into an AI animation based on the artist’s drawings; Aron Lesnik creates uncanny animations of people talking about the advantages of reading. The exhibition title cites Joy Division’s 1979 song Transmission, “Touching from a distance/sound, that’s all we need to synchronize,”, which praised the affect of telecommunication. As we stay connected via intangible yet visible information, the concept of transmediation reflects our internet routine. All works deal with transmediation, the process of translating information between different coexisting media — analog or digital, written or visual. — Tina Sauerländer

Canada/Germany/UK 2017-19

Goethe-Institut Toronto 100 University Ave North Tower, 2F Thu 4:30–7:30pm Sat 10am–1pm

Reception Fri Mar 22, 6:30pm

Commissioned and co-presented by Goethe-Institut Toronto with Digifest, and Hot Docs. In collaboration with medienkunstverein.

The Swan Collective, Here We Are - A Turing Torture, VR Experience (Still), 2018 © The Swan Collective.


off screen March 29 - April 27

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Sharona FrankLin

new PsychedeLia of IndustriaL HeaLing New Psychedelia of Industrial Healing is a daily cycling bio-installation, adopting the structure of durational performance and sculpture, meditating on medical treatments that the artist began 20 years ago. Each daily composition exposes disability through a process of bio-ritual: the embodiment of biopharmacology, biocitizenship, as well as the unveiled autobiography of a daily ritual, private self-injection, and the treatment of genetic disease. Within the altars assembled, documented, and connected through Instagram, live cells are arranged among unprecious objects. The syringe creates a new psychedelia of visual meditations, interjecting social media algorithms, and reclaiming a long-standing alienation. Each image confronts questions of “Who defines celebration while policing the expression of the disabled?” A selection from over a hundred of her images allows us to linger with this experiment in de-stigmatization. — Curated by Steffanie Ling

Canada 2018

Gallery 44 401 Richmond St W Suite 120 Tue-Sat 11am-5pm

Reception Fri Mar 29, 6-8pm

Co-presented with Gallery 44.

Sharona Franklin, New Psychedelia of Industrial Healing, 2018.


36

off screen March 30 - May 1

Zhizi Wang

We become aware of the void as we fiLL it Zhizi Wang’s multimedia practice meshes personal narratives with found and online stock videos. Her works navigate our understandings of space and recollection, as well as the objects and bodies that occupy them. Wang’s exhibition, We become aware of the void as we fill it is a three-channel video installation that focuses on dislocations between body and memory. Throughout the two floors of the gallery, this work positions itself between immersive installation and visual space. A childhood memory of picking up stones along a river is remixed. Digital aggregates are reformed to recover what was lost. A figure continually dances in the sea at night, before gradually degrading into pixels. Gentle yet prodding encounters with familiarly rendered spaces, such as aquariums, tunnels, and galaxies, tease out their relationship to the viewer, overlapping in both time and space. Wang constructs a digital green screen—an (un)necessary and anomalous zone that emphasizes the illusionary power of digital space-time.

Canada 2019 Loop

Support 260b Clarence St London, ON Thu-Sat 2–5pm

Reception Sat Mar 30, 3-5pm

Co-presented with Support.

We become aware of the void as we fill it, 2019.


off screen April 4 - May 26

nevet Yitzhak

37

WarCraft Deeply informed by cultural research, the video and sound installations of Israeli artist Nevet Yitzhak rely on digital technology, combining found footage, archival, and photographic materials transformed through editing and sound treatment. With a critical approach of contemporary political and cultural issues, Yitzhak challenges perceptions of the past by raising questions about cultural heritage and collective forgetfulness within a complex local identity. Yitzhak’s multi-channel video installation WarCraft takes as departure point the Afghan war rug, a unique tradition of weaving generated by a history of conflict and foreign military presence. Originally an expression of resistance, a means of survival, and a way of communicating the horrors of war, occupation, and migration, the rugs became commodified by the international tourism industry. In her laborious digital work, Yitzhak reinvents the rugs’ iconography introducing 3D models of weaponry employed by contemporary armies and war zones, using animation and sound to reveal their destructive potential. Expanding from the culturally specific to global concerns and other violent histories, Yitzhak’s view is informed by her own context and a critical examination of the current Israeli state of affairs. — Curated by Liora Belford

Israel 2014

Koffler Gallery Artscape Youngplace 180 Shaw St Suite 104-105 Wed-Fri 12-6pm Sat-Sun 11am-5pm

Reception Thur Apr 4, 7-9pm

Co-presented with Koffler Gallery and Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival.

Nevet Yitzhak, WarCraft, 2014, Installation views at Yossi Milo gallery, New York, 2015. Thomas Seely. Courtesy of Yossi Milo Gallery.


38

off screen April 5 - 27

Sarah Pupo

burning through the body the drawing of the body burns into the body/and so/it burns through the body/then the wildfire/ reaches from chin to collarbone/some draw burn marks/and some enter burn marks/and then burn marks become drawings/and so/drawings burn - Kristin Eiriksdottir Kristin Eiriksdottir’s poem “Kök” inspires the exhibition’s theme of opposing forces and tensions: of layering and unravelling, concealing and revealing, openness and containment. Both Sarah Pupo’s watercolour paintings and animation work are relational and dynamic configurations that create movement. The exhibition highlights the physical and intuitive labour that goes into the making of an image. The gestures, colours, shapes, and forms that appear on canvas and on screen bring something to life that spills over and through the frame. What has been generated, animated, and projected compels us toward these works as they delight in the poetic intention of intuition, in movement and colour. — Curated by Nasrin Himada

Canada 2019

Trinity Square Video 401 Richmond St W Suite 121 Tue-Sat 11am-5pm

Reception Fri Apr 5, 6-9pm

Co-presented with Trinity Square Video.

Artist Talk Tue Apr 16, 12pm, at Bachir/Yerex Presentation Space Sarah Pupo, Untitled, watercolour and wax on silk, 36” x 40”, 2018.


off screen April 10 - May 3

39

EmiLija skarnuLyte

SirenomeLia Sirenomelia is a rare condition, also known as the mermaid syndrome. In Emilija Škarnulytė’s video Sirenomelia (2016), the condition becomes a poetic device that hosts a world of double mythologies. Sirenomelia opens on a frozen landscape. Shot in the abandoned underwater docks of Olavsvern, a decommissioned naval base built to conceal American submarines, and the Geodetic Observatory of the Norwegian Mapping Authority at Ny-Ålesund, Spitsbergen, the audio we hear are the sounds of deep listening, the drones and beeps as recorded by the enormous observatory satellite dish. Škarnulytė escorts us through the empty, submerged bays — conducting an exploration in this underwater environment inhabited only by the ghosts of the Cold War. Here, we encounter what she calls the“ counter-mythology of (that era)…what the East believed about the West and vice versa.” With her post-human body clad in a single-finned skin suit, she undulates into the world of the mermaid where water — even frozen water — is full of life. — Curated by Lisa Steele

Lithuania 2017 12 min

Vtape 401 Richmond St W Suite 452 Mon-Fri 10am-5pm Sat 1-5pm

Reception Wed Apr 10, 6-8pm Artist Talk Fri Apr 12, 12-2pm

Co-presented by Vtape.

Emilija Škarnulytė, 2016.


40

off screen April 11 – 20

nicoLe KeLLy Westman

a sLight space amidst a slight space amidst is a video installation that exists in the threshold between a screening and an exhibition. A secluded space just beyond sheer partitions, you determine the duration of your viewing as the film loops. Capturing arrested light and moments that meld and mesh, the film echoes the wavering movements proposed by the installation’s materiality: sheer silk curtains that partition here and there, before and after, daylight and nocturne. A synthesized sound reverberates to the shrill of whipping wind, accented by pelting wetness. Quivering light is interrupted by a quiet melancholy of fluttering darkness that is both contained by and expands beyond the crop of the screen. a slight space amidst offers an invitation to consider the fragmentation of binaries; the tranquility of distraction; and intimacy, as you remain on that side, and I on the other. So, what for the spaces between, where the lines have been drawn? Where the drapes have been drawn by trembling hands. Where the sunsets are no longer seen, but the warmth is still felt through a vivid hue. What for the act of participating so pathetically that all is lost or at least lousy? — Nicole Kelly Westman

Canada 2019

Critical Distance Artscape Youngplace 180 Shaw St Suite 301

Reception Wed Apr 10, 6-8pm

Co-presented with Critical Distance.

Artist Talk Sun Apr 14, 1:30pm

Nicole Kelly Westman, From a slight space amidst, 2019.


off screen April 13 - June 1

I Hope I’m Loud When I’m Dead is commissioned by Mercer Union, Toronto; Bergen Kunsthall; Camden Arts Centre, London; and KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin. The work is produced with support from the Julia Stoschek Collection, Outset Germany_ Switzerland and Arts Council Norway. Deux Soeurs is commissioned by Mercer Union, Toronto; Bergen Kunsthall, Borealis Festival, Bergen; and Camden Arts Centre, London. The work is produced with support from Fluxus Art Projects and Arts Council England, and features a score by Laurence Crane commissioned with support from Arts Council Norway.

UK 2018-2019

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BEATRICE GIBSON

PLURAL DREAMS OF SOCIAL LIFE Mercer Union is delighted to co-commission two interconnected films by artist Beatrice Gibson that together propose empathy and friendship as a means to reckon with an increasingly turbulent present. I Hope I’m Loud When I’m Dead is an intimate 16mm film that captures the consequences of political upheaval and war. Beginning with material shot on the evening of the 45th American presidential inauguration in January 2017, the film weaves together CAConrad and Eileen Myles’ words alongside those of fellow poets Audre Lorde, Alice Notley and Adrienne Rich. Here, Gibson employs language and poetry to grapple with the present. I Hope I’m Loud When I’m Dead is a deeply personal work, one that seeks out the power of ritual and casts the poet as a prophet, fit to navigate an alternative path in times of perilous authority. Conceived as a companion piece, Gibson’s Deux Soeurs is based on an unrealized script by Gertrude Stein, written in 1929 as European fascism was building momentum. Gibson’s adaptation, set almost a century later in contemporary Paris, deploys Stein’s script as a talismanic guide through a contemporary moment of comparable social and political unrest. Here, Gibson explores feminism not only as subject matter but also as method, casting as the film’s characters a close network of friends and practitioners, alongside others who have supported or influenced the artist’s life and work. — Curated by Julia Paoli

Mercer Union 1286 Bloor St Tue-Sat 11am–6pm

Reception Fri Apr 12, 7-11pm

This exhibition is presented by Mercer Union and realized in partnership with Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival and Images Festival.

Beatrice Gibson, still from Deux Soeurs, 2019. Courtesy the artist.


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off screen April 17 - June 23

Arnait

Arnait Ikajurtigiit: Women heLping each other Arnait Video Productions values the unique culture and voices of Inuit women and opening discussions with Canadians of all origins. Since its beginnings in 1991, Arnait has followed a trajectory that wholly reveals the originality of its producers. Arnait works to make films that speak directly to the lives of its members. The sheer endurance required to realize these video documents testifies to the importance of the project. The films celebrate the cultural specificity of women in Igloolik and consist of interviews, reenactments of traditional activities, and narrative elements. Arnait Ikajurtigiit: Women helping each other offers strength, grace, humour, resilience, and a model for learning by doing. Developed over three decades, this body of work is a rigorous and relevant contribution to the field of contemporary art. Inclusive of film, objects, and photography, the exhibition highlights, from the exceptional perspective of women of Igloolik, the continual change inherent to Inuit life. — Curated by Alissa Firth-Eagland

Canada 1992-2018

AGYU 4700 Keele St East Accolade Building Mon-Fri 10am-4pm Wed 10am-8pm Sun 12-5pm

Reception Wed Apr 17, 6-9pm Artist Talk Thu Apr 18, 12pm, at Bachir/Yerex Presentation Space

Co-presented with the AGYU and Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival.

Susan Avingaq, Art Director on the set of Before Tomorrow in Puvirnituq. Photo by Oana Spinu. Courtesy of Arnait Video ProductionsŠ


off screen May 27 - September 3

PubLic Studio

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Wood between WorLds Wood between Worlds is an LED public artwork that uses video game landscapes to explore the forest. The work takes its name from a pond-filled forest in The Magician’s Nephew, the sixth instalment of the Chronicles of Narnia novel series by C.S. Lewis, in which each pond is a portal to a different world. Commissioned by TD Bank Group, Wood between Worlds uses an “open world” video game design, which allows players (the viewer in this case) to roam freely and explore their surroundings without a stated objective. This contrasts with the traditional video game design that demands players confront challenges and progress to next levels. Today, we understand the word “forest” to mean a large wooded area. However, etymologically the word derives from the Latin, foris, meaning “outside.” This double meaning points to the forest as a site that both sustains us and exists “outside” of ourselves. As black and white silent images carry us through the landscape, we are reminded of the pervasive and profound symbol of the forest as a place of refuge or of ambush, of evil or enchantment, for the hunter or the hunted. Here long before us and long after us, forests bear witness to all that happens within them and in this sense, serve as our collective memory. Wood between Worlds refuses to see the forest as standing reserves for commodity exploitation, but asks instead, what has been given up and what needs to be recovered—and regenerated.

Canada 2019 18 min

Td Arts Wall - Bay And Queen TD Bay and Queen Branch 394 Bay St 12am - 11:30pm

TD Bank Group is a proud supporter of the arts, and through The Ready Commitment, strives to reflect all voices in the TD Art Collection.

