Focus Program 2025

sonic frictions

IM FOKUS:

sonic frictions – “What does it mean to translate the void?”

Haunted images and imaginaries. Archives and narratives shaped and torn by erasure and colonial violence, instrumentalised for capturing, for locking down meaning. Sonic f(r)ictions features film practices that rebel against the image, offering speculative openings to counter-histories. They propose remixing, reassembling and resignifying as modes of contestation. Critical fabulation as a way to encounter voids and silences. By tearing, stretching and rupturing linearities, these practices disrupt the grammar of hegemonic logic and temporality, making space for spectres that transcend time-spaces and space-times, prefiguring possible elsewheres (and might have beens). Scrubbed soundscapes, rhythms, whispers and songs as sonic interventions and explorations gravitate toward the spaces between, beneath and beyond frames and framings. Bodies as sites of knowledge, gestures and movements as activated memory, as embodied historicity. Approaching archives by listening to the hum, as Tina Campt would put it, these films become searching movements toward what lies beyond capture – movements toward release, toward multiplicities. Three proposals, expanded by sonic extensions that bleed into the screening room, excavate ghosts, voices and appearances. 

_______All three programs are accompanied by sonic extensions by Soñ Gweha aka SOÑXSEED

A program curated by Djamila Grandits & Lara Bellon


sonic frictions – “Sometimes, when the ghost smiles it hurts his face.”

SHORT FILM PROGRAM I

SUNDAY, 11.05. | 7:45 pm
De France, Saal 1 | TICKETS

In three short films, the last co-directed with his sister Audrey Jean-Baptiste, Maxime Jean-Baptiste amplifies, echoes and traces notions of presence and continuity, language and archive. Rewinding becomes a speculative practice that allows for meaning to emerge in the glitch, allowing to sense and listen into the void  between frames, inhabited by beats and voices ever resisting capture and co-optation. Diasporic movements in cinemas, on film, kinship and records transcend time-spaces and space-times, revealing continuities of colonial violences and erasures. An assembly of haunting vocal expressions of agency and resistance around Guyanese representation and experience.

Maxime Jean-Baptiste is based between Brussels and Paris. He grew up in France, in the context of the Guyanese and West Indian diaspora. His audiovisual and performance work is focused on archives and forms of re-enactment as a perspective to conceive a vivid and embodied memory.

_______ sonic extensions by Soñ Gweha aka SOÑXSEED

Films

ÉCOUTEZ LE BATTEMENT DE NOS IMAGES

ÉCOUTEZ LE BATTEMENT DE NOS IMAGES

Audrey Jean-Baptiste, Maxime Jean-Baptiste | France 2021 | 15 Min. | OmeU
MOUNE Ô

MOUNE Ô

Maxime Jean-Baptiste | Blegium, French-Guayana, France 2022 | 17 Min. | OmeU
NOU VOIX

NOU VOIX

Maxime Jean-Baptiste | France, French-Guayana 2018 | 14 Min. | OmeU

sonic frictions – on altered truths and so-called archives

SHORT FILM PROGRAM II

MONDAY, 12.05. | 7:15 pm
De France, Saal 1 | TICKETS

An incessant pull towards movement, embodied in both physical and narrative rhythms, repetitions and choreographies. Practices of layering, reassembling and resignifying material allow for dissonance and synchronicities between image and sound to reveal ruptures and open up spaces for reimagination and fabulation. Disrupting archival silence and violence through bodily gestures, choral arrangements and textual interruptions, embodiment and dance are posed as ways of knowing that contest hegemonic regimes of meaning and image making.

Onyeka Igwe is an artist and researcher working between cinema and installation, born and based in London, UK. In her non-fiction video work, Onyeka uses dance, voice, archive and text to expose a multiplicity of narratives.

_______ sonic extensions von Soñ Gweha aka SOÑXSEED

Films

A SO-CALLED ARCHIVE

A SO-CALLED ARCHIVE

Onyeka Igwe | Great Britain 2020 | 19 Min. | OmeU
SPECIALISED TECHNIQUE

SPECIALISED TECHNIQUE

Onyeka Igwe | Great Britain 2018 | 7 Min. | OmeU
THE NAMES HAVE CHANGED, INCLUDING MY OWN AND TRUTHS HAVE BEEN ALTERED

THE NAMES HAVE CHANGED, INCLUDING MY OWN AND TRUTHS HAVE BEEN ALTERED

Onyeka Igwe | Great Britain 2019 | 26 Min. | OmeU
WE NEED NEW NAMES

WE NEED NEW NAMES

Onyeka Igwe | Great Britain 2015 | 14 Min. | OmeU

sonic frictions – ,”It’s after the end of the world. Don’t you know that yet?”

THE LAST ANGEL OF HISTORY

TUESDAY, 13.05. | 8 pm
De France, Saal 1 | TICKETS

John Akomfrah is a Ghanaian-born British artist and filmmaker whose influential work is characterised by investigations into memory, the legacy of colonialism, temporalities and aesthetics and the Black Diaspora. In response to the social unrests in Britain during the 80s, he co-founded the Black Audio Film Collective, a media workshop known for its seminal experimental film practices dedicated to Black popular and political culture. In his work, Akomfrah weaves together original footage with archival material to create stirring, layered narratives that juxtapose personal and historical memory, past and present.

_______ sonic extensions by Soñ Gweha aka SOÑXSEED

Film

THE LAST ANGEL OF HISTORY

THE LAST ANGEL OF HISTORY

John Akomfrah | United Kongdom 1995 | 45 Min. | OmeU