Category Archives: SECTIONS

Visible Evidence 2006, 2015, 2019

Sao Paulo, Brazil

August 6-10, 2006

“I Am Not A War Photographer” (illustrated talk and screening, 2006-2007) Exploring my decade-long artistic rather than physical immersion in war. From Vietnam to Bosnia to WWII Occupied Rome to the Middle East today, my experimental documentary films push the borders between genres, discourses, radicalized identities, psychic states and nations through the intertwining of abstract and reality based imagery. In my talk, I introduce precise visual strategies I have discovered in working with these fraught and divisive themes, often opting for a painterly rather than a photographic articulation of conflict.

Mesa Temática:
Viewing the Absent – Remarks On Forensic Animation Film

Integrantes:
Patrik Sjoberg / Karlstad University, Noruega
Kjetil Jakobsen / University of Bergen, Noruega
Lynne Sachs / New York Univesrsity, EUA
Coordenador:
Patrik Sjoberg

RESUMOS:
Viewing the Absent – Remarks On Forensic Animation Film
Patrick Sjoberg

This paper address forensic animation films: the animated/digital films introduced into
the courtroom as re-enactments of an event: a crime, an accident, or a possible scenario.
These films are often based on photographs taken at the scene but not always. The films can
also be made from witness statements and speculations made by various expert witnesses.
Although these animated films have, to a lesser extent, been a feature in courtrooms and legal
procedures for well more than a decade, the opportunities now offered by CGI (computer
generated imagery) have given these films a whole new dynamic. Although they use a similar
technology as the producers of the latest computer games and feature film productions, they
rely heavily on the conventions established by the documentary film and/or actuality footage.
My paper discusses the development of these films, their aesthetics and the theoretical
implications of these films; that is, as evidence in a courtroom and as films referring to a
“real”.

Documenting globalization. A reflection on History, Storytelling and Film
Kjetil Jakobsen

Ever since Immanuel Kant in 1784 pronounced his age to be that of The Enlightenment (“Wir sind die Aufklärung” ), man has taken upon himself to give name to the times in which he live and to conceptualize these as a new form of experience. A generation after Kant, Friedrich Schegel proclaimed his epoch to be that of “the romantics”. In nineteenth century Paris Baudelaire and Rimbaud proclaimed “modernity” and set out to create an artistic language that was peculiarly “modern”. It has always been the ambition of documentary film to document its times. The nature of the contemporary is by definition
contested territory. Yet – like it or not – there seems to be some sort of consent that we are currently living in the age of globalization. The ethical imperatives of documenting globalization are overwhelming, considering the human suffering involved in these processes. Yet documenting globalization is a different issue from that of documenting, say the Great Depression or the Cold War. Firstly the problem of abstraction is pushed to extremes. How does one visualize such huge socio-structural transformations? Of course, aspects of globalization like mass tourism, illegal immigration, the blurring of cultural borders, the politics of global terrorism, and the exploitiveness of unfettered capitalism offer themselves to the documentary eye. But assuming that these things are interlinked, how does one synthesize “the age of globalization”?

Complicating matters further, a key aspect of present day globalization is precisely
that discourses of power are ever further removed from the world of human face to face
interaction and from the modes of representation that stem therefrom. The functioning of say
the world financial markets is beyond the scope of human perception. The same may be true
even of the global media (The obsession with dinosaurs in synthetic computer imaginary
seems a way of hinting uncannily that we are the dinosaurs, that is that ordinary non-
digitalized human experience is heading for extinction and subsequent synthetic recreation!)
In the globalized world, even modernity’s conventional system for covering up – and bridging the gap between power structures and everyday reality, that of introducing “representational
democracy” is lacking. There is no such representation on a world level. How does one
present the very “unrealness” of the present, in a realistic manner? Part of the answer must, I
believe, lie in an attentiveness to the “subjective”, that is to the new modes of perception
involved in globalization.

Imagery contrasting the abstract or virtual with real, human experience easily leads to
luddism. There is a self-reflective point here. The documentary itself contributes to a virtual
space of global civil society, a space of re-mediation.

I will discuss not only “conventional” documentaries like Hubert Sauper’s Darwin’s
nightmare but also mockumentaries, docudramas and art movies that explore that borders
between documentary and fiction while reflecting on globalization: Johan Grimonprez dial H-
I-S-T-0-R-Y , Chantal Ackermans From the other side, Amar Kanwars A Season outside,
among others. From the point of view of the historian of ideas it is obvious that the borderline
between “fictional” and factual discourse can never be stable, neither in the short, nor the long
run. In order to main its effet du réel, art is obliged always to cannibalize its environment,
pushing its borders ever further into the discourses of the real.

I am Not a War Photographer
Lynne Sachs

”I Am Not a War Photographer” is a cinematic presentation and talk exploring my
decade-long artistic rather than physical immersion in war.  From Vietnam to Bosnia to
WWII Occupied Rome to the Middle East today, my experimental documentary films push
the borders between genres, discourses, radicalized identities, psychic states and nations
through the intertwining of abstract and reality based imagery.  In my talk, I will introduce
precise visual strategies I have discovered in working with these fraught and divisive themes. 
Often opting for a painterly rather than a photographic articulation of conflict, I struggle with
each new project to find a precise language of images and sounds with which to discuss these
volatile moments in history, exposing what I see as the limits of a conventional, documentary
representation of both the past and the present. Infusions of colored ”brush strokes” catapult a
viewer into contemporary Vietnam.  Floating drinking glasses moving across a Muslim
cemetery in Sarajevo evoke a wartime without water.  Pulsing, geometric mattes suspended in
cinematic space block news footage of a bombing in Tel Aviv.  These and many other
examples form my visual approach to looking at trauma, painful memory, and conflict.  By
using abstraction we are not avoiding graphic realism but rather unpeeling the outer, more familiar layer, hoping to reveal something new about perception and engagement in cinema.