TD is working with renowned contemporary artists Public Studio to showcase their work to the public on its visual art media wall at the TD Bay and Queen Branch in the Spring.

Still from Wood Between Worlds


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Knot Project Space A new venue for media art in Ottawa, powered by SAW Video

Patricia Reed, Volatile Prophecies recent exhibition, video still

knotsawvideo.com


VIDEO WORK BY

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TORRY MENDOZA Traffic Is Murder In the Main Gallery

KRIS SNOWBIRD Dancing In the Dark In the Marvin Francis Media Gallery

April 5 to May 18, 2019

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CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS opening summer 2019


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TAYSIR BATNIJI SUSPENDED TIME MAY 3 – JUNE 22, 2019 OPENING RECEPTION AND RELEASE PARTY FOR PREFIX PHOTO 39: FRIDAY, MAY 3 FROM 7 TO 10 PM. THIS EXHIBITION IS CURATED BY SCOTT MCLEOD AND PRESENTED AS A PRIMARY EXHIBITION OF THE SCOTIABANK CONTACT PHOTOGRAPHY FESTIVAL.

Taysir Batniji, Untitled (Gaza Walls), 2001. Courtesy the artist and Galerie Sfeir-Semler, Hamburg/Beirut.

For their support of the exhibition, Prefix gratefully acknowledges the support of the Cultural Service, French Embassy in Canada. Prefix also gratefully acknowledges the assistance of the Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council and the Toronto Arts Council with funding from the City of Toronto.

SUBSCRIBE TO PREFIX PHOTO MAGAZINE

Prefix Institute of Contemporary Art Suite 124, Box 124 401 Richmond Street West Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5V 3A8 T 416.591.0357 info@prefix.ca www.prefix.ca Photo Magazine. Visual, Audio and Surround Art Galleries. Reference Library. Small Press. Travelling Shows.


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Homage to the Faceless Woman, by Jessica Johnson and Karen Zolo, 2018.

Video Out is the distribution branch of VIVO Media Arts Centre. Video Out offers non-exclusive distribution services to media artists, with reach to local and international festivals, institutions, libraries, galleries, curators, programmers, and researchers. For information on our catalogue or to inquire about distribution services, visit videoout.ca or contact us at distribution@vivomediaarts.com

ENTRY DEADLINE: MAY 31

instagram: @vivomediaarts @videooutcollection @cdmla_vivo


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SOLO EXHIBITION BY ARTIST RAJNI PERERA


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on screen and Live


on screen Thu Apr 11 8pm

Software Garden

Nurtured over two years of collaboration, workshops, and live concerts, artist and musician Rory Pilgrim premieres his debut music video album Software Garden in Canada. In contrast to a recent fascination with technology’s dystopian impact on public and private life, Software Garden asks how we meet from both behind and beyond our screens. Over the course of 11 tracks and performances, we encounter proposals for tenderness with digital and robotic entities in tow. Without cynicism, irony, or repudiation, the enmeshing of lyrical, cinematic, and choreographed sequences pour between stage, studio, and screen. The words of British poet and disability advocate Carrol R. Kallend narrate Software Garden, as she reflects on her experience of catastrophic reductions to public health care and her desire for technologies to intervene. Singer Robyn Haddon, singer/rapper Daisy Rodrigues, and dancer, artist, and choreographer Casper-Malte Augusta further interpret and pronounce an array of methodologies to move, 68 min

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Opening Night

The Royal Cinema 608 College Street The Royal has 5 accessible seating sections. The Royal does not have accessible washrooms.

lean, and brush upon our spaces in ways that affirm the complexities of tenderness after the Internet. The convergence of these disciplines reclaim “connection” as an elemental synapse beyond a successful upload. The screen is often decried as an alienating partition, yet, in Software Garden, it is reinscribed as socially porous, a tool toward the effect of linked arms or a soft touch. — Steffanie Ling Software Garden, Rory Pilgrim North American Premiere, UK/Netherlands, 2018, digital, 51 min, English Preceded by: Printed Sunset, Andrés Baron North American Premiere, Columbia/France, 2017, digital, 6 min A couple seems resigned to watch a fake sunset. Hi I Need To Be Loved, Marnie Ellen Hertzler USA, 2018, digital, 11 min, English “I’m going to read you a collection from my spam emails.” Is this poetry or malware?

$15 general admission $10 students, seniors, underemployed Ticket price includes entry to Opening Night Party at The Baby G

Co-presented with Rendezvous With Madness, Dames Making Games, and Drake Art.

Album Artwork, 2018 (courtesy of andriesse-eyck galerie).


56

Shorts Program

FeeLing Resistance How do we manifest resistance through the spaces we occupy? How does resistance manifest itself on our bodies, our minds, our souls? What are the human materials and psychic energies that provide us with the agency to show up for our collective wills? How does the power of shared resistance allow us to more truthfully feel ourselves? How do our bodies and the spaces they occupy come to be shaped or re-shaped by our defiance? How have our bodies become active sites of violence? How can we resist this exploitation of our inherent nature in a way that speaks to our vulnerabilities, our livedness, our freedom? This program sees these questions as points of entry to explore, without boundary, the myriad ways in which resistance feels. — Sarah-Tai Black jeny303, Laura Huertas Millán Toronto Premiere, Colombia/France, 2018, 16mm > digital, 6 min, Spanish Footage of an abandoned Bauhaus-style building accompanies confessionals from Jeny, a self-described living work of art, in this composite work and fleeting meditation on architecture and biography. Crowtrap, Callum Hill North American Premiere, Germany/UK, 2018, 35mm, 15 min, English Weaving together the lives of two men, Crowtrap draws upon their individual dealings with fire to expand across themes such as pyromania, anarchy, radicalism, and enlightenment. 77 min

Innis Town Hall University of Toronto 2 Sussex Ave

on screen Fri Apr 12 5pm

I Signed the Petition, Mahdi Fleifel UK/Germany/Switzerland, 2018, digital, 11 min, English Immediately after a Palestinian man signs an online petition, he is thrown into a panic-inducing spiral of self-doubt. Over the course of a conversation with an understanding friend, he analyzes, deconstructs, and interprets the meaning of his choice to publicly support the cultural boycott of Israel. Dislocation Blues, Sky Hopinka US, 2017, digital, 17 min, English An incomplete and imperfect portrait of reflections from Standing Rock. Cleo Keahna recounts his experiences entering, being at, and leaving the camp and the difficulties and reluctance in looking back with a clear and critical eye. Terry Running Wild describes what his camp is like, and what he hopes it will become. Giverny I (Négresse Impériale), Ja’Tovia Gary Toronto Premiere, France/US, 2017, digital, 6 min Shot on location in Claude Monet’s garden in Giverny, France, Gary’s film examines the precarious nature of Black women’s bodily integrity, the ethics of care as resistance work, and how class position shapes the contours of violence. Set against the backdrop of the West’s continued global imperialist campaigns and its historical artistic canon, this experimental video features a mélange of HD video, archival footage, and analog animation to assert an oppositional gaze in the re-telling of modern history. Sojourner, Cauleen Smith Canadian Premiere, US, 2018, digital, 22 min, English Set in Noah Purifoy’s Outdoor Desert Art Museum in Joshua Tree, California, artist Cauleen Smith reimagines this unique space as a radical feminist utopia. Among the scattered assemblages, a group of women whose dynamic, colourful outfits radiate with energy, gather to re-stage an iconic photograph of men taken by Billy May for Life Magazine in 1966. While paying homage to the feminist abolitionist Sojourner Truth, the title refers to the spiritual journey these women embark upon.

$12 general admission $6 students, seniors, underemployed

Co-presented with Inside Out Festival, Toronto Arab Film and Unit 2. Ja’Tovia Gary, Giverny I (Négresse Impériale), 2017.


on screen Fri Apr 12 7:30pm

Feature

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stiLL/here

Christopher Harris is a filmmaker whose films and video installations read African-American historiography through the poetics and aesthetics of experimental cinema. His work employs manually and photochemically altered appropriated moving images, staged reenactments of archival artifacts, and interrogations of documentary conventions. A Willing Suspension of Disbelief + Photography and Fetish Canadian Premiere, USA, 2014, 16mm > digital, 16min, English A response to an 1850 daguerreotype of a young American-born enslaved woman named Delia. Delia was photographed stripped bare as visual evidence in support of an ethnographic study by the Swiss-born naturalist professor Louis Agassiz, who held that racial characteristics are a result of differing human origins.

future generation of their unborn descendants, to the loss of family and loved ones that were sold away during slavery, absence has been and continues to be a fundamental feature of the African-American experience. But how, in an image-based medium such as film, does one represent absence? still/ here acknowledges that an exhaustive rendering of absence is, at best, unlikely, and instead engages with this question by developing a vocabulary of absence. The film acknowledges the limits of representation and proceeds through a series of visual and aural breakdowns, erasures, contradictions and gaps. It does not use the documentary power of film to recuperate a sense of closure, and instead dwells within the space of rupture occasioned by the presence of a profound absence.

still/here Toronto Premiere, US, 2001, 16mm, 60 min, English A meditation on the vast landscape of ruins and vacant lots that constitute the north side of St. Louis — an area populated almost exclusively by working class and working poor African Americans. still/here constructs a documentary record of the blight and decay of this space, acting not as an overt assessment of social injustices but instead as a study of the way in which the politics of class and race within American society are integral to its very being. The ruins seen here are emblematic of an unimaginable absence at the core of much of the African Diaspora’s experience in North America. From the countless Africans lost in the Middle Passage and the disappeared 76 min

Innis Town Hall University of Toronto 2 Sussex Ave

$12 general admission $6 students, seniors, underemployed

Co-presented with Black Gold, Black Artists’ Network in Dialogue (BAND), Hot Docs, and Ryerson Image Centre.

Christopher Harris, A Willing Suspension of Disbelief, 2014.


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Lido Pimienta

We are in a Non-ReLationship ReLationship

Live Fri April 12 10pm

A work of theatre. A work of performance. Lido Pimienta is a Toronto-based, Colombian-born interdisciplinary musician and artist-curator. She has performed, exhibited, and curated around the world since 2002, exploring the politics of gender, race, motherhood, identity and the construct of the Canadian landscape in the Latin American diaspora and vernacular. Her 2017 Polaris Prize-winning album La Papessa charts Pimienta’s evolution into an independent woman and artist who refuses to fit into pre-conceived notions of what a pop Latina artist ought to be.

60 min

MOCA 158 Sterling Rd

$15 general admission $10 students, seniors, underemployed Ticket price includes entry to After Party at Unit 2

This program is part of Public Programs featured during the exhibitions of Chantal Akerman and Basma Alsharif, co-presented with MOCA.

Lido Pimienta photographed by Alejandro Santiago.


KEYNOTE Sat Apr 13 3pm

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CharLes Mudede

Visions of BLack Secret TechnoLogy This talk will begin by closely examining the movie Black Panther to determine not only how black technology is visualized but, more importantly, what this visualization tells us about our understanding, manner of coding, and modes of experiencing technology as a whole. The notion of advanced technology is, in fact, very new, and historically specific. But most of us hold, consciously or not, a Hegelian idea that it is transhistorical and progressive (rather than accidental and dispersed over the centuries). In the Hegelian view, each moment in universal history is leading to more and more improved forms of ordering and managing the human/nature metabolic exchange. This talk will also look at representations of black technology in the works of Saya Woolfalk and Sondra Perry, and will itself be structured like a movie. — Charles Mudede Charles Tonderai Mudede is a Zimbabwean-born cultural critic, urbanist, filmmaker, lecturer, and writer. He is the film editor for the Stranger and a lecturer at Cornish College. In 2018, he directed his first film, Thin Skin, from a script he wrote with Lindy West and Aham Oluo.

Innis Town Hall University of Toronto 2 Sussex Ave

FREE

Co-presented by University of Toronto Cinema Studies Institute.


60

Shorts Program

Notes on Being The tensions between being and being seen, speaking and being heard, moving and being moved. In this program, such tensions are made material. Identities and voices transfigure; some contorted by the will of an unseen force, others immovable even of their own volition. Livedness breathes as form, as narrative, as spectacle, as opposition. The quotidian and routine become a way through which some lives are able to cope, and others can no longer. Bodies and space are heavy under the watchful eyes of authenticity, ritual, and expectation. Language and movement emerge as tools of freedom, constraint, and sheer will. A study of the ways in which we have come to be. — Sarah-Tai Black

72 min

Innis Town Hall University of Toronto 2 Sussex Ave

on screen Sat Apr 13 5pm

Sitting on a Man, Onyeka Igwe International Premiere, UK, 2018, digital, 7 min, English Traditionally, women in Igbo-speaking parts of Nigeria came together to protest the behaviour of men by sitting on or making war on them, adorning themselves with palm fronds, dancing and singing protest songs outside the man in question’s home. This practice became infamous due to its prominence as a tactic in the Aba Women’s War, the 1929 all-woman protest against colonial rule. Two contemporary dancers reimagine the practice, drawing on both archival research and their own experiences. Specialised Technique, Onyeka Igwe North American Premiere, UK, 2018, digital, 7 min, English William Sellers and the Colonial Film Unit developed a framework for colonial cinema: slow edits and minimal camera movement, no camera tricks. In an effort to recuperate black dance from this colonial project, Specialised Technique attempts to transform this material from studied spectacle to livingness. Halimuhfack, Christopher Harris Toronto Premiere, US, 2016, 16mm > digital, 4 min, English A performer lip syncs to archival audio featuring the voice of author and anthropologist Zora Neale Hurston as she describes her method of documenting African American folk songs in Florida. By design, nothing in this film is authentic except the source audio. The flickering images were produced with a hand-cranked Bolex so that the lip sync is deliberately erratic and the rear-projected, grainy, looped images of Masai tribesmen and women, recycled from an educational film, become increasingly abstract as the audio transforms into an incantation.

