Tallinn Photomonth

6.10.—26.11.2023

Tallinn Photomonth is an international biennial of contemporary art, which features work that spans all disciplines and looks at developments in art and society.

Contemporary art biennial

Artists’ film programme: part 2

Cinema Sõprus

KAUGTUNDJA. Goliatus & Carábida (1977–1997). OJOBOCA. 2022, Saksamaa, 36 min, performance, inglise keeles.

17.11.2023, part 2
19.00–21.30
Curators: Piibe Kolka, Genevieve Yue
Cinema Sõprus (Vana-Posti 8, Tallinn)
Tickets: 10 / 7,5 € (7,5€ until 26.10.2023)
No wheelchair access

Screenings are part of the Black Nights Film Festival’s programme PÖFF Expanded.

 

Booklet with the programme is available here (in Estonian and English)

On 16 and 17 November, the Tallinn Photomonth artists’ films programme Polar Coordinates will take place at the cinema Sõprus. Ten films from eight countries will be screened during the two-day programme with themes ranging from intimate family relationships to geographic explorations and telepathic cinema. The film programme is curated by the Estonian artist and filmmaker Piibe Kolka and New York based critic and film curator Genevieve Yue. This is the first time that the programme takes place in collaboration with the Black Nights Film Festival PÖFF.

Tallinn Photomonth’s film programme Polar Coordinates, which is part of the PÖFF Expanded programme, focuses on artists’ films that are the product of a variety of collaborations. “Unlike mainstream films, which are typically made by enormous crews, experimental or artist films often imply the painstaking work of a solitary maker. This year’s Photomonth film programme explores works that were created through various partnerships and dialogues in order to reflect upon the different forms of creative collaboration. Authors of many of these films are partners beyond filmmaking duos: they are families, romantic partners, scientists, and activists,” explains the artist and filmmaker Piibe Kolka, one of the curators of the programme.

The second program, A Question that Can Be Answered Yes or No, traverses the world, collapsing vast distances of time and space through trajectories of desire. Whether working in close quarters or at a far remove, these explorers share with each other their discoveries, frustrations, and joys. There is a yearning for communication that finds an expression in experimental devices, shared motions, and the subtle discrepancies of perspective.

Part II of the Tallinn Photomonth’s film programme, A Question that Can Be Answered Yes or No:

– The Measures, Jacqueline Goss and Jenny Perlin, 2011, United States, 47 min, 16mm on HD, in English.
– New City of Friends, Roman Khimei and Yarema Malashchuk, 2021, Ukraine, 9 min, HD video, in Ukrainian, with English subtitle.
– similar image, fantastic little splash, 2021, Ukraine, 9 min, HD video, no dialogue.
– DISTANT FEELER. Goliatus & Carábida (1977–1997), OJOBOCA, 2022, Germany, 36 min, performance, in English.

The second evening of screenings will be followed by a Q&A with the artists and curators. Additionally, a public lecture on the subject of feminism and film materiality will be held by Genevieve Yue, one of the curators of the film programme, in the main auditorium of the Estonian Academy of Arts on 20 November at 17.30.

The first part of the Photomonth film programme, Frame that Holds Us, takes place on 16 November from 19.00 to 20.45 at the cinema Sõprus. The first program arises from the intimate spaces of the home, which, in these artists’ conceptions, can mean a physical space, a relation among people, or the recesses of the mind. These are inside-out home movies, playing on the conventions of their traditional forms, depicting unconventional domestic scenes, moments of strife as well as joy. The intimate spaces alternate with “views from the windows,” both literally but also as a framing of one’s world from a remove, an experience made globally familiar by the recent years of confinement and seclusion.

Piibe Kolka is an artist, filmmaker and film worker with a background in anthropology. She is interested in artists’ moving image as a personal enquiry into the bodily, temporal and rhythmic aspects of social realities. She works with video, sound, and performance, artistic research and curatorial practices. She has co-curated artist film programs for Kumu Art Film Festival (2016 and 2018) and at the international group show Point of No Return at NART art residency (2021).

Genevieve Yue is an associate professor of culture and media and director of the Screen Studies program at the New School. She has programmed films at Anthology Film Archives, Metrograph, MassArt, and other venues. Her essays and criticism have appeared in Mubi, Film Comment, Film Quarterly, and Reverse Shot, and she is author of Girl Head: Feminism and Film Materiality (Fordham University Press, 2021). She is based in New York City.

Artists

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Jacqueline Goss

Jacqueline Goss makes movies about scientific systems and how they change the ways we think about ourselves. Goss is a 2008 Tribeca Film Institute Media Arts Fellow and the 2007 recipient of the Herb Alpert Award in Film and Video. She teaches in the Film and Electronic Arts program at Bard College in the Hudson Valley of New York.

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Jenny Perlin

Jenny Perlin makes 16mm films, videos, and animations. Her films work with and against the documentary tradition, incorporating innovative stylistic techniques to emphasize issues of truth, mis­understanding, and personal history. Perlin’s work has been shown in numerous exhibitions and film festivals, including at the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Guggenheim Museum, the Museum of Modern Art, the New York Film Festival, the Berlin Film Festival, the Rotterdam Film Festival, and others. Perlin is currently a research fellow in Visual Art at the National Academy of Art, Oslo and is director of The Hoosac Institute, a curated platform for text and image focusing on works that don’t fit conventional disciplinary narratives.

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Roman Khimei and Yarema Malashchuk

Collaborating at the edge of visual art and cinema since 2013, Kyiv-based artists and filmmakers, Roman Khimei and Yarema Malashchuk graduated as cinematographers from the Kyiv National Theatre, Cinema and Television University. They were awarded the main award of the PinchukArtCentre Prize (2020), VISIO Young Talent Acquisition Prize (2021). Their debut documentary feature New Jerusalem received the Special Mention Award at Kharkiv MeetDocs and the duo also participated at the Future Generation Art Prize 2021. Their video works are in collections of the Museum of Contemporary Art Antwerp, Frac Bretagne, and Fondazione In Between Art Film. Yarema and Roman are members of the art group Prykarpattian Theater which is currently working on the project Theater of Hopes and Expectations.

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fantastic little splash

fantastic little splash is a collective comprised of journalist/artist Lera Malchenko and artist/director Oleksandr Hants. The collective combines art practice and media studies, focusing on utopias, dystopia, the collective imagination and its incarnations, projections, delusions, and uncertainties. Established in 2016 in Ukraine, their projects have been exhibited at events including transmediale, post.MoMA, Plokta TV, Ars Electronica, Liste Art Fair Basel, Construction festival VI x CYNETART, KISFF, and Docudays, among others. They have also participated in the transmediale x Pro Helvetia Residency 2022, and in LaCité internationale des arts, 2023-2024.

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Anja Dornieden and Juan David González Monroy

Anja Dornieden and Juan David González Monroy are filmmakers based in Berlin. They work together under the moniker OJOBOCA. Together they practice Orrorism, a simulated method of inner and outer transformation. They have presented their films and performances in a wide variety of venues and festivals worldwide, among them the Wexner Center for the Arts, Österreichische Filmmuseum, Anthology Film Archives, Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Kunstverein München, Ullens Center for Contemporary Art, International Film Festival Rotterdam, Berlinale, New York Film Festival, Visions du Réel, RIDM, Ann Arbor Film Festival and Edinburgh International Film Festival. Both González Monroy and Dornieden are members of the artist-run film lab LaborBerlin.