NOTES FROM LECTURE

“Which Way is East: Notebooks from Vietnam” (1994)

  • Two Views of the horizon line/literally the Pacific Ocean and a time line; how is
    history registered from American and Vietnamese perspective?
  • Childhood as preparation, Walter Cronkite, War movies that were extremely
    graphic, no such thing as a G rated war movie
  • Shot w/ 16mm Bolex with 28 sec. limit; no interviews; no sync sound; heightened
    sensitivity to light and sound (discrete sensory experiences); no zoom lens/only
    primes as this puts a discipline on my relationship to what I am shooting, my
    body must move; camera like a paintbrush
  • Looking for the essence of a history, confidence in my love of the real
  • ABSTRACTION: news report meditation matched with streaky brush strokes;
    tunnels with white streaks
  • Books & Research through Texts: Dispatches by Michael Herr; When Heaven
    and Earth Changed Places by Le Ly Hayslip; “Ear Before Eye” article and
    Framer Framed by Trinh T.Minh-ha; Vietnamese parables ( and later the Bible)
    give me the chance to enter an internal, mental space that provides a better
    understanding of cultures, values, human/animal position in the larger world;
    *James Clifford’s “Notes on Travel and Theory” (History of Consciousness
    Program at UC Santa Cruz) :
  • a) “Every center or home is someone else’s periphery or diaspora.” Or
    “Every periphery is someone else’s home.” I found this also to be true of
    mythic visits to Israel by Jews, this claim, this attachment to someone
    else’s everyday life; Clifford was also interested in who was traveling –
    nomads, refugees, immigrants, tourists, explorers – we all have
    experiences of awakening, and new understandings of what is familiar and
    exotic.
  • b) “’A place on the map is also a place in history’” he quotes Adrienne
    Rich; I wanted to be neither a tourist nor an explorer but rather a traveler
    (a mind working in history); I wanted to visit our shared historical sites of
    war but to experience something beyond this, more present, and more personal

“Investigation of a Flame” (2001)

  • Same time period, opposite side of the horizon
  • Backyard field work, gives me another kind of license and trust
  • Intensive investigation; research is vital; confidence that this was important
    excavation; finding the critical buried treasure that becomes a hallowed
    connection w/the past — the original 16mm footage of the action
  • Uses traditional interviews which I integrate with joy and ambivalence
  • a) eye to eye conversations with participants; no eyeline off camera models, I
    quote National Geographic TV series producer who asks “Where will they look?
    At you?”; the camera is EYE/I and looks out the window in reverie during John
    Hogan’s section about children in a bus
  • b) no tripods, push engagement
  • c) influenced by Trinh Minh-Ha’s staged, off center interviews in “Surname Viet:
    Given Name Nam”
  • For whom was I making this film? Where were my obligations as a politically
    conscious person? As an activist?
  • Began film prior to 2001; prior to 9/11, it was then “purely a historical exploration,
    even nostalgia” some people told me
  • Obtained archival footage of action; would I treat it with reverence or
    irreverence?; where were my limitations artistically
  • Both Philip and Daniel Berrigan completely supportive of an artist’s interpretation
    of this political performance; it was the people with strict political agendas who
    presented obstacles
  • Warsite as theater to the world: Hanoi….Catonsville (middle
    America)….Sarajevo, Bosnina….. Tel Aviv, Israel …. WWII Rome during
    Occupation
  • Both WWE and IOF began as history projects but IOF becomes extremely
    relevant after 9/11 and start of Iraq War; whose God pushed you/us to the
    extreme?
  • ABSTRACTION: How do I face the artistic challenge of addressing blood, fire
    and heroism?
  • a) use light flares as the surface burns
  • b) allow azaleas from May 1999 to transform into blood of the Vietnam war
  • c) astronauts (28:30) and rockets floating in the air seem otherworldy, elegant,
    militarized, romantic (this footage is my liberation, an intellectual opening for
    some viewers and a distraction for others)
  • FILM INFLUENCES: Emile de Antonio’s “In the Year of the Pig”, Craig Baldwin’s
    “Tribulation 99”
  • What is the relationship btwn politics and art? How do I express my own
    perspective while also leaving a complexity to my approach; this parallels my
    relationship to abstraction and visual specificity
    SHOW “WAR PHOTOGRAPHER” (Ch. 13) by Christiam Frei, film about
    James Nachtway
    “WWW.House-of-Drafts.org : A Bosnian/American web collaboration” (2002)
  • Backdrop of Sarajevo as a theater of war in early 1990’s

3

  • Explain fellowship with artists and our collaboration; wrote fiction in the morning
    and shot in the afternoon; created characters as composite of ourselves and
    imaginary person a) my 20 year-character b) Bosnian cinematographer who is
    given money to make a film in Bangkok but instead recreates the EAST in
    Sarajevo; c) Adla’s girl d) ABSTRACT mosque
  • Round-about way of asking other collaborators what happened during war in
    siege of Sarajevo but it did come out
  • BOOKS: In the Country of Last Things by Paul Auster, very popular during the
    war; David Reiff’s writing on war along with his mother Susan Sontag’s articles
    about putting on “Waiting for Godot”
  • Intersection of real and fiction in hypertext; the personal imagination intersects
    with the collective imagination; also in the Ghost Room
  • ABSTRACTION – floating glass of war, not so much a visual transformation but a
    moving away from precise experience
    “States of UnBelonging” (2005)
  • I started this project as a triptych which looked at the degrees by which you can
    know another person
  • Pursuing an understanding of another terrain of war
  • Come to the conflict btwn Israel and Palestine with the background of identity as
    an American Jew; how is this different and similar to my connection to Vietnam?
    Why do I choose Revital?
  • Begins as an anti-documentary (term that reviewer used for IOF); I would not go
    to Israel/Palestine; I would imagine it! ….through the legacy of the Bible, archival
    footage, her films
  • BOOKS:
  • a) Regarding the Pain of Other’s by Susan Sontag (looks at how we regard
    horrors of the world through images – paintings like Goya’s and photographs
    (realistic and abstract);
  • b) “My Algerience” from Stigmata by Helene Cixous 1) “Until the day I
    understood there is no harm, only difficulties, in living in the zone without
    belonging.” 2) “I am on the side of Moses, the one who does not enter.”(his
    brother enters Israel); 3) “The sentence, ‘Next year, in Jerusalem’ makes me
    flee.”
  • c) Don’t Call it Night by Amos Oz “There are also a few Eucalyptus trees and
    tamarisks, blighted by droughts and salty wind, hunched towards the east like
    fugitives turned to stone in mind-flight….Those hills over there, the mouth of the
    wadi…” What is a wadi? I don’t know the word for the place. How can I
    imagine it.
  • d) BIBLE: the ferocity of the land; why people kill for it; parable as a way of
    understanding a culture again
  • FILM INFLUENCES: “Notre Musique” by Jean-Luc Godard; “Sans Soleil” by
    Chris Marker


Invisible (2006) a work-in-process (00:00 to 06:00; 16:00 to
22:00)

