Flaherty Film Seminar
27TH JUNE 2024 I LAGOA HENRIQUES AUDITORIUM /// 28TH JUNE > 02ND JULY 20204 I MAIN AUDITORIUM
Join us in Lisbon (or Porto) TO COMMUNE with The Flaherty Film Seminar.
We will have screenings and discussions each day of the seminar, at times in sync, on the campuses of, and in collaboration with, FBAUL and IFILNOVA, and part of the Artificial Atmospheres: AI, Art, and Archives project, research group in Art and Technology, CineLab.
Online registration is appreciated, but not mandatory, we want to welcome anyone who is interested in joining. If you are joining us, you will get a lovely 60% discount code if you do decide to register!
If you are interested, please sign up here
“We’re interested in the potential of groups gathering around a screen over a period of time. We approach documentary filmmaking as that which brings together bodies, minds and spirits across different spaces, worlds and temporalities.Beyond self-organizing and community-building, to commune is to communicate with mystical, animistic, and ritualistic capacities. Beyond affirming commonality, to commune is to connect with others and to be in touch with the unknowable. We turn to the fundamental value of cinema as an encounter with beings and worlds very different from our own.
Our programme seeks to explore how contemporary filmmakers and moving image artists are expanding the imaginative possibilities of communing through documentary forms. We want to highlight how filmmakers and artists, especially those connected to the Global South, are inheriting surprising legacies of historical efforts to commune. We’re intrigued by artistic explorations of communal capacities in spaces and situations such as the classroom, the ritual, the carnival, the film set, the potent site, the gathering and the protest.
Within the immediate context of the Flaherty Seminar, we’re interested in exploring the latent communal capacities of its format, apparatus, and institutional infrastructure. Our curatorial approach seeks to explore the tensions and the sparks of efforts to commune. Not to gather to recognise an identity or a common concern, but to make relations on grounds of radical differentiation.”
May Adadol Ingawanij & Julian Ross, Programmers