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We Began By Measuring Distance • The Story of Milk and Honey • Home Movies Gaza • Wawa

Friday 8 March, 14:00
Sunday 10 March, 10:45

Run Time

89 mins
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Basma al-Sharif will not be present for the Friday programme of short films. However we’re delighted that in the repeat screening at 10.45 on Sunday, poet Sarona Abuaker will join Basma for a Q&A conversation.

We Began By Measuring Distance

Long still frames, text, language, and sound are weaved together to form a narrative of an anonymous group who fill their time by measuring distance. Innocent measurements transition into political ones, examining how image and sound communicate history. A film that began as hours of unrelated footage, We Began… evolved into a personal reflection on the irreconcilable reality of witnessing tragedy from a physical distance. A document of a history, an event, or simply a feeling.

Director

Country

Year

2009

Dialogue Language

Arabic

Subtitle Language

Primary Contact

Camille Velluet

Duration

18 mins

Gallery

Camille Velluet

The Story of Milk and Honey

The failure of an unknown author to write a love story about the Levant grounds this short experiential video exploring the positionality of the individual in tellings of history. Layering voiceover, images, letters and songs, a story of defeat becomes a journey of transformation. Part of a larger multimodal project, The Story of Milk and Honey confronts questions of nationalism and orientalism arising from representations of the Middle-East.

Director

Country

Year

2011

Dialogue Language

Arabic

Subtitle Language

Primary Contact

Camille Velluet

Duration

9 mins

Gallery

Camille Velluet

Home Movies Gaza

Home Movies Gaza introduces us to the Gaza Strip as a mircrocosm for the failure of civilization. In an attempt to describe the everyday of a place that struggles for the most basic of human rights, this video claims a perspective from within the domestic spaces of a territory that is complicated, derelict, and altogether impossible to separate from its political identity.

Director

Countries

Year

2013

Dialogue Language

Arabic

Subtitle Language

Primary Contact

Camille Velluet

Duration

24 mins

Distribution (Film Festivals)

Emily Martin

Gallery

Camille Velluet

Wawa

Wawa peeks at the anxieties and difficulties of communication through the interactions between speakers of an endangered Indigenous language, each from differing cultural backgrounds and generations. By transforming the chronology of the language, it weaves past and present into a single entity and confronts various modes of conversation, translation, identity, and history.

Director

Country

Year

2014

Premiere

Dialogue Language

English

Subtitle Language

Primary Contact

Emily Martin

Duration

6 mins

Distribution (Worldwide)

Emily Martin

Essay

Poem as Photon Returning to Audience

by Sarona Abuaker