  • How can I know another person?
  • Talk about Sandor Lenard’s story and how I am related; his life in Occupied Italy;
    working for the US government reconstructing body parts of soldiers
  • Another look at “States” and “stateless-ness’
  • The push-pull of culture. He is both disgusted and consumed by the products of
    society
  • Using my imagination to find a man who lives in his own imagination
  • BOOKS: The Emigrants by W.G. Sebald; The Things We Used to Say by
    Natalia Ginzburg
  • FILMS: “Rome, Open City” by Robert Rossellini; “Garden of the Finzi Continis”
    by Vittorio de Sica; “Friendship’s Death” by Peter Wollen; “Fanny and Alexander”
    by Ingmar Bergman

https://fasikul.altyazi.net/in-english/culture-in-crisis-the-case-of-the-cinemateca-brasileira/


Toronto, Canada

August 19-23, 2015
https://www.visibleevidence.org/conference/visible-evidence-xxii/
Visible Evidence, the international conference on documentary film and media, now in its 22nd year, will convene August 19-22nd, 2015 in Toronto, Canada. Hosted by the Cinema Studies Institute, University of Toronto; the School of Image Arts, Ryerson University; and the Department of Cinema and Media Arts, York University, Visible Evidence 22 will address the history, theory, and practice of documentary and non-fiction cinema, television, video, audio recording, digital media, photography, and performance, in a wide range of panels, workshops, plenary sessions, screenings, and special events.

August 22 | PANEL 12B | Tangible Wreckage:
Memory, Resistance and Reclamation: Four Filmmakers IMA 307

“Documentary Experiments in Temporality and Survival in Late Liberalism: A Case Study of Tongues of Heaven” Anita Wen-Shin Chang, University of California, Santa Cruz, USA

“History, Culture And Power: Love Boat: Taiwan Documentary Film” Valerie Soe, San Francisco State
University, USA “Stories From A Shifting Ground: Structural Vulnerability in Collaborative Filmmaking”
Greta Snider, San Francisco State University, USA

“To Sing the Darkness*: Explorations of Trauma in Film” Lynne Sachs, New York University, USA

Chair: Valerie Soe, San Francisco State University, USA

To Sing the Darkness: Explorations of Trauma
Lynne Sachs
Visible Evidence
August 22, 2015

Over the last 20 years, I have been moved by the awkward, delicate,
humiliating conversation between trauma and art.
Is engaging with images of war equivalent to taking a political stand?
In Susan Sontag’s Regarding the Pain of Others she asks if an
abhorrence of war in general implies a point of view, a moral
imperative, or simply an informed intellectual interaction.
Do we need to take a stand on who is killed as forthrightly as we
stand in opposition to the death’s very occurrence?
To what extent can we as artists claim authority on a situation in all its
complexity?


In 1994, I completed “Which Way is East” a diary film I made with my
sister Dana Sachs. This half hour documentary is structured around
a road trip from the south to the north of Vietnam during the first few
months American tourists were allowed to travel in that country. In
this short scene, you will hear a voice-over reflection about some
horrific events that took place in a dark alleyway in Hué juxtaposed
with a very aesthetically sculpted mirror image of a building with
bicyclists going by. For me the building becomes a container in
which you can hold the story you hear. Play Which Way is East.
During the first few years that I screened this film, my audiences
tended to assume that since I had made a film in Vietnam I must be,
as a result, an authority on the country’s history. This position as a
documentarian is problematic to those of us who make the work but it
is not necessarily an issue for the people who are watching the films.
As you will see, I often focus on what seems like small stories that
work like parables. These stories allow for insight in to a historical
event rather than enhanced knowledge.

2
In my 2009 film “The Small Ones”, I reckon with the fact that the only
personal connection that I have to the Holocaust can be found in
letters from a distant cousin who had a strangely macabre job with
the US Army. I use on-screen text to express my own confusion and
curiosity, as I face his work as what I call a “cosmetic surgeon” for
corpses. My approach here might feel cavalier, but I think this attitude
allows for the viewer to enter that period in history less enured and
more vulnerable to the tale told. Play “The Small Ones”.
In “Your Day is My Night” (2013) I confront Mao and all the messy,
ambiguous horror that comes with his famously traumatic Cultural
Revolution. Who cares, you say, what one lowly American filmmaker
has to say about Mao and the reign of terror he imposed on the
people of China for three decades in the middle of the 20 th Century?
Do I need to take a stand on a “situation” in history that produced
both progress and overt acts of destruction? In this scene, you will
see Qin Che giving a massage to his friend Mr. Cao as he recounts a
profoundly violent and politically motivated event from his childhood
in Northern China in the mid 1940s. The scene is intimate and
informal full of light and flickering hand gestures that remind me of
bird wings. I screened this film in several cities in China and Taiwan
during a tour last fall, and in most situations my young audience was
shocked to discover this version of their country’s history. Play
“Your Day is My Night”.


Lastly, I wanted to share with you one short shot from my current
work in process “Tip of My Tongue”. Like all of these films, I am
constructing an inverted history in which private moments create
shadows on large, uncontrollable public occurrences. I am not going
to tell you what “trauma” the woman is talking about. I like the
ambiguity, and yet I ask myself is this an act of artistic privilege in my
attempt to claim a universal pathos. To what extent does
“transcending the particulars” of a trauma in history sterilize it? Play
“Tip of My Tongue”.


Los Angeles, California, USA

July 24-28, 2019
https://www.visibleevidence.org/conference/visible-evidence-xxvi/
Visible Evidence, the international conference on documentary film and media, will convene for its 26th year at University of Southern California in Los Angeles, California July 24-28, 2019.

VE XXVI will feature the history, theory, and practice of documentary and nonfiction cinema, television, video, audio recording, digital media, photography, and performance, in a wide range of panels, workshops, plenary sessions, screenings, and special events.

July 2 2019 | SCA 108
The Art of Documentary (Workshop)
Chair: Michael Renov
Michael Renov (University of Southern California)
Genevieve Yue (New School)
Scott MacDonald (Hamilton University)
Lynne Sachs (Independent Filmmaker)
Jeffrey Skoller (UC Berkeley)

Contractions / Mimesis Documentary Festival 2024

Best Short Documentary Jury Award: Contractions

Mimesis Documentary Festival
Sunday, August 18, 2024 1:00pm
Boedecker Cinema

https://mimesis.eventive.org/schedule/6695d04d31c517005dea881d

Program: In Our Hands

Acts of digging into the ground and into the past deconstruct vulnerabilities, unheralded work, and systems of care. Behind everyday labor we find partial prints etched in the pavement, on abandoned sites, or in recorded images; a palimpsest of existence and action to be deciphered by generations to come.