$12 general admission $6 students, seniors, underemployed

Co-presented with cléo journal, C Magazine, Le Labo, the8fest and Toronto Palestine Film Festival. Christopher Harris, Halimuhfack, 2016.


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Saute ma ville, Chantal Akerman France, 1968, restored 35mm > digital, 13 min “The first film I made, Saute ma ville, was a world. Everything took place in a kitchen, but it was about destroying the world. Indeed it was called “Saute ma ville” (“Blow Up My Town”), but it was also called “Saute ma vie” (“Blow Up My Life”). And ultimately it was about the destruction of this world my mother, my aunts, and her aunts had shown me.” — Chantal Akerman

Chronicles of a Lying Spirit (by Kelly Gabron), Cauleen Smith Canadian Premiere, US, 1991, 16mm, 7 min, English An exploration of the fabrication of identity that layers time, space, and history in following the imagined life of Smith’s alter-ego, Kelly Gabron. Dual-narration discusses Gabron in the third person; the story is repeated, prompting a consideration of the instability and unreliability of history. Turkish Delight, Basma Alsharif Jordan, 2010, Super 8mm > digital, 3 min Composed of footage from three separate sequences that interweave frame by frame, Turkish Delish was shot within the interiors of empty homes in Amman, Jordan. The film’s sound is composed of recordings of food ingredients for unspecified dishes looped repetitively over ambient noise.

Aquarius, Kevin Jerome Everson US, 2003, 16mm > digital, 2 min, English A film about coping. Cycles, Zeinabu Irene Davis US, 1989, 16mm, 16 min, English Rasheeda Allen is waiting for her period. Drawing on Caribbean folklore, Cycles uses animation and live action to discover a film language unique to AfricanAmerican women. The multilayered soundtrack combines a chorus of women’s voices with the music of Africa and the diaspora, including Miriam Makeba, acappella singers from Haiti, and trumpetiste Clora Bryant.

Mutiny, Abigail Child US, 1982, 16mm > digital, 10 min, English Mutiny employs a panoply of expression, gesture, and repeated movement. Its central images are of women: at home, on the street, at the workplace, at school, talking, singing, jumping on trampolines, playing the violin. The syntax of the film reflects the possibilities and limitations of speech, while politically, physically, and realistically flirting with the language of opposition.

Print courtesy of the Academy Film Archive.

Re Dis Appearing, Theresa Hak Kyung Cha USA, 1977, video, 3 min, English and French The artist speaks a word, which is quickly echoed in French, so that the words are only barely comprehended. Simple images — a bowl, a photograph of the ocean — appear and disappear. This work is originally intended to be shown on a monitor.

Onyeka Igwe, Specialised Technique, 2018.

Kevin Jerome Everson, Aquarius, 2003.


62

Canadian SpotLight

Murky CoLours Murky Colours is based on a spy novel by Menjin Wei, the filmmaker’s father. It is not, by any measure, a conventional adaptation, although it does begin to chart the poetics of one. Through the arena of participatory documentary and film essay, fiction and document seem to conspire to tell a story of an unrealized film as family heirloom. Menjin’s novel was written with the aspiration of being adapted into a Hollywood film. In his daughter’s adaptation, all the markers of the genre are present but unravel through KC Wei’s arrangement of drama and archive that come together with a writerly consideration.

79 min

Innis Town Hall University of Toronto 2 Sussex Ave

on screen Sat Apr 13 7:30pm

Action scenes are intercut with Wei interviewing her father, him reading from his manuscript, gonzo footage of their family trip to China, and Hollywood and Hong Kong action films. Her editing and post-production techniques amplify the tropes of spy movies and pulp novels. The adaptation of Murky Colors, revitalized within its own lifetime, pulls its viewer into considering the internal chronologies of an artwork. — Steffanie Ling Murky Colours, KC Wei Toronto Premiere, Canada, 2016, digital, 47 min, English/Mandarin Preceded by: In Free Fall, Hito Steyerl Germany, 2010, digital, 32 min, German/English If we follow the disintegration of a Boeing 707-700 4X-JYI, we are put on the trajectory of the global economic crisis. One day you’re flown by Mossad, the next, blown up behind Keanu Reeves. A neverending swan song.

$12 general admission $6 students, seniors, underemployed

Co-presented with Canadian Art and Toronto Reel Asian International Film Festival.

Artist Talk details P. 25

Salina, Fabien, and Menjin. KC Wei, Murky Colours, 2016.


Live Sat Apr 13 10pm

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Aisha Sasha John

HEAT And in the warmness of the fire I feel fine. — Aisha Sasha John Aisha Sasha John’s medium is energy. Her solo dance show the aisha of is premiered at the Whitney Museum in 2017; in 2018 it was presented by the MAI and Toronto’s 2018 Summerworks Festival. I have to live. (McClelland & Stewart 2017) was a finalist for the 2018 Griffin Poetry Prize. This program is produced in partnership with Necessary Angel Theatre Company.

40 min

Location The Costume House 165 Geary Ave 2nd Floor, Unit A

$15 general admission $10 students, seniors, underemployed Ticket price includes entry to After Party at The Costume House.

Co-presented with FADO Performance Art Centre, Necessary Angel Theatre Company, SummerWorks Performance Festival and The Costume House.

Photo by Yuula Benivolski.


64

Shorts Program

Anti-Racist Mathematics and Other Stories

on screen Sat Apr 14 5pm

Anti-Racist Mathematics and Other Stories is a series of three speculative educational videos that have attempted to figure that pedagogy with the lexicon of our contemporary mediascape. If these are the lessons, what is the classroom, and the society that endorses this education? —Steffanie Ling Byron Peters is an artist and writer based in Vancouver (unceded Coast Salish Territories). His works take the form of sculpture, text, sound, and video, and his research engages emerging technologies, economic imaginaries, prison education, and the histories of science. Pure Difference Canada, 2017, digital, 22 min, English An imperialistic history of numbers with a combination of the bright voice of a tech presentation, a physics lesson out of Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Dispossessed, and the aesthetics of evading copyright violations on YouTube. Its hypothesis: a Western understanding of numbers functions serves to reinforce the dominance of capitalistic ideology.

Secessio Canada, 2018, digital, 18 min, English An adaptation of an ancient story of a mass general strike, told via a present-day crowd-modelling and crowd-control software. While showing the ‘‘artificial-stupidity’’ of technologies used for the training of enforcement officers and security design, it presents an anachronistic world where numbers do not hold.

10 - 3 = 13 Canada, 2018, digital, 13 min, English Set between a children’s play town that playfully delivers sincere propositions for a collective logic of political imagination. Drawing from anti-bias curricula alongside radical positions on colonial and historical debts, the second episode in the series offers a lesson on the ‘misinvention’ of negative numbers. Each are distinct in their playful didacticism and elements of the unreliable narrator, oscillating between satirical dramatizations and sincere propositions for a world wherein the equation 10 - 3 = 13 expresses an ideology of sharing, collectivity, and mutuality. 53 min

Innis Town Hall University of Toronto 2 Sussex Ave

$12 general admission $6 students, seniors, underemployed

Co-presented with Gamma Space and Ottawa International Animation Festival.

Byron Peters, 10 - 3 = 13 (Production Still), 2018.


on screen Sun Apr 14 7pm

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Feature

Empty MetaL

An uninspired punk band recruited by time-travelling revolutionaries. A future with tension between the unchecked militarization of land and air. Empty Metal traces a process from youth alienation to radicalization. A trio of musicians desert their sincere but ultimately uninspired creative endeavours after answering an inexplicable call to action by time-travelling revolutionaries. What unravels is a provocatively efficient assassination plot that reveals the status of the artist for what it is, a particle imbedded within some of the sustained injustices of our time: wanton surveillance, drone warfare, toxic masculinity within libertarian ranks, and the enduring inaccessibility to a secure sense of culture, place, and identity by displaced populations living in the United States. With the intention of creating a science fiction film set one week into the future, Empty Metal is an unselfconscious projection of the furthest political imagination stretched and shared by its directors. Whatever flippant, indulgent, irrational, or naive sentiments in this political, magical realist, revenge fantasy implicates expectations of images of civil disobedience, as historically eloquent, heroic, archivable, and visible, when oppression has always been mercurial, agile and, unprincipled. — Steffanie Ling Empty Metal, Adam Khalil and Bayley Sweitzer US, 2018, digital, 84 min, English

84 min

Innis Town Hall University of Toronto 2 Sussex Ave

$12 general admission $6 students, seniors, underemployed

Co-presented with imagineNATIVE Film & Media Arts Festival and Onsite Gallery.

Adam Khalil and Bayley Sweitzer, Empty Metal, 2018.


66

Shorts Program

The Diaspora Suite Ephraim Asili is a Filmmaker, DJ, and Traveler whose work focuses on the African diaspora as a cultural force. His films have screened in festivals and venues all over the world, including the New York Film Festival, Toronto International Film Festival, International Film Festival Rotterdam, The United States National Gallery of Art, The Whitney Museum, and The Museum of Modern Art. Shot on 16mm over the course of seven years in Brazil, Canada, Ethiopia, Ghana, Jamaica, and the United States, Asili’s The Diaspora Suite was described by the Brooklyn Art Museum as a “revelatory cycle of five short films collapsing time and space to reveal the hidden resonances that connect the black American experience to the greater African diaspora.” Forged Ways US, 2011, 16mm, digital, 15 min Photographed on location in Harlem,and various locations throughout Ethiopia, Forged Ways oscillates between the first person account of a filmmaker, the third person experience of a man navigating the streets of Harlem, and day-today life in the cities and villages of Ethiopia. American Hunger US, 2013, 16mm, digital, 19 min Oscillating between a street festival in Philadelphia, the slave forts and capitol city of Ghana, and the New Jersey shore, American Hunger explores the relationship between personal experience and collective histories. American fantasies confront African realities. African realities confront America fantasies. African fantasies confront American realities. American realities confront African fantasies… 77 min

Innis Town Hall University of Toronto 2 Sussex Ave

on screen Sun Apr 14 9:30pm

Many Thousands Gone Toronto Premiere, US, 2015, 16mm, digital, 8 min Filmed on location in Salvador, Brazil (the last city in the Western Hemisphere to outlaw slavery) and Harlem, New York (an international stronghold of the African Diaspora), Many Thousands Gone draws parallels between a summer afternoon on the streets of the two cities. A silent version of the film was given to jazz multi-instrumentalist Joe McPhee, who in turn produced an interpretive score. The final film is the combination of the images and McPhee’s real time “sight reading” of the score. Kindah Toronto Premiere, US, 2016, 16mm, digital, 12 min Kindah was shot in Hudson, New York and Accompong, Jamaica. Accompong was founded in 1739 after rebel slaves and their descendants fought a protracted war with the British, effectively leading to the establishment of a treaty between the two sides. The treaty signed under British governor Edward Trelawny granted Cudjoe’s Maroons 1500 acres of land between their strongholds of Trelawny Town and Accompong in the Cockpits, as well as a certain amount of political autonomy and economic freedoms. Cudjoe, a leader of the Maroons, is said to have united the Maroons in their fight for autonomy under the Kindah Tree—a large, ancient mango tree that is still standing. The tree symbolizes the common kinship of the community on its common land. Fluid Frontiers US, 2017, 16mm, digital, 23 min Shot along the Detroit River border region, Fluid Frontiers explores the relationship between concepts of resistance and liberation from the Underground Railroad (the Detroit River being a major terminal point), modern movements such as Dudley Randell’s Detroit based Broadside Press, as well as the installation, sculptural, and performance works of local Detroit Artists. All poems read are sourced from original copies of Broadside Press and recorded in one, unrehearsed take. The readers of these poems are natives of the Detroit Windsor region.

$12 general admission $6 students, seniors, underemployed

Co-presented with Black Artists Union (BAU), Black Gold, Doc Now, Regent Park Film Festival, and Vertical Features.

Ephraim Asili, American Hunger, 2013.


on screen Mon Apr 15 5pm

Shorts Program

67

Matter

The movement of matter is never explicit. This program brings together three works that launch inquiries into the movement of matter as collaboration. Each with a distinct methodology, from cinematic documentary, earthquake as accomplice, to black liberation, and connecting histories of trade, optics, and art. — Steffanie Ling

Sunstone, Filipa CĂŠsar and Louis Henderson North American Premiere, UK/Portugal, 2018, digital, 35 min, English/ Portuguese/Spanish A colonial and visual history of optics conveyed with a strata of 16mm film, desktop screen captures and 3D CGI. Contrasting the system of triangular trade with the political potential of Op Art in post-revolutionary Cuba, Sunstone examines the diverse social contexts of optics, divulging a spectrum of humanist pragmatism, discovery and oppression. See All That Is Solid. P.68.

