A GRAIN OF SAND IN THE MOUNTAIN’S BELLY (Part 1)

Online Screening

Date

March 23 – April 2, 2023

Admission

Free / $5 suggested donation

Ticket

In-person Screening

Date

March 28, 2023

Admission

$10

Ticket

This two-part program puts the weird, dark, supernatural, and fantastical at center stage.

It looks at how these often under-exploredmodes of the strange narrate complex historical, geopoliticaland socio-cultural realities, while opening an imaginary world of speculation and possibility. Through the enchanted otherworldliness of the spirit world, expanding universes, understated dread, and the coming to life of that what should remain petrified, these films not only mash up conceptions of time and space, but also blur the boundaries between human and nonhuman, life and nonlife. 

The works in the program travel through colonial pasts, extractivist presents, and improbable futures, rendering time and geography fluid and haunted. Landscapes, in the form of forests, waterways, deserts and mountains, become animate. While there is always a suggestion of looming catastrophe and implied violence lurking underneath, there is also an immense sense of potential. A grain of sand slumbers in the mountain’s belly, patiently waiting to transform into something else. 

By drawing on folklore, mythology, scienceand the intricate entanglements between deep geological time and human historical time, these artists and filmmakers address topical issues such as dispossession, migration, protracted politicaland resource extraction. Here dead matter morphs into live matter, ghosts slip into reverie, disquiet awakens desire, and fabulation destabilizes rigid belief systems.

Curated by Nat Muller

I Feel Nothing

Jumana Emil Abboud

Jumana Emil Abboud

, United Kingdom, Palestine

, 2012

, 8 min

English with Arabic subtitles

I Feel Nothing began as a multi-faceted investigation into the sense of touch; detachment; the relationship between the body and memory; between land and its "spiritual" history/presence; superstitions; wives' tales; sacred stones and votive offerings as once deeply lived and practiced within Palestinian heritage. The folk tale that undergoes Abboud’s disassembly is a tale about a brother who wrongfully judges his sister to be a ghoul (evil spirit/shapeshifter) after the disappearance of his new-borns. He later realizes that his estranged spouse – who is in fact a goblin – is responsible for their deaths. It is too late to undo what he has done by the time of his realization – for he has already taken his sister to the outskirts of the village and abandoned her without her hands and feet. Eventually, an enchanted snake restores the girl’s limbs and she continues to live a long and fulfilling life. Over ten variants of folk tales about handless maidens exist around the world. Inspired by such tales, I Feel Nothing is a metaphorical video-poem, where a relationship is recounted, though remains ambiguous if it is between a man and a woman, the past and the present, or an individual and a homeland. The work was commissioned for the exhibition Points of Departure, resulting from a year-long partnership between Delfina Foundation, the Institute of Contemporary Arts, Art School Palestine and British Council. Supported using public funding by the National Lottery through Arts Council England.