El itinerante

Tiff Rekem

Patients file in and out of a public health clinic in a former Mayan town in rural Yucatán. A young doctor, who has just arrived there on temporary assignment, sends voice messages to his girlfriend.

Contractions

Lynne Sachs

What happens when women and other who gestate no longer have control of their bodies? In 2022, the U.S. Supreme Court ended a woman’s right to a safe and legal abortion in the United States. “Contractions” takes us to Memphis, Tennessee where we contemplate the discontinuation of abortion services at a women’s health clinic. We listen to an obstetrician and a reproductive rights activist who movingly lay out these vital issues. We watch 14 women and their male allies who witness and perform with their backs to the camera. In a place where a woman can no longer make decisions about her own body, they “speak” with the full force of their collective presence.

Couple More Shovels for a Few More Levs

Pauline Shongov

This project features a group of workers at an archaeological site in the Sub-Balkan region of eastern Bulgaria. Their confessions to the camera explore the conditions of contemporary life as the country, shaped by over thirty years of lethargic political transition, transitions from the lev currency to the euro.

Set Pieces

Bentley Brown, Ibrahim Mursal

Seaside fireworks, a march to the US-Iran game, and Souk Waqif festivities all make up a series of vignettes from the 2022 World Cup in Qatar. Meanwhile, an attendee ponders the event’s significance amid a shifting of the world’s centers of power.

Heterotopia

Nikola Nikolic

The coexistence of two mutually exclusive fictional entities.

Time & Place: on the work of Lynn Marie Kirby / X Artists’ Books

https://www.xartistsbooks.com/books/time-and-place

Time & Place: on the work of Lynn Marie Kirby explores the artist’s work through a collection of newly commissioned writing and previously published essays by Etel Adnan, Barbara McBane, Charlie Hewison, Glenn Phillips, Etienne Kallos, Lynne Sachs, Jeffrey Skoller, Jordan Stein, Jalal Toufic, Carolina Magis Weinberg, Tanya Zimbardo, and interviews with Kirby and Lissa Gibbs, Alexandra Grant, Megan Kiskaddon, Rachel Ralph, and Trinh T. Minh-ha. In lieu of standard photo documentation, the book includes Kirby’s black & white scans. 

Lynn Marie Kirby is a San Francisco-based artist focused on questions of place, the residue of history, and social choreography. Her conceptual practice engages time as a material, different sensory systems, improvisation and collaboration, accidents that make her jump, and forms of contemplation. She is the co-author of XAB’s previous publication Oracular Transmissions.

Artist: Lynn Marie Kirby
Contributors: Etel Adnan, Lissa Gibbs, Alexandra Grant, Charlie Hewison, Etienne Kallos, Megan Kiskaddon, Carolina Magis Weinberg, Barbara McBane, Trinh T. Minh-ha, Glenn Phillips, Rachel Ralph, Lynne Sachs, Michael Sicinski, Jeffrey Skoller, Jordan Stein, Jalal Toufic, Tanya Zimbardo
Editors: Addy Rabinovitch, Alexandra Grant, and Lynn Marie Kirby
Design: Dana Collins

Published in 2024

9 x 6 x .6 inches (22.9 x 15.4 x 1.6 cm), 312 pages, paperback

ISBN: 9781737838883

The Brooklyn Rail / DCTV’s Lynne Sachs: From the Outside In

The body of the body: examining the films of Lynne Sachs, inspired by a new retrospective.

https://brooklynrail.org/2024/07/film/DCTVs-Lynne-Sachs-From-the-Outside-In
July 1, 2024
By Hannah Bonner

In Barbara Hammer’s memoir HAMMER! Making Movies Out of Sex and Life she writes, “My films begin in what I call feeling images, an inseparable unity of emotion and thought/idea/image and internal bodily states of excitement.” Hammer’s desire to wed both emotion and thought, objects and bodies, could also be the epigraph to the experimental filmmaker and writer Lynne Sachs’s ongoing illustrious career. 2024 marks forty years since Sachs took her first video class at DCTV, where their June retrospective From the Outside In honors Sachs’s oeuvre of experimental shorts, cinepoems, and hybrid documentaries that explore feminism, family, New York City, labor, and “internal bodily states of excitement” with radical empathy and joy evinced in the act of their making. 

From the Outside In features twenty-four films from Sachs’s body of work spanning 1983 to 2024, as well as an artist talk and workshop on uniting poetry with cinema. This preoccupation with language and translation—or the ever ongoing interplay between the aural, textual, and visual—is always at the forefront of Sachs’s work. In the very first program, “Performing the Real,” her short Fossil (1986) opens with a series of bodies in medium close-up performing various repetitive terpsichorean movements. The VHS camera, handheld, slightly unsteady, traces their shadows and gestures against the room’s white walls. Sachs then cuts to video footage of women in Ubud, Bali, packing sand into their baskets at a river bank. Through juxtaposition, the dance is both an interpretation as well as a translation of the Indonesian women’s labor. As Sachs elaborates in a recent phone interview, the cut is “another type of line break” that allows “the juxtapositions between shots … to have [what we’ll call] free song.” 

The Washing Society (2018) expands upon the content and form of Fossil. Sachs initially began this projectwith her co-director/playwright Lizzie Olesker by informally interviewing various people who worked in laundromats to create the play Every Fold Matters, which was performed in laundromats all over New York. The composite of all those different conversations is also the content of her film. In between subjects candidly sharing their experiences of racism or overtime at work, The Washing Society also features actors delivering monologues about laundering or dancers bounding atop site specific washing machines with interpretive abandon. The Washing Society makes visible typically invisible labor both by conducting talking head interviews, as well as by lovingly translating folding gestures into emotive dance. The mix of registers (veering from participatory to performative modes of hybrid documentary), coupled with the chorus of voices, creates a powerful panoply of experiences on this historically marginalized, gendered, and racialized labor. 