Labour/Leisure, Ryan Ermacora and Jessica Johnson North American Premiere, Canada, 2019, digital, 19 min, English/Spanish The Okanagan Valley in the southern interior of British Columbia is marketed as a destination of leisure, recreation, retirement, and wealth. Behind this facade is a largely invisible agricultural labour force, comprised of temporary migrant workers from the Global South. Serpent Rain, Arjuna Neuman and Denise Ferreira da Silva Toronto Premiere, Norway, 2016, digital, 30 min, English When prompted by a philosopher to make a film without time, the result is a video that speaks from inside the cut between slavery and resource extraction; between Black Lives Matter and the matter of life; between the state changes of elements, timelessness and tarot. See also 4 Waters: Deep Implicancy at Gallery TPW P.30

84 min

Innis Town Hall University of Toronto 2 Sussex Ave

$12 general admission $6 students, seniors, underemployed

Co-presented with Cinema Politica, Gallery TPW, and Planet in Focus. Arjuna Neuman is a guest of the Goethe-Institut Toronto.

Ryan Ermacora and Jessica Johnson, Labour/Leisure, 2019.


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Feature

GARY

on screen Mon Apr 15 7:30pm

Do you know Gary? In 1984 music producer Gary Davis left an early recording success in New Jersey and New York City for a fresh start in Florida. From his new home he got to work making over 40 feature length kung-fu, zombie, and blaxploitation movies, while also helping birth a new sound in music: Miami booty bass. Featuring an eccentric cast of locals, Gary paints a fever dream portrait of this determined artist. Simon Mercer received an MA in film theory under the supervision of feminist film scholar Laura Mulvey. He has since made numerous experimental documentaries and films about filmmakers living on the margins, as well as music videos for artists including Dean Blunt, Babyfather, Actress and the Junior Boys. Gary, Simon Mercer World Premiere, Canada/UK, 2019, digital, 60 min, English

58 min

Innis Town Hall University of Toronto 2 Sussex Ave

$12 general admission $6 students, seniors, underemployed

Co-presented with Musicworks, POV, and Toronto Black Film Festival.

Simon Mercer, Gary, 2019.


on screen Mon Apr 15 9:30pm

Feature

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Squere

Two films shaped by obscure socio-political encounters between East Asia and the Eastern Bloc. While Citizens of the Cosmos is an experiment in defamiliarization, the central motif in Squere is an agent against forgetting. Despite departing from opposite sides of a former or future utopianism, the otherworldly elements in each of these works drum up affinities with histories that fold back onto the present. — Steffanie Ling

Citizens of The Cosmos, Anton Vidokle Canadian Premiere, Japan/Ukraine, 2019, digital, 30 min, Japanese A narration of the manifesto of Biocosmism unfurls across a sequence of dream-like tableaus amongst urban shrines, a crematorium, tatami rooms, a bamboo forest, and a theremin recital. Cosmism was introduced to Japan in 1943 and is one of the first instances of translation of the concepts beyond Russia and the USSR.

102 min

$12 general admission $6 students, seniors, underemployed

Innis Town Hall University of Toronto 2 Sussex Ave

Squere, Karolina Breguła World Premiere, Taiwan/Poland, 2017, digital, 72 min, Mandarin A mysterious object imbedded in the bushes on the square calls out to the citizens of a small town—“I’d like to ask you a question”—provoking a spectrum of reactions from calm spectatorship to organized aggression. Said to be a public sculpture, a remnant of a bygone political order, the voice begins to build from sweet ambiguity to that of a screech. Because what it says is neither a question nor an outright statement; the looming possibility of a question unravels the town’s functional complacency.

Co-presented with Ryerson University School of the Image Arts and YYZ Artists’ Outlet.

Karolina Breguła, Squere, 2017.


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Shorts Program

ALL That Is SoLid

on screen Tue Apr 16 5:30pm

There exist multiple tensions between the amplification of aesthetic or cultural pursuits and the political conditions, movements, and matter of making. This program focuses on the latter—video essays and strategic pop aesthetics are noted formal approaches to the illumination of such tensions. How will climate change affect the web extension of certain global video streaming and television sites, or ants? The lessons of extractions beget disappearances behind a veil of capital’s trinkets. — Steffanie Ling

Breaker of Horses, Pernille Matzen and Nanna Rebekka Toronto Premiere, Denmark, 2015, digital, 14 min, Danish The long patinated surfaces of monuments celebrating the heroics of conflict have death and slavery sublimated into them, but their image propagates the alignment of death with glory, allegiance, progress. Breaker of Horses, structured as a formal and symbolic reading of two monuments, unravels the Belgian colonization of the Congo as a king’s ruthless and flippant pursuit of beauty, civic decor, and self-styled accolades.

King Edward VII Equestrian Statue Floating Down The Don River, Life of a Craphead Toronto Premiere, Canada, 2018, digital, 9 min, English In 1969, a prominent Toronto businessman and politician purchases a “great equestrian statue” for Queen’s Park. The statue still bears the original plaque stating that man depicted on the horse is “The Emperor of India.” In 2017, Life of a Craphead dumps a replica of the colonial monument in the Don, where it floats down the toxified river, making a strong proposal for corrective action.

.TV, G. Anthony Svatek US/Tuvalu/New Zealand/France, 2018, digital, 22 min, English/Tuvaluan Voicemails left by an anonymous caller from the future guides us to the remote islands of Tuvalu, perhaps the first country to “disappear” due to rising sea levels, and the vastly popular and surprisingly lucrative countrycode web extension, .TV, along with it. The caller describes how heat, digital screens, and distance gave him no choice but to leave his sinking home and escape into cyberspace, where rising waters will never reach him.

All That Is Solid, Louis Henderson France, 2014, digital, 16 min, English/French Wouldn’t you like to know the mineral weight of the Cloud? Filmed in the Agbogbloshie electronic waste ground in Accra and illegal gold mines of Ghana, All That Is Solid critiques the capitalist myth of the immateriality of new technology.

Myrmex, Elisabeth Molin International Premiere, Greece, 2018, digital, 3 min Ants scurry across the fragmented surfaces of classical Greek sculptures in the Agora, showcasing a zone of subsistence within an ancient marketplace. 65 min

Innis Town Hall University of Toronto 2 Sussex Ave

$12 general admission $6 students, seniors, underemployed

Co-presented with Art Metropole and DOC Institute.

Still from All That Is Solid (2014). Image copyright of the artist, courtesy of Video Data Bank, www.vdb.org, School of the Art Institute of Chicago


on screen Tue Apr 16 7:30pm

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Shorts Program

interior MythoLogies

Land is inextricable from embodied history and, here, this history is one of time, ritual, storytelling, and, crucially, indigeneity. The mythologies and spiritual practices that inform the earth, air, and bodies of these films are both eternal and in flux. Spells of protection are cast by botanist-activists to salve the earth and its most vulnerable living of further wound. Spaces of ritual worship have undergone irrevocable transformation. Spirits inform physical materiality, physiological healing, emotional fortitude. Ancient deities are honoured. The past and present intertwine in the bearing of ancestral knowledge and natural resource. Stories of life, death, and space in between take place upon sacred land and within otherworlds. —Sarah-Tai Black Smudge Series, Eve-Lauryn LaFountain Canadian Premiere, US, 2013, 16mm, 7 min This trilogy of 16mm films explores living Indigenous histories in southern California. In Indabaabasaan (I Smudge It, I Cleanse It), the artist cleanses the city and sets the tone for the following pieces. Soda Lake bends the sky, earth and air. Boozhoo Jiibayag (Hello Ghosts) shows the spirits that come out to play when darkness settles over the desert. The Ojibwe titles come from the artist’s traditional tribal language, which she uses her art practice to explore, reclaim, and relearn. Soundscapes by Jon Almaraz.

La cabeza mató a todos, Beatriz Santiago Muñoz Canadian Premiere, US, 2014, digital, 7 min, Spanish A mixing of Indigenous mythologies with present-day characters, geographies, and culture in Puerto Rico. The title refers to how a shooting star was (in local mythology) interpreted as a head without a body, crossing the sky, signalling the arrival of chaos and destruction. The actor in the video, Michelle Nonó, is herself a hybrid creature, an androgynous figure, in touch with native plants—she’s a medicinal botanist but also a cultural activist. She hosts cultural events in her house, in an section of primarily Afro-Caribbean and post-industrial Carolina. Piramide erosionada, Colectivo los ingrávidos North American Premiere, Mexico, 16mm > digital, 8 min From pyramid to mountain. A Tree Is Like A Man, Thorbjorg Jonsdottir North American Premiere, Columbia/US, 2019, 16mm > digital, 29 min, Spanish An attempt to touch the otherworld through its edges. Filmmaker Thorbjorg Jonsdottir met Ayahuasquero Don William back in the year 2000 by chance while traveling in the Colombian Amazon. The film serves as personal witness to Don William’s lifetime relationship to Ayahuasca and other plant medicines that are native to the jungle. With the rainforest a rich labyrinthine background, this portrait is at once intimate and spare, opening up to alternate realities as dense as the jungle itself, with kaleidoscopic multiplicities in both the natural and the spiritual realms. La Bala de Sandoval, Jean Jacques Martinod Canadian Premiere, Ecuador, 2019, 16mm > digital, 17 min, Spanish Isidro meanders through the rainforest as he and his brother recall the various times he came face to face with death itself.

Altares, Colectivo los ingrávidos World Premiere, Mexico, 2019, 16mm > digital, 4 min Altares is an audiovisual shrine to ancient deities.

72 min

Innis Town Hall University of Toronto 2 Sussex Ave

$12 general admission $6 students, seniors, underemployed

Co-presented with aluCine Latin Film + Media Arts Festival, Pleasure Dome, and Sur Gallery.

Thorbjorg Jonsdottir, A Tree Is Like A Man, 2019.»


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Shorts Program

Screening + TaLk with MichaeL Keshane Michael Roderick Keshane is a First Nations independent filmmaker and artist from Keeseekoose First Nation and the Coté First Nation Reserve. His work explores the sense of peace that First Nations people find through maintaining the cultural traditions of their ancestors in the face of uncertain futures and harsh realities.

on screen Wed Apr 17 12pm

9 Rules: From Safety Precautions, Michael Keshane Canada, 2018, digital, 22 min, English The latest chapter in Michael Keshane’s ongoing body of work focusing on the loss of his Elders and family members. 9 Rules is a raw, poignant and personal reflection on grief, struggle, and the search for healing.

See also Outliers On Tour. P.29

Keepers For The Old People, Michael Keshane Canada, 2017, digital, 18 min, English Keepers For The Old People is a different type of documentary. It follows the artist as he journeys with elders and recalls the teachings from his youth, all while struggling to cope with the loss of his grandparents. Based on a true story of family loss, Keshane’s journey is told by revisiting the past and looking between the lines of what it means to have grown up in north-central Regina, and what it means to carry history forward as a keeper of stories, faith, pain, and healing.

40 min

FREE

Bachir/Yerex Presentation Space The gallery is accessible. Both screenings will be captioned and described video will be available. The artist talk will be captioned and ASL interpretation will be available.

Co-presented with Tangled Art + Disability and Near North Mobile Media Lab.

Michael Keshane, 9 Rules: from Safety Precautions, 2018


on screen Thu Apr 18 3pm

Shorts Program

73

Domestic Cinema

The ongoing discourse of Domestic Cinema springs from Gabi Dao’s film The Protagonists. Examining the relationships that can be created through moving digital images and incorporated sound produced in close proximity to our homes, Domestic Cinema counters the dramatization of the home as a site of nostalgia and psychoanalysis, in the lives of marginalized or diasporic demographics. Instead, this program presents the domestic as a playground for identities to flourish, blush, retreat, or trumpet. — Steffanie Ling The Patient Storm, Dana Claxton Canada, 2006, digital, 8 min, English Storm, a graceful and gesticulating woman. Lightning, she who espouses cool riddle speak. A conversation suspended between mythology and girl talk proceeds in the sky.

And What Is The Summer Saying?, Payal Kapadia Canadian Premiere, India, 2018, digital, 21 min, Marathi Namdeo has learned to live off the forest from his father. He stares at the treetops, searching for honey. The wind blows and afternoon descends on the small village by the jungle. Women of the village whisper little secrets of their lost loves. The Lining, Charlotte Zhang Toronto Premiere, US/Canada, 2018, digital, 21 min, English The sweet and controlled banter between the family, friends, and lovers of a Los Angeles teen. Love and friendship are quietly discussed, or knowingly intimated in the bonds we witness during ritual and hang-out. Five Movements /五種流行之氣, Lily Jue Sheng International Premiere, US, 2018, digital, 35 min, English A diaristic interpretation of Wu Xing, a Chinese system of energies roughly meaning, “five kinds of qi prevailing at different times.” Two nameless, unidentified characters explore phantasmagoric interiors and exteriors, activating a loose story that visually emphasizes colour, composition, effects, lighting, and mood.

A-5H1, Laura Acosta and Paz Ramirez Larrain World Premiere, Canada, 2019, digital, 3 min 5H1 is the shipping code for woven plastic bags without inner lining or coating. Three large plastic aliens wiggle and morph to perform a ballet of erratic movements in various public spaces throughout Montreal. The Protagonists, Gabi Dao Toronto Premiere, Canada, 2018, digital, 8 min, English A bejewelled and ornamentally manicured robotic hand flinches. Vibrant plumes of smoke hover between vegetable garden and greenhouse. Incense burns. Aloe, sliced. Such motifs cast before us to interrogate cinematic history and movement as nostalgia machines fuelling the emotion of diaspora narratives.

96 min

Innis Town Hall University of Toronto 2 Sussex Ave

$12 general admission $6 students, seniors, underemployed

Co-presented with Breakthroughts Film Festival, Call Again, Liaison of Independent Filmmakers of Toronto, and SAVAC.

