Dear All,
come and join us tomorrow for the screening of
Hong Kong Perma-Cinema and Slow Hope
21.6. 14:00 at Synnika
Chan Hau Chun, Chan Ting, Huang Ting, Lo Lai Lai Natalie, Chung Wong,
Long Wong, curated by Zimu Zhang
- Veranstaltung in englischer Sprache, Übersetzung auf Deutsch nach
Absprache -
This screening program features six young artists from Hong Kong whose
practices embody the emerging perma-cinema movement. Inspired by
permaculture, perma-cinema refers to a cinematic approach deeply rooted
in sustainability--encompassing filmmaking, daily life, and community
building. Set in the context of Hong Kong, an island-city shaped by
border politics, neoliberal pressures, and cultural hybridity,
perma-cinema also serves as a form of self-sustaining art, which acts to
maintain one's own autonomy of memory and affect against the societal
inertia and isolation amid global and local upheavals.
The artists' film and art practices are rooted in their own ways of
cultivating sustainable and equitable living, such as practicing urban
farming, village sojourns, running a community vegan restaurant, and
various forms of cultural activism. Their gradual, resilient, and
introspective endeavors reflect our era's scarcest resource: hope. Far
from fleeting optimism, but a "slow hope," as German environmental
historian Christof Mauch describes it--one forged through endurance of
trauma, despair, and crisis. It is a communal, incremental narrative,
distinct from the glare of technological futurism, yet a vital force in
confronting planetary challenges.
Under this screening theme, the artists will present recent and
in-progress films, followed by an online discussion. Artists include (in
alphabetical order):
Chan Hau Chun: an independent documentary filmmaker and photographer.
Her films have always shed light on marginal communities in Hong Kong's
urban dwelling with sensitive and respectful portraits. In recent years,
she has embraced a more micro-material scrutiny on urban-rural landscape
of both natural and built structures.
https://www.chanhauchun.com/
Chan Ting: a multidisciplinary artist working with diverse medium and
poetic dialogue among image and sound. She often works with found
material, urban space and natural elements, coordinating them with a
multisensorial experience. Her current film project explores human-bird
relationship via birdwatching and rural life in the Hong Kong New
Territories.
https://chan-ting.com/
Huang Ting: a multi-media storyteller and filmmaker whose practice has
connected her with broader Hong Kong social art tissues and
self-organizing creative grassroot units. She has been living and
creating in the rural village in the New Territories for the recent
years. Her current work focuses on the ecology of borders.
Lo Lai Lai Natalie: a prolific ecoartist, farmer and researcher. She has
been practicing farming with the local farming collective Sangwoodgoon
for more than fifteen years in the city's northern rural area. Her
filmworks often feature the intricate relationships of farming labour,
soil, seeds, insects, and many more farming world actors under the
evolving sociopolitical environment of the city.
http://lolailai.com
Chung Wong: she practices film utilizing diverse audiovisual languages
including documentary, experimentation, field recordings, and
stop-motion. Her recent projects offer speculative soundwalks that
differentially explore the reverberant soundscapes of idle spaces, water
tunnels, and fish pond habitats under developmental threats,
incorporating experiments with field recordings, vocals, and bird songs.
https://vimeo.com/user61607488
Long Wong: an experimental artist practicing animation, manga drawing
and sound improvisation. He employs real-time audio-visual electronic
circuits to connect analog equipment that generate video and sound
feedback as moving image creation.
https://mimickapoaaa.wixsite.com/mimickappa
Curator: Zimu Zhang, an environmental humanities scholar working on
visual culture, eco-cinema and ecofeminist arts.
https://zimu-z.com/
(Zimu will join the screening in person).
perma
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www.synnika.space [1]
Synnika e.V.
Niddastraße 57
60329 Frankfurt am Main
Tel: +49 156 783 939 73
Email: hello(a)synnika.space
Opening times: Fridays 3-7 pm and after prior appointment.
Öffnungszeiten: Freitags 15:00-19:00 und nach Terminvereinbarung.
Links:
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[1]
http://www.synnika.space