Swerve concludes “Performing the Real’s” program by deftly (and movingly) uniting Sachs’s interests in translation, language, and text on screen. Inspired by Paolo Javier’s (Queens Poet Laureate 2010–14) sonnets in his 2021 book O.B.Ba.k.a. The Original Brown BoySwerve takes place in both an Asian food market and a playground in Queens. As various actors recite Javier’s lines, the camera tracks their movements closely like a confidant; at times, text layers the images, language equally worthy of sight as a face or a hand. Sachs further underscores her love of language in her short A Year in Notes and Numbers (2017) where the camera cuts from marginalia to to-do lists to vital signs in rhythmic succession. Sachs describes A Year as a “concise, autobiographical poem … made from the detritus. [It’s all] about the micro coming together.” Text typically delegated to the margins—or reserved solely for medical spheres—takes center frame. 

Elsewhere, like in E•pis•to•lar•y: Letter to Jean Vigo (2021), the letter becomes another format from which to aurally and textually examine the power and politics of images. E•pis•to•lar•y begins with the white text “Dear Jean” against a black screen, ominously overlaid with the chatter of children and what sounds like a crackling fire. Sachs then cuts to black-and-white footage of the January 6th rioters descending on the Capitol before cutting back to the black screen where white text now states, “I don’t believe that childhood is swathed in innocence.” Each member of this mob was once a child—but children are equally capable of inciting chaos as adults. Sachs subsequently cuts to footage from Peter Brook’s Lord of the Flies (1963) as two young children push a large rock from a cliff. When the rock begins its descent, Sachs immediately cuts back to the rioters overturning a barricade; the objects, as well as the sound bridge of the rock falling, links the two disparate source materials. The result is a deeply unsettling collage of mob mentality that activates the viewer not just intellectually, but sensorially due to the match on action cuts and sound bridges. This is a film where the power of images surpasses the power of the written word. Through disquieting visual juxtapositions, Sachs’s E•pis•to•lar•y returns us to Hammer’s “inseparable unity” of embodied violence and political ideology.

Yet, politics—and the politics of identity—are never removed from any of Sachs’s work. She is always already attuned to bodies (both her own and others’), and their multiplicities, gradations, and variations. As Audre Lorde wrote, “It is not our differences which separate women, but our reluctance to recognize those differences and to deal effectively with the distortions which have resulted from the ignoring and misnaming of those differences”; Sachs’s films live by Lorde’s tenet that difference is worthy of record—and celebration. Some films, like Your Day is My Night (2013), include both English and Chinese subtitles; others, like Tip of My Tongue / En la punta de mi lengua (2017), include Spanish subtitles on screen. Sachs does not always automatically assume her audiences are English speakers. Nor is she interested in documenting a single political or social experience. Nowhere is such a chorus of voices more personally rendered than in Film About a Father Who (2020). Filmed over thirty-five years, Sachs’s portrait of her charismatic yet unknowable father incorporates interviews with family members who provide loving, albeit troubling, insight into Ira Sachs Sr. as a father, husband, lover, and son. As additional facts come to light, Father reveals that sometimes the best story is told by multiple people, not just one.  

Contractions (2024)1, a much more performative documentary than Film About a Father Who, stages its bodies, rather than observes them. As an obstetrician and reproductive rights activist narrate their time working in an abortion clinic offscreen, various performers congregate outside a closed abortion clinic in Memphis, Tennessee in a long shot, their backs to the camera. The decision to obscure the faces of the performers is both to protect their privacy as well as to formally gesture to collective solidarity. Though the bodies range in age, race, and nationality, the choreography (and current political landscape) unite them in a post-Roe world, as does the cinematography which holds each and every body in the frame. Though we do not know every person’s individual story, Sachs’s camera does not discriminate. The long shot makes it possible that every person’s body, however anonymous, is seen.  

The reproductive politics of Contractions (2024) recalls Sachs’s 1991 film The House of Science: A Museum of False Facts, a more formally embodied polyphonic collage film about women’s bodies. Incorporating archival footage as well as her own home movies, The House of Science is a scintillating examination of sexuality and science’s gendered biases. Whereas Contractions requires (necessarily so) a level of remove due to the anonymity of the actors, The House of Science is much more personal due to Sachs’s incorporation of her own story, as well as varied footage. On a formal level, I would argue Sachs’s works achieve Hammer’s “internal states of bodily excitement” when they are not as performative or tightly choreographed, but more interested in the power of montage, graphic matches, and the interplay between language and sound, because it is not just the actors, but the medium itself which activates new ways of seeing. 

In The House of Science, Sachs’s diary chronicles receiving a diaphragm from “Dr. L.” in preparation for going to college, just as Esther Greenwood, in Sylvia Plath’s novel, receives a diaphragm to get out from under the bell jar’s oppressive dome. But Sachs’s doctor doesn’t tell her how to use it. Sachs’s text on screen elaborates: 

My memory of being a girl includes a “me” that is two. I am two bodies—the body of the body and the body of the mind. The body of the body was flaccid and forgotten. This was the body that was wet with dirty liquids, holes that wouldn’t close, full of smells and curdled milk. 

While Sachs may have once described her body as leaky and porous, full of “dirty liquids” and “smells,” her overall filmography affirms a heuristic approach to radical self-acceptance, not just of herself, but of others around her, including friends, family, and fellow artists like the aforementioned luminary Hammer. Through such ongoing generosity at both the level of content and form, Sachs’s films arouse ongoing intellectual and emotional compassion through myriad actors, materials, and mediums. 

  1. Contractions will begin streaming in perpetuity on the NYT OpDocs page as part of their coverage of the second anniversary of the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision to end a woman’s constitutional right to an abortion.

Cafe Cinema: Cinema of the Unusual Curated and Hosted by Maya and Noa Street-Sachs 2007 / MoMA P.S.1

Café Cinema: Cinema of the Unusual
Matinee Movies: Mystery, Magic, and Marigolds Curated and Hosted by Maya and Noa Street-Sachs

Café Cinema: Cinema of the Unusual makes its debut at P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center with the film program Matinee Movies: Mystery, Magic, and Marigolds, curated by 12 year old and 10 year old Maya and Noa Street-Sachs, daughters of avant-garde filmmakers. Timed to coincide with Halloween, the curators have chosen a series of films from the Film-makers’ Cooperative archives that will wow, tickle, spook, and surprise a matinee audience of boys and girls who may or may not have encountered the splendor of the avant-garde cinema. The event will be held on Saturday, October 27 at 4:00 p.m.