Lily Jue Sheng, Five Movements, 2018.


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Student Program

a BLack HoLe is a BLack HoLe in the Ground This program of student works articulates a specific tension between aesthetic and utilitarian approaches to architecture, and their implicit ability to shape our sociopolitical conceptions of time, space, and personhood. What does does it mean to see Richard Serra’s EastWest/West-East (2014) beside the prototypes for the new US/Mexico border wall? In what way are we to interpret these aesthetics and on what side of these structures do we find ourselves? How can we learn to recognize the inherent biases in how we relate to these forms and, more importantly, how can we work to dismantle them? What walls have we built to house our perceivably unique experiences? What are the implications of altering our vision of these landscapes in such ways and how does this affect our understanding of the quotidian? — Aaron Moore and Jeremy Saya

on screen Thu Apr 18 5:30pm

WASIS, Carr Sappier Canada, 2017, digital, 6 min Using found fabrics and objects, WASIS recreates an imaginative world from the perspective of an unborn child. The variety of shapes, colours, and sounds are ambiguously explored as if seeing and hearing them for the first time. taking-away, Eginhartz Kanter Canadian Premiere, Austria/Japan, 2018, digital, 10 min taking-away shows surprisingly quiet streets in Tokyo on a surprisingly quiet night. The nocturnal peace is interrupted by an unexpected intervention. A strange object shifts the appearance of the uncanny and seemingly apocalyptic landscape. It disturbs the peaceful order of the well-kept neighbourhood. Buffer Zone Blues, Franz Milec Canadian Premiere , Czech Republic, 2018, digital, 6 min As part of the so-called strategy of mutually assured destruction, the US produced a list of over 2,000 nuclear targets in the Eastern Bloc. Only a few years ago this information was declassified, revealing a list that includes not only military bases and airports but also targets that would have had an impact on millions of civilians. Lane, Evangeline Brooks Canada, 2018, 16mm with digital, 3 min Shot both digitally and on 16mm, Lane explores how water changes when interacting with a swimmer, before reverting to stagnancy. EVEN IN PARADISE, Duane Peterson Canadian Premiere, USA, 2018, digital, 10 min Serene forest groves and opaque Silicon Valley windows provide the visual framework for this assumption-challenging essay film, which takes a critical geography approach toward a new way of seeing the costs of war-making found in the very flesh of California.

69 min

Innis Town Hall University of Toronto 2 Sussex Ave

Pay What You Can A free shuttle bus will depart from Innis to the Cinesphere for Closing Night at 7pm.

Co-presented with OCAD University, Toronto Queer Film Festival and University of Toronto John H Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape & Design.


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MONOLITH, Gabriel Bullen Qatar, 2018, Super 8/8mm with digital, 3 min Shot on Super 8 film with all edits executed in-camera, this non-linear work examines US artist Richard Serra’s enigmatic installation East-West/WestEast (2014) located in the Brouq Nature Reserve in Qatar. Life After Love, Zachary Epcar Canadian Premiere, USA, 2018, digital, 9 min, English A shifting in the light of the lot, where parked cars become containers for a collective estrangement. It’s Going to Be Beautiful, Luis Gutierrez Arias Canadian Premiere, MEX/USA, 2018, digital, 9 min, Spanish Eight prototypes for a border wall stand on the US-Mexico border. To choose a winning design, Border Patrol officers and the military will attempt to climb, dig under, or breach the structures using techniques employed by immigrants and drug dealers. Aufstieg, Eginhartz Kanter Canadian Premiere, Austria/Hungary, 2018, digital, 3 min Aufstieg – “rise” – is an attempt to contrast the massive aesthetic of a brutalist residential block with a poetic gesture. The coexistence of nature and ruins is broken here by the action of a protagonist. A Black Hole is a Black Hole in the Ground, Sophia Feuer & Tyler Marci World Premiere, USA, 2018, 16mm>digital, 13 min, English Concerning three groups of children from disparate upbringings, A Black Hole is a Black Hole in the Ground blends techniques of science fiction and ethnography to intimately depict the strange, ephemeral realities that arise on evenings of play during early youth.


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cLosing NIGHT and awards Thu Apr 18 8pm

OLiver Husain, Lisa Jackson, KeLLy Richardson, MichaeL Snow, and LeiLa Sujir

OUTER WORLDS This program presents five original IMAX commissions, giving artists a unique opportunity to experiment with the large screen format. In keeping with the cinematic genre typical of IMAX films—the larger-than-life landscape that forms an outer world beyond the limits of the human sensorium—each of the films explores expanded cinema through different ecologies of the nonhuman: the forest, lichen, snails, water, and sky. The works propose different worlds of experience and distinct grammars of immersion through a meeting with the camera. The invited artists in this program—Oliver Husain, Lisa Jackson, Kelly Richardson, Michael Snow, and Leila Sujir—imagine common worlds by reflecting upon the exigencies of intercultural and interspecies communication. This task has taken on great urgency in the 21st century as we grapple with how to adapt to the ecological realities brought about by anthropogenic climate change. The term “Anthropocene” describes our current geological age, characterized by a massive acceleration in the geohistory of the Earth. For some artists in this program this notion provides a means to reimagine our entanglements with nature and our damaged planet. For others, the new universalizing discourse of species avoids the real culprit: the Capitalocene. As expressed by Donna Haraway, the Capitalocene is the relationship between the commodification of the Earth and the Anthropocene. These notions are critical as we rethink the future of global citizenship, a future that depends on our capacity to communicate across cultures and species to reimagine the worlds we share. — Curated by Janine Marchessault 50 min

Cinesphere Ontario Place 955 Lake Shore Blvd W

$15 general admission $10 students, seniors, underemployed Preceeded by the 2019 Images Awards, p.13

Co-presented with CFMDC, Cinesphere, IMAA, MANO/RAMO, and York University School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design.

Includes admission to Closing Night Party with Myst Milano

Oliver Husain, Garden of the Legend of the Golden Snail, 2019.


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cLosing NIGHT and awards Thu Apr 18 8pm Aerial, Leila Sujir World Premiere, Canada, 2019, IMAX digital, 10 min, English A west coast rainforest seen through a drone-mounted camera. Moving rapidly as if it were a hummingbird, it hovers, zigzags horizontally, then vertically. Four white embossed stills of a forest landscape extend the possibility of inner spaces encouraging us to step back into ourselves, to contemplate, and to engage with memory and the recording process.

Embers and the Giants, Kelly Richardson World Premiere, Canada, 2019, IMAX digital, 7 min Embers and the Giants presents an endangered, old-growth forest during twilight, articulated by thousands of embers of light. Are we witness to a rare, exceptionally beautiful display of fireflies? Or is human intervention at play, suggesting a time when we’ll need to amplify nature in order to convince the public of its worth?

Lichen, Lisa Jackson World Premiere, Canada, 2019, IMAX digital, 10 min, English Lichen is an otherworldly film that takes a deep dive into a species that confounds scientists to this day. Ancient and diverse, thriving in adversity, lichen is a model of “emergence.” This film reveals the hidden magical beauty of this remarkable life form and asks what we might learn from it.

Cityscape, Michael Snow World Premiere, Canada, 2019, IMAX digital, 10 min Snow’s Cityscape elaborates on the methods used in his groundbreaking landscape film La Région Centrale (1971), which used a 360° rotating camera. Taking the advice of his long-time friend, Graeme Ferguson, to produce the latter as an IMAX film, Snow orchestrates new patterns of movement to dizzyingly capture the cityscape of Toronto.

Garden of the Legend of the Golden Snail, Oliver Husain World Premiere, Canada/Indonesia, 2019, IMAX digital 3D, 13 min, English/Indonesian Referencing a popular fairy tale and a new source of protein, the first IMAX cinema in Indonesia—the Keong Emas Theatre— was built to resemble a golden apple snail. Moving between tiny and monumental, soft and solid, mythical and invasive, this graceful animal is making its slow-paced way through the topography of IMAX cinema itself.

Commissioned by the Public Access Collective. Technical Production by True Frame Productions. This is one of the 200 exceptional projects funded through the Canada Council for the Arts’ New Chapter program. With this $35M investment, the Council supports the creation and sharing of the arts in communities across Canada.


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Canadian SpotLLight: KC Wei


By Tiziana La MeLia

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The Tender Sorrow of Casey Wei “There really isn’t an image of tenderness that is approximate to the meaning of the word.” - Casey Wei, nothingreasons blog, 2012 “Woman is not the moon. She must rely on herself to shine.” - Ting Lan via Trinh T. Minh-Ha “Because I love you and I don’t want you to die.” - Puzzlehead We sit under the supermoon in midwinter, writing in reverse. Bathed under moonlight, making stuff up, ripping off dreams, spinning webs. Since dreaming is not automatic for everyone, perhaps even to dream is to fabricate. The particular blood colour of this moon occurs when blue light “undergoes stronger atmospheric scattering.”1 As sunlight passes through the atmosphere, it casts a reflection, refracts on the moon, illuminating the moon with red light. The moon appears bigger than usual when it’s close to the horizon, a phenomenon, I learn, called “the moon illusion.” Casey Wei is a filmmaker whose work concerns the romance of just such a distance. Her first film, Murky Colours (2013), is a sort of meta-adaptation of a made-for-Hollywood spy novel first written by her father, Menjin Wei. It weaves together her visualization of Menjin’s script and her personal catalogue of friction (like when the video lens makes contact with denim as the character tries to buckle her seat belt), charting her movements between Los Angeles, Hong Kong, and the “Three Ponds Mirroring the Moon” in Hangzhou. Like many films that contend with diasporic narratives, Murky Colours begins by cinching together multiple entries and perspectives: of an airplane, and then followed by other modes of transit. In an email conversation with Wei, she


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explained that she shot these scenes—fragmented sequences on planes, in malls—covertly and at waist height, from a bag with a hole cut out for the lens. This spy device not only recalls both an amateur style typical of home video and the popular/punk “poor image” coined by artist Hito Steyerl to describe the aesthetic aspirations of the populist crowd,2 but also early female “home travelogue” cinematography, which emerged around the ’40s in America with a newly mobile type of (wealthy, white) woman.3 In one scene, after dressing up as the protagonist in the novel Femme Fatale, Selina (played by Wei) sways seductively in front of a hotel window overlooking the city (Hong Kong), with a scarf that turns into a magical portal. Inside this gliding visual space is a remixed montage of people (mainly in China) playing guitar or saxophone, or dancing at a local plaza. While there are far too many storylines in the film to recount here, one worth mentioning concerns the muted relationship between the father and his daughter as they struggle to come to terms with their family’s migration, guided by the former’s descriptions of disappearance in the Shanghai neighbourhood they once called home. The kinds of distance embodied in these scenes have a diffracting effect—one that uses collage aesthetics, non-hierarchical points of view, and purposefully clashing modes of narration. The telling happens not only optically but also in the blur of diegetic and non-diegetic sound referencing music and folly sounds from the genres of mystery, action, crime, and noir cinema. Wei’s collagist aesthetic likewise applies to her experimentation in and across other disciplines. Performing as her solo musical act, hazy, Wei emotes the euphoria and idealism of youth culture resisting capitalism. This sense of integration and disintegration is most palpable in her latest film, art rock? The Popular Esoteric (2018), where a sense of needing space for catharsis, and for misfits to be seen by other publics, is conveyed by bringing various anti-establishment venues into visual proximity. Watching the film, I was reminded of spaces like the Emergency Room in Vancouver, a venue that marked my era of art school, or Ms. T’s Cabaret (a bit before my time), which burned down in 2003. Not only does the film effectively document a scene and moment in time, it also


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puts in motion the conditions for liveliness and multiple communities to overlap, mythologizing its intensities. In a city that feels increasingly unrecognizable and alienated to working class or struggling folk, art rock? allows, at least for a brief moment in time, the possibility of returning to grubby and messy stages left un-swept. Wei’s critical and poetic DIY publishing projects include the ongoing Agony Klub book series and music micro-label, as well as the annual essay collection Whitney Houston et al. These projects act as primers for films like art rock? The Popular Esoteric (2018), which documents the musical performances in post-Olympic Vancouver between the years 2014-2018. In order to make the film, Wei organized exactly 31 music and performance evenings (the titular art rock? Events at the Astoria) and videographed them. The footage shot would later become a large part of the content of her documentary, which is sparse in didactics and full of song. The camera zooms in at a standing ovation that occurs over a cleared stage as Wei’s voice declares, “There has been a steep uprise and a steep decline, where the two curves meet, that is the point of entry to this, the popular esoteric [...] the popular becomes esoteric, and the esoteric fucks with the status quo.” In a 2016 book that accompanied the album x.o. Virgo Ox by hazy, she wrote, “[t]he distance between me / and the screen gives / perception its shape; / it is a feedback loop of desire, / a cheap trick, / a recurring / dream.” Moon illusions describing the romance of a distance. Recurring in art rock? is a video by Strawberry, the musical project of artists Dennis Ha and Barry Doupé. It depicts a haunting restaging of the final beach/death scene in Luchino Visconti’s Death in Venice. Gustav von Aschenbach (played by Ha) is slouched against a trash can at the edge of a littered boardwalk. Apart from the camera’s slow movement, Gustav is completely still. In the original death scene, a young boy named Tadzio (played by Doupé), walks away from the dying man, wading into the Adriatic Sea; in this reimagining, Tadzio returns to Gustav and gives him a kiss, as though awakening a sleeping beauty. Fog contributes to a daytime drama, film noir feeling. Optically, Strawberry’s video


