Filmprogramm

• Thu 26 09 2024 / 6 pm •
Undoing Images I


Mentors: MADHUSREE DUTTA, MOHAMED GAWAD, ALA YOUNIS

The pilot project NEW CURATORS, which takes place in collaboration with Filmhaus Köln, presents its public film program Undoing Images at Filmhaus, curated by the mentors of the program.

Ala Younis - the current Artistic Director of the Academy of the Arts of the World, artist, and architect who works in research, curation and collaboration, Madhusree Dutta – filmmaker, author and former Artistic Director of the ADKDQ, and Mohamed A. Gawad – editor and filmmaker – will present a curated selection of films, dealing on the deconstruction and reconstruction of images.

The program focuses on the question of locations, the search for materials and its reappropriation as well as the effects of colonial imagery, providing an in-depth and multi-layered lens on stories, which are often forgotten in common narratives.

With this selection of films, the mentors want to express resistance against the supposed infallibility of cinema - especially against the narratives shaped by the magic of moving images. Undoing Images invites the audience to question and reinterpret the power and possibilities of images.

Program:

6:00 PM - 8:00 PM + 20 minutes insights of selected films/curations by Ala Younis (120 min)

The Blue Ink Pocket (2022), Ali Eyal

In the village, we managed to retrieve the lost pieces of the artist’s roving duplicates. The village artist drew copies of himself with complicated stories that he shared in the galleries from around the world, since he couldn’t travel with his duplicates. This was both an artistic style and his position towards the politics that obstruct the movement of the artist with his work and his Western audience. He had a group of drawings of the strongest passports from around the world that he produced with cheap paint on cigarette boxes. With each story, he created a duplicate of himself as he placed a passport in the pocket of a drawn shirt. This copy of THE BLUE INK POCKET, AND is the only one we possess. Aside from an old letter that the artist wrote in 2022 for a collective he joined, nothing remains except the signature and the phrase “Good luck.” The words were consumed by the farm’s larvae in the basement, but traces of the pen’s power remain on the back of the paper.

Ali Eyal, “The Blue Ink Pocket Still” 2022 '11

One Image, Two Acts (2020), Sanaz Sohrabi

The establishment of Iran’s petroleum industrial complex in 1908 is entangled with the formation of media and visual infrastructures which propelled and sustained new ideologies and modes of identification with the emergent colonial modernity in Iran. Between 1908-1951, the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC) -currently British Petroleum (BP)- strategically utilized ethnographic film and photography production to promote and represent its colonial developments in Iran. Investigating the relationship between petro-modernity and photography and film as technologies of coloniality, “One Image, Two Acts” unpacks the spatial and cultural manifestation of this emergent image economy which operated in tandem with the larger petroleum complex.
With a particular focus on the historical ethnographic film and photographic surveys produced by the BP, “One Image, Two Acts” examines the formations of early modernist infrastructures of leisure such as cinemas vis-à-vis the broader social engineering project and asymmetries of power in the oil towns of South-Western Iran. Unraveling the social spaces of leisure in relation to industrial spaces of labor, this film connects and maps the cognitive and formal structures of modernist ideas of time, leisure, and desire during the oil company’s operations in Iran. This emergent oil encounter was not limited to the oil company’s colonial expansion; the multifaceted infrastructures of petroleum industry accumulated incrementally and temporally, produced political assets, and shaped politics along the way. This film examines the ways in which the oil company’s visual regimes of petro-modernity were reclaimed and countered by a growing anti-colonial cinema in which oil was a protagonist and cinemas had become the contested emblem of colonial development.
Reading the Iranian New Wave cinema against the backdrop of growing raw material sovereignty and nationalization movement, this film analyzes two integral films of this period, namely “A Fire” by Ebrahim Golestan (1961) and Amir Naderi’s “The Runner” (1984). It reframes oil not solely as an exchangeable commodity but rather as an archive itself; one that constitutes a web of imaginations, aspirations, and struggles. “One Image, Two Acts” is a coalescence of infrastructures, images, and archives of oil wherein cinematic time and geological time mobilize different sites, temporalities, and numerous material modalities.

Thur 26 09 | 6 - 8 pm
Location: Filmhaus Köln
Address: Maybachstraße 111, 50670 Cologne
In English language
Tickets are available via Filmhaus Köln
The room is step-free accessible