Seven short films will be shown on 16mm film format: Gulls and Buoys (Robert Breer, 1972), a flipbook of fabulous drawings from nature; The Red Book (Janie Geiser, 1994), spectacular animated cut-outs of color and mysterious images; Little Red Riding Hood (Red Grooms, 1978), dramatic scenes of elaborate, colorful costumes; Earth Song of the Crickets (Stan Brakhage, 1999), a silent film of hand-painted abstraction with magical sparkles; Fragment of an Unidentified Horror Show (Danny Woodruff, 1993), a suspenseful masterpiece of eerie proportions; Evil of Dracula (Martha Colburn, 1998), an animated film of happy faces and long pointy teeth; Moshulu Holiday (George Kuchar, 1966), hilarious scenes of New York city life with a surprise ending!

In the true spirit of Halloween, children are encouraged to come in costume. Tricks and treats will be provided. The entire program will last approximately 48 minutes.

Café Cinema: Cinema of the Unusual is organized by M.M. Serra, Executive Director of the Film- makers’ Cooperative and produced by P.S.1 Public Programs. Following this extra special Halloween film program, the Café Cinema series will begin to explore different aspects of the New American Cinema (from 1960s onward), is inspired by a 1964 film program at the 55th Street Playhouse featuring Film- makers’ Cooperative members Ron Rice and Vernon Zimmerman. The series has adopted its name from the motto of the Playhouse – “America’s Only Cinema of the Unusual!” All of the films have been graciously provided by the Film-makers’ Cooperative.

Special thanks to GuS – Grown Up Soda, beverage sponsors of Café Cinema: Cinema of the Unusual This event is free with museum admission
Upcoming Café Cinema Events
December 1, 4 p.m. One Man Show with special guest filmmaker and video artist Jud Yalkut

“Struck Faceless and Yet, We Continue to Speak” / Talkhouse

https://www.talkhouse.com/struck-faceless-and-yet-we-continue-to-speak/
June 5, 2024
By Lynne Sachs

Maybe everyone has this feeling in some way. When something terrible happens in the world, we ask ourselves, “What can I do?” Sometimes, I feel hopeless and powerless and go on with my life. Other times, the despair so haunts me that I realize that I must respond in some way. I need my artistic practice to articulate how I am feeling, not so much as an act of persuasion but rather a witnessing.

In spring 2023, filmmaker Kristy Guevara-Flanagan, the head of documentary at UCLA, put out a national call to filmmakers around the country. She was searching for artists who were willing to look at the 2022 Dobbs decision that had overturned Roe v. Wade, the 1973 landmark Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion nationwide. In 21 states, women no longer had the right to end their pregnancies. Guevara-Flanagan hoped to create a collection of films which would reflect the post-Dobbs reality and its ripple effects. Specifically, she wanted to look at the impact of abortion clinic closures across the country. I was already asking myself what the role of my art-making practice might be in this heightened time of fear and chaos. Her summons to action landed in my consciousness at just the right moment.

Now a year later, our Abortion Clinic Film Collective has become a diverse group of six filmmakers. Using our own visual style, we recount the story of various clinics in states where a woman no longer has the right to an abortion. We observe and listen to activists, daughters, parents, teachers and medical providers from Arizona, Kentucky, North Dakota and Tennessee. Each of us investigates the myriad ways that women’s personal and professional lives have been affected by this seismic change in the American legal system. I’ve found a sense of solidarity and hope with these artists.

I traveled back to my hometown of Memphis, Tennessee, to begin the work on Contractions, my contribution to the collective. While I haven’t lived in Memphis for many years, my cousin Laura Goodman, a longtime activist in the local reproductive justice community, was able to help me get started. With her personal contacts and enthusiasm, we gathered a group of 14 Memphis activists – mostly women, but also a few male allies – to perform in front of the camera. From the first moment that we reached out to potential participants in the film, I made it clear that their presence would probably be different from any film they had seen before: there would be no faces on the screen.

If you don’t live in one of the 21 states where antipathy toward abortion rights is at the level of vitriol, it might be difficult for you to imagine what it’s really like to advocate for a woman’s right to choose in the state of Tennessee. Being in this film could pose risks to your reputation – affecting such vital aspects of your life as your job, your place in your religious community, and certainly your political future. If you need an untarnished name in town, you would probably not opt to be in this film. Promising everyone that their face would not appear in the finished film was liberating – for my “cast,” and for me. I am an experimental filmmaker, so beginning a project with these basic constraints actually gave me the artistic freedom to transform what appeared to be a documentary impulse into a choreographed, physically precise performance. I came to our set with drawings for each visual scene and asked all of the women to wear patient gowns. In this way, their presence on screen became stark, uniform, distinct only by the way that they carried their bodies and wore their hair.

I decided to bring New York cinematographer Sean Hanley, a dear friend and collaborator I’ve worked with for over a decade on my films Your Day is My Night (2013), Tip of My Tongue (2017), The Washing Society (2018) and Swerve (2022), with me to Memphis to shoot the film. As part of our preparation for the film, we looked at the work of artist, musician and choreographer Meredith Monk, specifically her astonishingly moving 1981 performance-based experimental documentary Ellis Island. In this film, Monk captures a haunting sense of place and trauma. I wanted to work with Sean in a similar way, using austere, dance-like gestures, a sharp attention to the confinement of the film frame, and a sense of a collective whole in which the singular becomes subsumed by the power of the group. I followed a taut dramaturgical impulse, directing my performers in a way that made them find strength in their shared experience. I was relieved to discover that asking each participant to wear a medical gown as their “costume” and only showing the backs of their heads released them from a self-consciousness that often comes with acting for the camera. Since I had chosen a parking lot outside a very well-known but now shuttered women’s health clinic, our location was simple but highly contested. We needed to work efficiently and very quickly, so I made storyboard drawings I could quickly show to Sean. Through his lens, we tried to evoke a dystopic, yet elegiac, feeling of anguish and collective pain.

On the morning of production, Emily Berisso, a co-producer in our support team, without telling me or anyone else on the crew, summoned 14 volunteer marshals and a paramedic to look out for our well-being during the shoot. These days, gathering together with kindred spirits to make a movie about abortion rights puts everyone involved in a precarious and, dare I say, vulnerable position. In retrospect, I do think it was wise to have an experienced, dedicated security team on call – sitting inside their cars, behind building windows, waiting for something they might deem “threatening” to happen. Luckily, it never did.