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rhymes with Murky Colours, and was produced by Wei during her exhibition/residency Karaoke Video Maker Free Store at Unit/Pitt in Vancouver of April 2017. During this period, people from the community and neighbourhood responded to the artist’s offer to shoot a free music video. Many who took up her offer were those who had performed or frequented venues like the Astoria, especially on evenings organized by Wei. Bands like JSN (the musical project of artists Steve Hubert and John Burgess) and Strawberry reappear throughout the documentary, acting as a kind of shared visual connection and preoccupation (or love, by Wei, between these two works, made many years apart). In When The Moon Waxes Red, Trinh T. Minh-Ha describes the cyclical and gravitational pulls of the moon as “the site of possibility for diversely repressed realities,” and further elaborates to say that “our relations to the moon are always a relation to the self.”4 Wei’s various projects are exemplary of this in their porousness and vital insistence on transformation and exposing repressed realities, desire, and longing for touch. (Meanwhile, we are watching the supermoon, there exists a similar sensation to watching a durational performance that you don’t wanna walk out on. I tell myself to let go (of the scripts I carry to the moon) and to go back inside. Some people respond to the moon as if it’s a refresh button; others make it an occasion to be together, even if after tonight we never see each other again. Instead of getting angry at each other, we gain composure, and for two hours, at the edge of anger, wander across the city to a familiar crossroads, telling the same heartaches with gentle humour while slurping the souping universe together.5 There is no shortage of a full moon story to signify a rupture in reality or to psychically cope with distances between humans and places, whether by exile or choice. Let’s go back to Wei and her family rowing a boat to Three Ponds Mirroring the Moon. Large captions superimposed over Communist-style clocks recount a tragic story Wei was told by her mom as a child. It is about a woman married to an evil landlord, but who was in love with a noble archer. Torn, she sees a fortune teller who pities her and gives her a pill to split with the archer so they can be together forever. While waiting for him under the full moon, she looks down at the pill in her hand and, when glamoured6 by the moon’s shimmer, momentarily loses all sense of things and swallows the pill whole. The woman floats up to the moon and is cursed to spend eternity at a distance.7 Tenderness perhaps can’t exist as an image, but in the suffering of holding onto a lost object. Why does the moon turn red? https://www.timeanddate.com/eclipse/why-does-moon-look-red-lunar-eclipse.html. Accessed January 29, 2019

1

2 “Poor images are thus popular images—images that can be made and seen by the many. They express all the contradictions of the contemporary crowd: its opportunism, narcissism, desire for autonomy and creation, its inability to focus or make up its mind, its constant readiness for transgression and simultaneous submission.” Steyerl, Hito, “In Defense of The Poor Image”, e-flux journal, 2009. 3

Referring to Courtney Stephens, an LA based filmmakers research and film Terra Femme (2017).

Minh-Ha, Trinh T., The Moon Waxes Red: Representational Gender and Cultural Politics. Routledge, 1992. Minh-Ha proposes darkness and the moon as a distinctly Asian and feminine space for non-binary thought. 4

5 A reference to both Wei’s nothingreasions blog, friends and the “miso soup” universe (after coffee cup in Godard’s 2 ou 2 chose que je sais d’elle, 1967) depicted in a sequence within Murky Colours and described in Wei’s essay about Yasujiro Ozu, Ozu’s Seasons. Blank Cheque, 2017. 6 To «glamour,» the ability of a vampire to charm a human into obeying and erasing human memory, as in the TV series True Blood. Archaic definitions of the word glamour are linked to both grammar and magic. Wikipedia. Accessed on January 29, 2018. 7 I thought about Persephone, who never meant to go travelling at all. But her desirability meant she got trafficked by her father, Zeus, to her uncle Hades. And when she ate of the fruit there, the pomegranate, she became chained to both, homeless, doomed to migrate seasonally, and set in cycle the entire world.


January 16 to April 14, 2019

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Mary Anne Barkhouse, Maryanne Casasanta, DaveandJenn, Li Xinmo, Qavavau Manumie, Pejvak (Rouzbeh Akhbari + Felix Kalmenson), Naufus Ramírez-Figueroa, Ningiukulu Teevee, Flora Weistche Curated by Lisa Deanne Smith How to Breathe Forever is a group exhibition that underlines the importance and interconnectedness of air, animals, land, plants and water.

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OTHER PLACES: REFLECTIONS ON MEDIA ARTS PRACTICES IN CANADA Edited by Deanna Bowen Assistant Editor Keli Safia Maksud Available in Print from Public Books Online at: otherplaces.mano-ramo.ca July 2019

W W W. R E E L A S I A N . C O M • • • N O V E M B E R 2 0 1 9

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Supporting Moving-Image Artists Since 1980 Vancouver | Unceded Coast Salish Territories www.cineworks.ca

䌀匀嘀 挀漀渀最爀愀琀甀氀愀琀攀猀  琀栀攀 瀀愀爀琀椀挀椀瀀愀琀椀渀最  愀爀琀椀猀琀猀 椀渀 琀栀椀猀 礀攀愀爀✀猀  䤀洀愀最攀猀 ㈀ ㄀㤀  昀攀猀琀椀瘀愀氀⸀ CRITICAL ART + CULTURE For information on our annual call for submissions visit aspacegallery.org. A Space Gallery gratefully acknowledges the support of our members and project partners as well as the Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council and the Toronto Arts Council.

401 Richmond St W • Suite 110 Toronto Ontario • M5V 3A8 info@aspacegallery.org

䌀栀攀挀欀 漀甀琀  䌀匀嘀  昀漀爀 礀漀甀爀  瘀椀搀攀漀 愀爀琀Ⰰ  ǻ氀洀Ⰰ  愀甀搀椀漀  愀渀搀 嘀刀  瀀爀漀搀甀挀琀椀漀渀  渀攀攀搀猀⸀

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Artist Index and Bios Abigail Child Abigail Child has been at the forefront of experimental writing and media since the 1980s. An acknowledged pioneer in montage, Child’s early film work addressed the interplay between sound and image in the context of reshaping narrative tropes, in a manner that prefigured many contemporary and future media concerns. p.58-59 Adam Khalil Adam Khalil is a filmmaker and artist from the Ojibway tribe who lives and works in Brooklyn. His practice attempts to subvert traditional forms of ethnography through humor, relation, and transgression. Khalil’s work has been exhibited at the MOMA, Sundance Film Festival, Walker Arts Center, Lincoln Center, Tate Modern, and Whitney Museum of American Art. p.63 Aisha Sasha John Aisha Sasha John’s medium is energy. Her solo dance show the aisha of is premiered at the Whitney Museum in 2017. In 2018 it was presented by the MAI and Toronto’s 2018 Summerworks Festival. I have to live. (McClelland & Stewart, 2017) was finalist for the 2018 Griffin Poetry Prize. p.61 Andrés Baron Andrés Baron is an artist who lives and works in Paris. Through working in film, video and photography, his practice is interested in how the image is transformed by screens and networks, and play with spaces of representation. He received his MFA from l’École nationale supérieure des Arts Décoratifs in Paris. p.53 Anna Ridler Anna Ridler is an artist and researcher who works with information and data. Her interests include drawing, machine learning, data collection, storytelling, and technology. She has degrees from the Royal College of Art, Oxford University, and University of Arts London. She lives and works in London, UK. p.32

Anton Vidokle Anton Vidokle is an artist and editor of e-flux journal. He was born in Moscow and lives in New York and Berlin. Vidokle’s work has been exhibited internationally at Documenta 13 and the 56th Venice Biennale. Vidokle’s films have been presented at Bergen Assembly, Shanghai Biennale, the 65th and 66th Berlinale International Film Festival, Gwangju Biennale, Center Pompidou, Tate Modern, Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Stedelijk Museum, and others. p.67 Arjuna Neuman Arjuna Neuman is an artist, filmmaker and writer. His work has been presented at Whitechapel Gallery, London; Istanbul Modern, Istanbul; Sharjah Biennial, UAE; Bergen Assembly, Norway; at NTU Centre for Contemporary Art, Singapore; and the 56th Venice Biennale. p.30, 65 Arnait Video Productions Arnait Video Productions has been producing video since 1991. It is a collective of women from Igloolik (Inuit and non-Inuit) who express their values and views through a medium that allows them to share their stories with both their community and outside audiences. Arnaitvideo.ca p.40 Aron Lesnik Aron Lesnik is a conceptual video and performance artist. In his works he broaches the mechanics of representation and normative identities. He studied in Leipzig, Vienna and Braunschweig and was a master student of Prof. Candice Breitz. He lives and works in Berlin, Germany. p.32 Basma Alsharif Basma Alsharif is an artist/filmmaker born in Kuwait to Palestinian parents, raised between France, the U.S. and Gaza, she is currently based in Cairo. Alsharif has exhibited internationally including in New York City, Berlin; Sharjah; São Paulo, Murcia, Tokyo, and Paris. p.28, 56, 58-59

Bayley Sweitzer Bayley Sweitzer is a filmmaker currently based in Brooklyn. His practice revolves around a dynamic engagement with the margins and an interest in the chronomorphic qualities of narrative, specifically the camera’s ability to consolidate dimensions. His work has been shown at Film Society Lincoln Center, Anthology Film Archives, Pacific Film Archive, Tate Modern. p.63 Beatrice Gibson Beatrice Gibson is an artist and filmmaker based in London. Her films are often improvised in nature, exploring the pull between chaos and control in the process of their own making. Gibson is twice winner of The Tiger Award for best short film at the Rotterdam International Film Festival and winner of the 2015 Baloise Art Prize, Art Basel. p.39 Beatriz Santiago Muñoz Beatriz Santiago Muñoz was born in San Juan, Puerto Rico, in 1972. She completed her BA in humanities at the University of Chicago in 1993 and received her MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1997, where she studied film and video. p.69 Byron Peters Byron Peters is an artist and writer based in Vancouver (unceded Coast Salish Territories). His collaborative and solo works take the form of sculpture, text, sound, and video, and his research engages emerging technologies, economic imaginaries, prison education, and the histories of science. p.62 Callum Hill Callum Hill is a London based artist filmmaker. Her films are led by real characters, locations and experiences. From these factual starting points she constructs idiosyncratic, at times erratic, narratives that move between the personal and the political. Film Awards include The 2018 Berwick New Cinema Award (Crowtrap) and The


2016 Aesthetica Artist Film Award (Solo Damas) She is currently artist in resident at the Irish Museum of Modern Art developing the film ‘A Portrait of an Artist as a Young German Bitch’. p.54 Carr Sappier With deep roots in their Wolastoqew community of Tobique First Nation, Carr Sappier is a two-spirited filmmaker based out of Vancouver finishing their fine arts degree at Simon Fraser University. Carr’s passion for filmmaking stems from an aspiration to decolonize the screen and offer an alternative perspective of Wolastoqiyik storytelling. p.72-73 Cauleen Smith Cauleen Smith is inspired by structuralism, Third World cinema and science fiction in her interdisciplinary filmmaking practice. Her films and installations have been exhibited in The Kitchen, MCA Chicago and Threewalls Chicago and featured in many group exhibitions around the world including Houston, New York, Leipzig and Berlin. She now works as a faculty member at the Vermont College of Fine Arts. p.54, 58-59 Chantal Akerman Born in 1950 in Brussels, Chantal Akerman lived and worked in Paris until her death in 2015. Akerman has exhibited in important group and solo exhibitions, and biennales globally, and her works are held in many museum collections. (MOCA) p.28, 56, 58 Charles Tonderai Mudede Charles Tonderai Mudede is a Zimbabwean-born cultural critic, urbanist, filmmaker, lecturer, and writer. He is the film editor of the Stranger, and a lecturer at Cornish College. In 2018, he directed his first film, Thin Skin, from a script he wrote with Lindy West and Aham Oluo. p.57 Charlotte Zhang Charlotte Zhang (b. 1999) is a filmmaker and occasional writer from Vancouver Island, currently studying Film/Video at California Institute of the Arts. p.71 Chris Binkowski Chris Bucko Binkowski is an emerging multidisciplinary artist working primarily

in electronic music performance and abstract painting. He performs improvised synth based music via iPhone. Bucko paints in acrylic and digitally. p.29 Christine Negus Christine Negus is a multidisciplinary artist and writer who employs humour and irony to investigate nostalgia and loss. Her works range from ephemeral objects, including glittery party banners, neon signs and artificially-flowered memorial wreaths, to single-channel animations and videos that are all steeped in a sweet sadness. p.29 Christopher Harris Christopher Harris is a filmmaker whose films and video installations read African American historiography through the poetics and aesthetics of experimental cinema. His work employs manually and photo-chemically altered appropriated moving images, staged reenactments of archival artifacts and interrogations of documentary conventions. p.55, 58-59 Colectivo Los Ingrávidos Colectivo Los Ingrávidos (Tehuacán, Mexico 2012). 300+ films since 2012; screenings and exhibitions at International Film Festival Rotterdam, International Short Film Festival Oberhausen, Flaherty Film Seminar (New York), Crossroads (San Francisco), Filmadrid (Madrid), Media City Film Festival, Ann Arbor Film Festival and Images Festival. p.69 Dana Claxton Dana Claxton is a Hunkpapa Lakota filmmaker, photographer, and performance artist. Her work looks at stereotypes, historical context, and gender studies of Indigenous peoples of the Americas, specifically those of the First Nations. In 2007, she was awarded an Eiteljorg Fellowship for Native American Fine Art. p.71 Denise Ferreira da Silva Dr. Denise Ferreira da Silva is a Professor and Director of The Social Justice Institute (the Institute for Gender, Race, Sexuality, and Social Justice) at the University of British Columbia. Her academic writings and artistic practice address the ethical questions of the global present and target the metaphysical and ontoepistemological dimensions of modern thought. p.30, 65