For the soundtrack of Contractions, I interviewed two women in my cousin Laura’s home the day after our production. Dr. Kimberly Looney is an obstetrician gynecologist who had years of experience performing abortions prior to the changes in the local laws. Until the fall of 2022, she was the Medical Director for Planned Parenthood of Tennessee and North Mississippi. The other woman, “Jane” – who uses this familiar pseudonym to protect herself and her network of advocates – drives pregnant women who want abortions on a nine-hour round trip, across two states to Carbondale, Illinois, where they are able to obtain the services they feel they need. Together, Dr. Looney and Jane bear witness to a troubled time in which women are losing their ability to control what happens to their own bodies. In addition to the two women’s voices, I recorded with our performers in Easley Studio, one of Memphis’ renowned rock & roll sound studios, which was offered to us free of charge. Standing in front of some of the best microphones the industry has to offer, each participant sang, hummed or simply verbally articulated their anguish over the situation they watch each and every day in the state of Tennessee and elsewhere around the country. Mixed in unison by Kevin T. Allen, their voices form an aural chorus that registers somatically in the soundtrack of the film, and is also available as a separate four-minute audio-only piece titled We Continue to Speak. By working with filmmaker Anthony Svatek on the editing, I tried to construct a rigorous formal engagement between these sounds and the images from the hot summer day in Memphis.

So what is the story of a 12-minute film like Contractions beyond its inception and production? What is the journey for a short art film that speaks to a vital, controversial issue of the day? The film had its U.S. premiere in March 2024 at the True / False Film Festival and is now playing at festivals around the world. Perhaps more significant for its place in the dialogue is the fact that The New York Times’ OpDocs series is streaming the film to a worldwide audience here. Issues around a woman’s constitutional right to control her own body can be reflected upon and maybe even discussed at home, in the office, in a car, on the beach, or wherever people stream content these days.

Making Contractions has already given me the chance to spend time with others in the reproductive justice movement. Through the film, I have engaged with people in the medical field, underground activists with a commitment to acts of nonviolent civil-disobedience film artists, and deeply committed volunteers. The experience of making Contractions has changed me. I am only beginning to discover how the film and our collective efforts will be experienced by audiences. I will smile if these moments of witnessing – whether in the theater or the living room – bring about introspection and recalibration.

Lynne Sachs (far left)with Dr. Looney, producers Emily Berisso and Laura Goodman and performers in her film Contractions at a screening in Memphis in May 2024.

THE WEEKEND WARRIOR Newsletter / From the Outside In

by Edward Douglas
June 6, 2024

https://edwarddouglas.substack.com/p/the-weekend-warrior-june-7-2024?utm_source=substack&publication_id=799402&post_id=145354620&utm_medium=email&utm_content=share&utm_campaign=email-share&triggerShare=true&isFreemail=false&r=bapy&triedRedirect=true

“Although there aren’t as many wide releases as there were last week, at least this week’s two offerings are being released into over 3,000 theaters, and hopefully one of them will break out and save us from the biggest bummer of a summer in recent memory…

I’d usually save this next bit for the Repertory section below, but I don’t often cover stuff out of the DCTV Firehouse, which is in my neighborhood, just maybe a ten-minute walk from where I live. Anyone who has read any incarnation of this column going back to 2001 probably knows how much I generally love the documentary genre, which the Firehouse specializes in. On Friday, they’re kicking off a new retrospective series called “Lynne Sachs: From the Outside In,” with probably the most comprehensive screening of the filmmaker’s work, running from Friday, June 7, through Tuesday, June 11. I haven’t had much of a chance to watch her films, though I have seen her 2020 film Film About a Father Who, which will screen with one of her more recent shorts, The Jitters, and she’ll be there for a QnA with some of her family. It’s a little tough breaking away to get over there this weekend, being that it’s also the opening weekend of Tribeca Festival, but I want to make sure that any doc enthusiasts reading this column are aware of the series and of the DCTV Firehouse.”

This Week in New York / From the Outside In

Lynne Sachs retrospective at DCTV features screenings, Q&As, and an interactive workshop.

by Mark Rifkin 

LYNNE SACHS: FROM THE OUTSIDE IN
DCTV Firehouse Cinema
87 Lafayette St.
June 7-11
212-966-4510
https://twi-ny.com/2024/06/06/lynne-sachs-from-the-outside-in/

Experimental filmmaker Lynne Sachs took her first video class at DCTV in 1984; she and DCTV Firehouse Cinema are celebrating this fortieth anniversary with “Lynne Sachs: From the Outside In,” a five-day retrospective with seven programs comprising two dozen of her works, from 1983’s Ladies Wear to 2024’s Contractions and the world premiere of We Continue to Speak, from the three-minute The Small Ones (2007) and The Jitters (2024) to the eighty-three-minute Tip of My Tongue (2017). Sachs will be at every program, participating in Q&As and an interactive workshop; among her special guests are Tom Day, Sam Green, Tabitha Jackson, Naeem Mohaiemen, Lizzie Olesker, Accra Shepp, and her brother Ira Sachs.

“I walked into Downtown Community TV (DCTV) in 1984 thinking I needed to take some classes on how to make a documentary film. I was twenty-two years old and open to any possibility, any guidance, and totally impressionable,” Sachs said in a statement. “From that moment on, I learned to challenge every conventional expectation about working with reality. As I continue to explore the connections between the body, the camera, and the materiality of film itself, I reflect on those early experiences that taught me to reflect upon my own relationship to the people, places, and events I continue to witness as a filmmaker.”

The Memphis-born, Brooklyn-based auteur is an open book in her films, melding the personal and the political. In the grainy Ladies Wear, she photographs Ira on the New York City subway as he applies polish to his nails and sneakers. In 2013’s Your Day Is My Night, she documents a group of Chinese immigrants crammed into a closetlike apartment in Chinatown, where they ponder the differences between their lives in America and their native country and wonder if they made the right choice in coming here; there’s a fascinating kind of intervention when a young Puerto Rican woman moves in with them. In The Small Ones, Sachs shares the story of her Hungarian cousin Sandor Lenard, who during WWII in Italy was tasked with “washing, measuring, and cementing the bones of American dead.” His straightforward narration is accompanied by abstract images of war and slow-motion home movies of children at a birthday party. In 2021’s Maya at 24, Sachs depicts her daughter, Maya, at ages six, sixteen, and twenty-four.