Eginhartz Kanter Eginhartz Kanter works with film, video, photography and installation, mainly in the context of public space. The starting point for his projects are often deserted architectural situations, which he discovers on extensive tours through (sub)urban landscapes. In his artistic approach he questions the boundaries and conventions of everyday life and living environments. p.72-73 Elisabeth Molin Elisabeth Molin has shown her videos at the 31st Stuttgarter Filmwinter, 7th Cairo Video Festival, and Arctic Moving Image & Film Festival. She has been awarded residencies at ISCP, New York, Cité Internationale des Arts, Paris and CCA Andratx, Mallorca. p.68 Emilija Škarnulytė Emilija Škarnulytė is a nomadic visual artist and filmmaker. Between the fictive and documentary, she works primarily with deep time, from the cosmic and geologic to the ecological and political. She currently co-directs Polar Film Lab, a collective for 16mm analogue film practice located in Tromsø, Norway. p.37 Ephraim Asili Ephraim Asili is a filmmaker, DJ, and traveler whose work focuses on the African diaspora as a cultural force. His films have screened in festivals and venues all over the world, including the New York Film Festival, Toronto International Film Festival, International Film Festival Rotterdam, The United States National Gallery of Art, The Whitney Museum, and The Museum of Modern Art. p.64 Eugene Lefrancois Eugene Lefrancois is a Métis woodland artist, who identifies as an injured worker. Noting that his injury while working caused their disability, Lefrancois believes society wants to lump the injured worker into the category of disabled, which they are not. Lefrancois is a worker first and foremost, and will fight any label that is placed upon injured workers. p.29 Evangeline Brooks Evangeline Brooks is a hybrid media artist working in art direction and production


design. Her work moves between analog and digital media, exploring identity, space, and interactivity. Past film work has been featured at festivals in Canada and the US, including TIFFxInstagram and the Calgary International Film Festival. p.72-73 Eve-Lauryn LaFountain Eve-Lauryn Little Shell LaFountain (Turtle Mountain Chippewa) is a Los Angeles based multimedia artist and educator. She is a member of the Echo Park Film Center co-op. Her work explores identity, history, indigenous futurism, feminism, ghosts, magic, and her mixed Native American and Jewish heritage through lens based media and installations. p.69 FILIPA CÉSAR Filipa César is an artist and filmmaker interested in the fictional aspects of the documentary, the porous borders between cinema and its reception, and the politics and poetics inherent to the moving image and imaging technologies. p.65 Franz Milec Franz Milec (1993, Žilina, Slovakia) is a filmmaker and multimedia artist focusing on the intersection of film and data visualization. Working with open source software, commercial APIs, and public domain sources, Franz constructs multisensory experiences while also building his own software tools. p.72-73 G. Anthony Svatek G. Anthony Svatek’s films have screened at numerous international festivals, such as New York Film Festival, International Film Festival Rotterdam and Ann Arbor Film Festival. Anthony serves as a board member at The Film-Makers’ Cooperative, staffs at the Flaherty Film Seminar, produces for BBC World News, and volunteers at the American Museum of Natural History. P.68 Gabi Dao Gabi Dao creates sculpture, installation, sound works and video. She co-publishes the weekly radio show Artspeak Radio Digest on 100.5FM and organizes exhibitions and events at the project space Duplex on the unceded Coast Salish territories of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh Nations, also known as Vancouver. p.71

Gabriel Bullen Gabriel Bullen is an artist and filmmaker from Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada. His filmography consists of short narrative, documentary, and animation. His fields of interest also include experimental film, storyboarding, and animation. He has shot on HDSLR, Super 8 and Super 16mm, mobile phones, and RED Epic Mysterium-X. He creates his own analogue VFX using old techniques with ink, milk, and a fish tank. p.72-73

cities such as Edinburgh, Trento, and Leiden. p.65

Hito Steyerl Hito Steyerl is a German filmmaker, visual artist, writer, and innovator of the essay documentary. Her principal topics of interest are media, technology, and the global circulation of images. Steyerl holds a PhD in Philosophy from the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna and is currently professor of New Media Art at the Berlin University of the Arts. (Tate) p.60, 78, 80

Julia Charlotte Richter Julia Charlotte Richter is a video artist. She explores the nature of human existence and the meaning of present in different stages of age and awareness. She studied at Fine Art Schools in Kassel and Braunschweig, Germany, and Portsmouth, UK. She lives and works in Berlin, Germany. p.32

Ja’Tovia Gary Ja’Tovia M. Gary (b. Dallas, TX. 1984) is an artist and filmmaker currently living and working in Brooklyn, New York. Gary’s work seeks to liberate the distorted histories through which Black life is often viewed while fleshing out a nuanced and multivalent Black interiority. Through documentary film and experimental video art, Gary charts the ways structures of power shape our perceptions around representation, race, gender, sexuality, and violence. p.54 Jean Jacques Martinod Jean-Jacques Martinod is a filmmaker and multimedia artist. His works have screened in a variety of venues, festivals, galleries and DIY spaces. His films oscillate between non-fiction traditions using formal experiments in celluloid film, analogue tape, digital media, and archival footage. He is a member of both the Global Emergent Media Lab and the Centre for Expanded Poetics at Concordia University. p.69 Jessica Johnson Jessica Johnson is an award-winning experimental filmmaker based in Vancouver, B.C. Her films have played at Vancouver International Film Festival, Festival du Nouveau Cinéma, Images Festival, WNDX, and internationally, in

Jonas Blume Jonas Blume is a conceptual video and installation artist. His work deals with online and offline realities and identities. He received a BFA in Sculpture from Pratt Institute, New York, and an MA in Visual and Media Anthropology from FU Berlin. He lives and works in Berlin, Germany. P.32

Julia Paoli Julia Paoli is the Director of Exhibitions and Programs at Mercer Union, Toronto. p.39 Karolina Breguła Karolina Breguła works in the fields of film, video, photography, installation and happening. Her work explores the problems of the status of «the Artwork», the materiality of art objects and their functioning within institutional frameworks. Her work has been exhibited at the National Museum in Warsaw, Jewish Museum in New York, and the 55th Venice Biennale. p.67 KC Wei KC Wei is an interdisciplinary artist, filmmaker, and musician based in Vancouver. In 2016, she began Agony Klub, a music and printed matter label that releases material under the framework of the “popular esoteric”. Her music projects include Kamikaze Nurse, hazy, and Late Spring. p.60, 76-80 Kelly Richardson Taking cues from landscape painting, cinema, and planetary research, Kelly Richardson crafts video installations and photographs that offer imaginative glimpses into the future and prompt careful considerations of the present. Her work has been selected for the Beijing, Busan, Canadian, Gwangju and Montréal


biennales, as well as major moving image exhibitions including TIFF and Sundance. p.74-75 Kevin Jerome Everson Kevin Jerome Everson is artist and maker of numerous short films and features about the working-class culture of black Americans. In 2006, Everson was voted one of the 25 most important new faces in independent cinema by Filmmaker Magazine. Everson is also a professor at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. p.58-59 Laura Huertas Millán Laura Huertas Millán is an artist and filmmaker. She studied at the Beaux-Arts de Paris and Le Fresnoy before going on to complete a PhD on “ethnographic fictions” at PSL University and Harvard. Black Sun (2016) received two honourable mentions (FIDMarseille, DocLisboa) and won Best Short Film at Fronteira and MIDBO. p.54 Leila Sujir Leila Sujir was born in Hyderabad, India, and moved to Quebec in Canada as a child. She first studied literature at the University of Alberta (Bachelor of Arts), and then moved immediately into film production as a young artist, working with the documentary form with the support of the Canada Council for the Arts and the Alberta Foundation for the Arts. p.74-75 Life of a Craphead Life of a Craphead is the collaboration of Amy Lam and Jon McCurley. Their work spans performance art, film, and curation. The name “Life of a Craphead” comes from the opening joke of the very first live comedy routine they performed together in 2006. Amy is Chinese and Jon is Vietnamese-Irish and they live and work in Toronto, Canada. p.68 Lily Jue Sheng Lily Jue Sheng works across film, video, 2D, performance, and installation. She is based in NYC & NJ. Her work has screened at the Whitney Museum, New York; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal, Montreal; 1933 Slaughterhouse and West Bund Art & Design Fair, Shanghai. p.71 Liora Belford Liora Belford is an Israeli-Canadian sound artist, curator and scholar. She is

currently a PhD ABD candidate at the department of Art History, University of Toronto. She is preparing Listening to Snow for the Art Museum (Toronto), a major exhibition on the sound works of artist Michael Snow. p.35 Lisa Jackson Anishinaabe filmmaker Lisa Jackson’s genre-crossing work includes fiction, documentary, animation, virtual reality, and a musical. Her work has been screened at festivals around the world, aired on Canadian TV networks and has garnered her a Genie award. Her recent VR piece Biidaaban: First Light premiered at Tribeca’s Storyscapes and has played internationally to great acclaim. p.74-75 Lisa Steele Lisa Steele is founder and Artistic Director of Vtape. Steele has worked in collaboration with Kim Tomczak since 1983, producing videotapes, photo works and installations that have been featured in exhibitions in Canada and beyond. They are the recipients of a Governor General’s Award for Lifetime Achievement in Visual and Media Arts, the Canada Council. p.37 Lorna Mills Lorna Mills is a digital media artist. She obsessively reconstructs and reanimates marginal or obscene online culture in GIF collages and physical installations. She studied at Information Technology Design Centre, University of Toronto. She lives and works in Toronto, Canada. p.32 Louis Henderson Louis Henderson is a filmmaker who is trying to find new ways of working with people to address and question our current global condition as defined by racial capitalism and the ever-present histories of the European colonial project. Their working method is archaeological. p.65, 68 Luis Arias Luis Gutiérrez Arias (b. 1990) is a Mexican-Cuban filmmaker and video artist whose work explores notions of identity politics, neo-colonialism and the politics of cinema. His work has been shown at Sundance, DokLeipzig, Kasseler Dokfest, Morelia and Guanajuato among others. p.72-73

Mahdi Fleifel Mahdi Fleifel (1979, United Arab Emirates) is a Danish-Palestinian filmmaker and visual artist who graduated from the UK National Film & TV School in 2009. Fleifel was born in Dubai, and grew up in a refugee camp in Lebanon and later in Denmark. He now resides in Amsterdam. In 2009, Fleifel graduated from the British National Film and Television School and founded the production company Nakba FilmWorks with Patrick Campbell. p.54 Manja Ebert Manja Ebert is a video and media artist. She is interested in online culture and selfperception in the digital age. She studied Art and Media at UDK Berlin and is a master student of Prof. Candice Breitz at HBK Braunschweig. She lives and works in Berlin, Germany. p.32 Marnie Ellen Hertzler Marnie Ellen Hertzler is a filmmaker in Baltimore, Maryland. In 2018 she was named one of Filmmaker Magazine’s 25 New Faces in Independent Film. Her work has screened at Locarno, Rotterdam, and MoMA. Influenced by her background in Psychology, her films explore interpersonal relationships, and the technology that defines us. p.53 Michael Dumont Michel Dumont is a queer Métis two spirited disabled artist currently residing in Thunder Bay. Making outfits for the local and national drag communities allows him to work around his multiple chemical sensitivity using non toxic materials. Working with shattered tile, mirrors his daily life dealing with a shattered back, which drives him to make something beautiful out of it. p.29 Michael Keshane Michael Roderick Keshane is a First Nations independent filmmaker and artist from Keeseekoose First Nation, and the Coté First Nation Reserve. His work explores the sense of peace that First Nations people find through maintaining the cultural traditions of their ancestors in the face of uncertain futures and harsh realities. p.29, 70 Michael Snow Visual artist and musician Michael Snow’s films have been presented at festivals around the world and are in the collections of several film archives,


including Anthology Film Archives, the Royal Belgian Film Archives, and the Oesterreichisches Film Museum. p.74-75 Nanna Rebekka Nanna Rebekka is an independent filmmaker based in Copenhagen. Her work lies within the realm of hybrid fiction, documentary and video art. She has studied filmmaking at Center for Digital Arts and Experimental Media, University of Washington and at School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design, York University. She is a former member of MIX Copenhagen LGBTQ Film Festival. p.68 Nasrin Himada Nasrin Himada is a Palestinian writer, editor, and curator based in Tio’tia:ke (Montréal), in Kanien’kehá:ka territory. Their writing on contemporary art has appeared in Canadian Art, C Magazine, Critical Signals, The Funambulist, Fuse Magazine, Contemptorary and MICE Magazine. p.36 NEVET YITZHAK Nevet Yitzhak is a graduate of the Naggar School of Photography, Media and New Music, and the Bezalel Program for Advanced Studies in Art. Her work is in the collection of Israel Museum, Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Museum for Islamic Art (Jerusalem), Petach Tikva Museum of Art, Shpilman Institute for Photography, among others. p.35 Nicole Kelly Westman Nicole Kelly Westman is a visual artist of Métis and Icelandic descent. She grew up in a supportive home with strongwilled parents; her mother, a considerate and creative woman, and her father, an anonymous feminist. Her work culls from formative years for insight and inspiration as she takes care to remediate what she has mined. p.38 OLIVER Husain Artist and filmmaker Oliver Husain uses a wide range of cinematic languages and visual pleasures—such as dance, puppetry, costume special effects—to invite viewers into complex narrative set-ups. Husain has participated in numerous international exhibitions and film festivals. In 2018 he had solo exhibitions at Gallery Clages, Cologne and at Remai Modern, Saskatoon. p.74-75