Sachs offers a unique perspective of 9/11 in Tornado (2002), her fingers ruffling through ripped paper that floated across to Brooklyn. In the seven-minute Swerve, artist and curator Emmy Catedral, blaqlatinx multidisciplinary artist ray ferreira, director and cinematographer Jeff Preiss, film curator and programmer Inney Prakash, and actor Juliana Sass recite excerpts from Pilipinx poet Paolo Javier’s O.B.B. in a Queens park; words occasionally appear on the screen, including “free emptiness,” “unknown thoroughfare,” and “hum your savage cabbage leaf.” Investigation of a Flame (2001) explores the true story of the Catonsville Nine through archival footage and new interviews, with one member decrying “the obscenity and the insanity” of the US government’s actions, “which are growing more and more obscene and insane.”

“I’ve been in awe of Lynne’s fearlessness and desire to create, make meaning, rip apart, and piece together,” DCTV Firehouse Cinema director of programming Dara Messinger said. “I see her as the epitome of an indelible artist who is driven by curiosity and empathy — not fame, industry demands, or commercial algorithms. And I appreciate her sincere gratitude to her collaborators and to DCTV, honorably looking back but always steps ahead. Good documentary filmmaking cannot happen in a vacuum.”

“I don’t believe that childhood is swathed in innocence,” Sachs writes in e•pis•to•lar•y: Letter to Jean Vigo (2021), which contains footage from January 6 and Peter Brook’s 1963 Lord of the Flies. In The Jitters (2024), she cavorts with her partner, Mark Street, and three pet frogs and a cat. She takes a revealing look at the patriarch of her seemingly ever-expanding family in Film About a Father Who (2020). In And Then We Marched (2017), Sachs speaks with Sophie D., her seven-year-old neighbor, over archival footage of suffragists and shots of the 2017 Women’s March for equality.

Sachs shares her real to-do lists in A Year in Notes and Numbers (2017) while tracking her cholesterol, bone density, weight, glucose level, platelet count, and total protein. In Carolee, Barbara and Gunvor (2018), she visits cutting-edge artists Carolee Schneemann in New Paltz, Barbara Hammer in New York City, and Gunvor Nelson in Sweden. In an essay Sachs wrote about the four-minute 1987 silent short Drawn and Quartered, depicting a naked man and woman divided into four frames, exploring the tacit nature of the human body, Sachs explained how she felt at the film’s San Francisco premiere: “Within those few painful minutes, the crowd went from absolute silence, to raucous laughter, and back to an exquisite quiet. I was shaking.” You can expect all that and more over these five days at DCTV; below is the full schedule.

The New York Times OpDocs / Contractions

June 18, 2024
By Lynne Sachs

https://www.nytimes.com/video/opinion/100000009438727/contractions.html

Tennessee Abortion Clinic Workers Speak Out About the State’s Near-Total Ban

In Memphis, a doctor and a volunteer driver contemplate
the discontinuation of abortion services at a women’s health clinic
two years after the overturning of Roe v. Wade.

I remember the hollowing sensation I felt on June 24, 2022, the day that the Supreme Court deemed that abortion was not a protected right under the U.S. Constitution. Everyone — on both sides of this debate — knew that women’s lives across the country were going to be drastically transformed. Since then, a lot of attention has been paid to the most heart-wrenching cases, but this decision affects all women’s bodily autonomy across the country.

I returned to my hometown, Memphis, to make a short film outside a building that once offered abortion services. In Tennessee abortion is banned, with no exception for rape and very limited medical exceptions that are being debated in state court.

I interviewed Dr. Kimberly Looney, an obstetrician-gynecologist and former medical officer for Planned Parenthood of Tennessee and North Mississippi, and a volunteer driver who had served as a patient escort for decades. The volunteer, whose name has been withheld to protect her privacy, now drives patients nine hours round trip to Carbondale, Ill., where they are able to have legal and safe abortions.

These women offer distinct perspectives on this radical transformation in American society. Together they speak to a time in U.S. history when women are wondering if they have been relegated to the status of second-class citizens. As Dr. Looney puts it in the film, “You basically, as a physician, had to start counseling your patients from a legal perspective and not a medical perspective.”

Lynne Sachs Commendation for Poetic Cinema / éphémère ~ London experimental film

https://thefamousjmc.com/%C3%A9ph%C3%A9m%C3%A8re

Step into the avant-garde realm of cinematic innovation at éphémère ~ London experimental film. We invite you to witness the ephemeral beauty of experimental cinema, where each frame is a brushstroke of creativity and every moment a fleeting masterpiece.

Lynne Sachs Commendation for Poetic Cinema: Awarded to films that exhibit a poetic and contemplative approach to cinema.


**Stan Brakhage Prize for Innovative Editing:** 
  *Anima 1-4* | Director: Vasco Diogo | Portugal

– **Dziga Vertov Honor for Experimental Documentary:** 
  *Maria’s Silence* | Director: Cesare Bedogne | Italy

– **Maya Deren Award for Visionary Cinematography:** 
  *Città Reale* | Director: Hing Tsang | UK

– **Chris Marker Tribute for Multimedia Storytelling:** 
  *Dear Heartbreak* | Director: Ffion Pritchard

– **Hollis Frampton Achievement in Conceptual Filmmaking:** 
  *Am Goat Fetus* | Director: Freddie Rupprecht | USA

– **Shirley Clarke Excellence in Experiential Cinema:** 
  *Red Bird* | Director: Henry McGrath | UK

– **Bruce Conner Award for Avant-Garde Animation:** 
  *Wish You Were Here* | Director: Shaun Clark | UK

– **Lynne Sachs Commendation for Poetic Cinema:** 
  *To My Love (Raakaalleni)* | Director: Aino Kontinen | Finland

– **Jonas Mekas Honour for Diary Film:** 
  *Strange Phenomena* | Director: Sarah Grice

– **Su Friedrich Vanguard Award for Personal Filmmaking:** 
  *TWO* | Director: Leah Bonaventura | UK

– **Peter Greenaway Honor for Experimental Production Design:** 
  *Occurrences of Questionable Significance* | Director: Dave Lojek | Poland

– **Chantal Akerman Tribute for Experimental Narrative:** 
  *Worry-Fear-Unease. The Triptych* | Director: Agrippina Meshcheryakova

– **Guy Maddin Prize for Surreal Cinematography:** 
  *Desasir* | Directors: Daisy Perez, Elizabeth Perez | Colombia

– **Agnes Varda Memorial for Intersectional Storytelling:** 
  *Threshold* | Director: Sofya Gollan | Australia

– **Bruce Baillie Commendation for Pioneering Sound Design:** 
  *Città Reale* | Director: Hing Tsang | UK