Onyeka Igwe Onyeka Igwe is an artist and researcher working between cinema and installation. She is born and based in London, UK. Onyeka uses dance, voice, archive and text to expose a multiplicity of narratives. She has shown at the ICA, London, Northwest Film Center, Berlin Biennale and the London, International Film Festival Rotterdam and Hamburg International Short Film Festival. p.58-59 Ornella Fieres Ornella Fieres is a photography and video artist. She deals with the transitions between the analogue and digital space, the loss and transformation of data and energy. She holds a Diploma in Visual Communication from Offenbach University of Art and Design. She lives and works in Berlin, Germany. p.32 Pamila Matharu Pamila Matharu is an immigrantsettler of South Asian descent, born in Birmingham, UK, and based in Tkaronto. She is an interdisciplinary artist, educator and cultural producer who works in installation art, social practice and lensbased strategies. p.31 Payal Kapadia Payal Kapadia is a Mumbai based filmmaker and artist. She studied Film Direction at the Film & Television Institute of India. Her earlier work includes Afternoon Clouds (2017), The Last Mango Before the Monsoon and Watermelon, Fish & half Ghost. She is currently developing her first feature, which was selected for the Three Rivers Residency, Rome. p.71 Paz Ramirez Larrain and Laura Acosta Paz Ramirez Larrain is an audiovisual artist from Santiago, Chile and Laura Acosta is a performance and textile artist from Bogota, Colombia. Both artists currently reside in Montreal, Canada, and draw from their experiences as immigrant women of colour to question how different individuals claim space. p.71 Pernille Lystlund Matzen Pernille Lystlund Matzen is an independent writer and filmmaker currently living in Copenhagen. Her work concentrates on new documentary

forms, video art and essayistic modes of filmmaking. She holds a master’s degree in Art History and Modern Culture from Columbia University, Universität der Kunste, Berlin, and Copenhagen University. She currently works as an art critic at the Danish newspaper Information. p.68 Public Studio Public Studio is the collective art practice of filmmaker Elle Flanders and architect Tamira Sawatzky. Public Studio creates large-scale public art works, lens-based works, films, and immersive installations. Grounded in the personal, social, and political implications of landscape, Public Studio’s multidisciplinary practice engages themes of ecology, political dissent, war and militarization. p.41 Rory Pilgrim Centred on emancipatory concerns, Pilgrim’s work aims to challenge the very nature of how we come together, speak, listen and strive for social change through sharing and voicing personal experience. Recent solo exhibitions include Between Bridges, South London Gallery, and Andriesse-Eyck Galerie, Amsterdam. p.53 Ryan Ermacora Ryan Ermacora is an award-winning filmmaker based in Vancouver, B.C. His work investigates the visible and invisible ways in which humans have engraved themselves into natural spaces and is informed by an interest in avant-garde depictions of landscape. His work has screened at the DOXA Documentary Festival, The Edinburgh International Film Festival, WNDX and VIFF. p.65 Sarah Oh-Mock Sarah Oh-Mock creates surrealistic video works, installations, objects, photographs and drawings that deal with the artificiality of urban spaces, culture, nature and the subconscious. She studied at the Fine Art Academies of Berlin, Kassel and Mainz. She lives and works in Berlin, Germany. p.32 Sarah Pupo Sarah Pupo’s practice bridges watercolour, drawing, provisional installation, and lo-fi animation. She works with materials and processes that


foreground intuition, associative thinking and ritual as means of accessing subtle logics and cyclical time. She lives and works in Montreal, QC. p.36 Sharona Franklin Sharona Franklin work disseminates a personal mythology of gender, class, bio-citizenship, and botany. Her work is reflexive to propaganda, transhumanism and bioethics, working to expand contemporary interpretations of genetic engineering. In 2016 Franklin published a book of visual prose titled Rental Bod. p.33 Simon Mercer Simon Mercer received an MA in film theory under the supervision of feminist film scholar Laura Mulvey. He has since made numerous experimental documentaries and films about filmmakers living on the margins, as well as music videos for artists including Dean Blunt, Babyfather, Actress and the Junior Boys. p.66 Sky Hopinka Sky Hopinka is a Ho-Chunk Nation national and descendent of the Pechanga Band of Luiseño Indians. He received his BA from Portland State University in Liberal Arts and his MFA in Film, Video, Animation, and New Genres from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. p.54 Sophia Feuer Sophia Feuer is a filmmaker and multimedia artist from upstate New York. She has spent the past year working on various independent films in New York, Germany and Costa Rica. She works in New York and San Francisco as a freelance Director of Photography. She graduated from Ithaca College with a Bachelor of Science in Cinema and Photography, Art and Anthropology. p.72-73 The Swan Collective The Swan Collective is an artist group. They mix different techniques like 3D animation, painting, paper embossment, literature, photography and performance. The founder, Felix Kraus, studied Media Art at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich and HfG Karlsruhe. He lives and works in Berlin, Germany. p.32

Theresa Hak Kyung Cha From the mid-1970s until her death at age 31 in 1982, Korean-born artist Theresa Hak Kyung Cha created a rich body of conceptual art that explored displacement and loss. Informed by French psychoanalytic film theory, her video works use performance and text to explore interactions of language, meaning and memory. Cha’s posthumously published book Dictée is an influential investigation of identity in the context of history, ethnicity and gender. p.58-59 Thorbjorg Jonsdottir Thorbjorg Jonsdottir is a visual artist and experimental filmmaker from Iceland. She works primarily in 16mm film, video installation and collage. Thorbjorg’s films and video installations have screened both in galleries and film festivals in Europe, Asia and the US. p.69 Tina Sauerländer Tina Sauerländer is an independent curator and writer. She is a co-founder and director of peer to space, co-founder of radiancevr. co and founder of Saloon Berlin, a network for women artists in Berlin. p.32 Tina Wilke Tina Wilke is a media artist from East Berlin. Her work deals with postcolonial processes in the context of global mobility and digital networks. She graduated from the University of Arts Berlin in Art And Media and the National University of Arts Buenos Aires in Theater with New Media and Interactivity. p.32 Tiziana La Melia Born in Italy and currently living on unceded Coast Salish territories, Tiziana La Melia is the author of Oral Like Cloaks, Dialect: Selected Writing and the chapbook Broom Emotion. She has had recent solo and collaborative presentations at LECLERE Centfare d’art, galerie anne baurrault, CSA Space, Damien and the Love Guru. p.76-80 Tyler Marci Tyler Macri (b. 1996, USA) is a recent graduate of Ithaca College holding a degree in Cinema, Photography, and Writing. In 2017 he was the recipient of the KODAK Student Scholarship (Gold Award) and the Rod Serling Communications Scholarship.

His work proposes an art of the uncanny: a mode where narrative, ethnographic, and phenomenological techniques are used to explore strange borderlands where history and myth converge. p.72-73 VibraFusionLab VibraFusionLab is a development lab, educational centre, and presentation space where artists from around the world merge to add the sense of touch to their performances and works. Vibration arts, for the body. p.29 Vicky Moufawad-Paul Vicky Moufawad-Paul is a Toronto based curator and writer. She is the Director/ Curator at A Space Gallery. She has curated exhibitions across Canada and published texts on a variety of art practices. p.31 Zachary Epcar Zachary Epcar (b. 1987, San Francisco) studied at Bard College and is a current MFA candidate in the Film, Video, Animation, & New Genres program at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee. His work has screened at the New York Film Festival, Pacific Film Archive, Ann Arbor Film Festival, San Francisco Cinematheque’s Crossroads, Images Festival, and others. p.72-73 Zeinabu Irene Davis Zeinabu Irene Davis is an AfricanAmerican filmmaker and professor of the Department of Communication at the University of California, San Diego. Her works in film include narrative, documentary and experimental film. p.58-59 Zhizi Wang Zhizi Wang is a video artist based in London, Ontario. Through video collage, her work examines our position in digital spaces, and their corresponding impacts on individual memory and world-making. Wang is an MFA candidate at Western University. p.34


97

TITLE InDEX .TV G. Anthony Svatek p.68

Basma Alsharif Basma Alsharif p.28

4 Waters: Deep Implicancy Denise Ferreira da Silva and Arjuna Neuman p.30

9 Rules: From Safety Precautions Michael Keshane p.29, 70

Breaker of Horses Pernille Lystlund Matzen and Nanna Rebekka p.68

Garden of the Legend of the Golden Snail Oliver Husain p.74-75

10 - 3 = 13 Byron Peters p.62

Buffer Zone Blues Franz Milec p.72-73

Gary Simon Mercer p.66

A Black Hole is a Black Hole in the Ground Tyler Marci & Sophia Feuer p.72-73

burning through the body Sara Pupo p.36

Giverny I (Négresse Impériale) Ja’Tovia Gary p.54

a slight space amidst Nicole Kelly Westman p.38

Chronicles of a Lying Spirit by Kelly Gabron Cauleen Smith p.58-59

Halimuhfack Christopher Harris p.58-59

A Tree is Like a Man Thorbjorg Jonsdottir p.69

Citizens of The Cosmos Anton Vidokle p.67

Hi I Need To Be Loved Marnie Ellen Hertzler p.53

A Willing Suspension of Disbelief + Photography and Fetish Christopher Harris p.55

Cityscape Michael Snow p.74-75

I Signed the Petition Mahdi Fleifel p.54

Crowtrap Callum Hill p.54

In Free Fall Hito Steyerl P.60

Cycles Zeinabu Irene Davis p.58-59

It’s Going to be Beautiful Luis Gutiérrez Arias p.72-73

Dislocation Blues Sky Hopinka p.54

jeny303 Laura Huertas Millán p.54

Embers and the Giants Kelly Richardson p.74-75

Keepers For The Old People Michael Keshane p.70

Empty Metal Adam Khalil and Bayley Sweitzer p.63

Kindah Ephraim Asili p.64

EVEN IN PARADISE Duane Peterson p.72-73

King Edward VII Equestrian Statue Floating Down The Don River Life of a Craphead p.68

A-5H1 Maria Paz Ramirez Larrain / Laura Acosta p.71 Aerial Leila Sujir p.74-75 All That Is Solid Louis Henderson p.68 Altares Colectivo los ingrávidos p.69 American Hunger Ephraim Asili P.64 And What is the Summer Saying Payal Kapadia p.71 Aquarius Kevin Jerome Everson p.58-59 Arnait Ikajurtigiit: Women helping each other Arnait p.40 Aufstieg Eginhartz Kanter p.72-73

Five Movements五種流行之氣 Lily Jue Sheng p.71 Fluid Frontiers Ephraim Asili p.64 Forged Ways Ephraim Asili p.64

La cabeza mató a todos Beatriz Santiago Muñoz p.69 Labour/Leisure Ryan Ermacora and Jessica Johnson p.65 Lane Evangeline Brooks p.72-73


Le Bala de Sandoval Jean Jacques Martinod p.69 Lichen Lisa Jackson p.74-75 Life after Love Zachary Epcar p.72-73 Loud, Dead Beatrice Gibson p.39 Many Thousands Gone Ephraim Asili p.64 MONOLITH Gabriel Bullen p.72-73 Murky Colours KC Wei p.60 Mutiny Abigail Child p.58-59 Myrmex Elisabeth Molin p.68 New Psychedelia of Industrial Healing Sharona Franklin p.33 One of These Things is Not Like The Other Pamila Matharu p.31 Outliers On Tour Michael Keshane, Christine Negus, Michael Dumont And Eugene Lefrancois, Chris Binkowski p.29

Serpent Rain Arjuna Neuman and Denise Ferreira da Silva p.65 Sirenomelia Emilija Škarnulytė p.37 Sitting on a Man Onyeka Igwe p.58-59 Smudge Series Eve-Lauryn LaFountain p.69 Software Garden Rory Pilgrim p.53 Sojourner Cauleen Smith p.54 Specialised Technique Onyeka Igwe p.58-59 Squere Karolina Breguła p.67 still/here Christopher Harris p.55 Sunstone Filipa Cesar and Louis Henderson p.65 taking-away Eginhartz Kanter p.72-73 The Lining Charlotte Zhang p.71

Piramide erosionada Colectivo los ingrávidos p.69

The Patient Storm Dana Claxton p.71

Printed Sunset Andres Baron p.53

The Protagonists Gabi Dao p.71

Pure Difference Byron Peters p.62

The Tender Sorrow of Casey Wei Tiziana La Melia p.76-80

Re Dis Appearing Theresa Hak Kyung Cha p.58-59

Touching the Distance II Jonas Blume, Manja Ebert, Ornella Fieres, Aron Lesnik, Lorna Mills, Sarah Oh-Mock, Julia Charlotte Richter , Anna Ridler, The Swan Collective, Tina Wilke p.32

Saute ma ville Chantal Akerman p.58-59 Secessio Byron Peters p.62

Turkish Delight Basma Alsharif p.58-59

Two Sisters Beatrice Gibson p.39 WarCraft Nevet Yitzhak p.35 WASIS Carr Sappier p.72-73 We Become Aware of the Void as We Fill It Zhizi Wang p.34



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