EMAMI ART EXPERIMENTAL FILM FESTIVAL 2023  : Festival of Indian and International Experimental Films

22 - 26 November 2023 

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An eagerly awaited annual event, the Emami Art Experimental Film Festival (EAEFF), returns as a five-day event from 22nd – 26th November 2023, following the debut edition’s raging success last year. EAEFF is conceived by Ushmita Sahu, Director and head Curator of Emami Art. This year, the scope of the Festival has grown to encompass twenty-two films in the competitive section + thirty-three Indian and international films across seven curated sections + Masterclasses, Filmmaker in Focus, Panel Discussions, Special screenings and more. Independent film curator and writer Raju Roychowdhury is the EAEFF 23 Festival Director.

 

 

 

ALL INDIA OPEN CALL AWARDEES & SELECTED FILMMAKERS

 

The EAEFF 23 All India Open Call received more than three hundred entries from across the length and breadth of the country. Twenty-two outstanding entries have been selected in the competitive section by a jury of Indian filmmaker Ashish Avikunthak, Canadian experiential filmmaker and Professor of Film Production at NSCAD University Solomon Nagler andEAEFF 23 Festival Director Raju Roychowdhury.

 

Additionally, the jury has selected two films, HYPNAGOGIA (2023), by Tushar Nongthombam fromImphal, Manipur, in the short to mid duration Category along with  I Wonder If Daylights Were White Nights or Something Childish But Very Natural(2022) by Sibi Sekar fromChennai, Tamil Nadu in the long duration category for two awards of excellence.

 

The other films selected by the jury (in alphabetical order) are :

Ankai-Tankai (2022) by Mansingh Chandravanshi; Baauji(2023) by Vikram Singh; Bela(2021) by Prantik Basu; Dustbin of a Middle-Class Family (2021) and  Dustbin of a Politician(2022) by Parashar Naik; Flesh in Flux(2021) by Prerit Jain; Locust Review Presents: TWENTY-ONE HEADLINES (2022) by Anupam Roy and Sudip Chakraborty; Marks of Wound Marks of Woe(2022) by Koushik Mitra; Memoirs(2021) by Debjit Bagchi; Memories of a City(2023) by Sarvesh Singh Hada; Museum of Memories(2022) by Navneet Mishra; My Courtyard (2021) by Shrutiman Deori; No Superhero(2023) by Stuti Bansal; Normalization of a Disaster(2020) by Devadeep Gupta; Nott – The Earthen Pot(2023) by M.K. RainaOf Other Spaces (2021) by Sibi Sekar; On How the Art Flows(2023) by Pralay Mistri; Slow Wave(2023) by Pooja Kadam; The Frog is the Pond’s Witness(2022) by Anuj Malhotra; WordCount (2023) by Srotoswini Sinha.

 

 

CURATED SECTION

 

The Festival will screen thirty-three Indian and international films across seven curated sessions by filmmakers of international renown. The curators include - artist and filmmaker Riar Rizaldi from Indonesia, who works predominantly with the medium of moving images and sound, both in the black box of cinema settings and in spatial presentation as installation. Rizaldi brings a selection of films from Southeast Asia, focusing on Indonesia, that investigate, interpret, and create myths, either directly or indirectly, with various approaches.

 

Harkat is an international boutique arts studio passionate about films, new media, community spaces, and contemporary art. Based in Mumbai & Berlin, filmmakers Simran Ankolkar, Namrata Sanghani, and Karan Talwar will bring a lecture screening, presenting short films from the lab and speaking about the context of the works and the lab itself.

 

Canadian experiential filmmaker and Professor of Film Production at NSCAD University, co-founder of WNDX: Festival of the Moving Image in Winnipeg Solomon Nagler, curates an anthology of Canadian experimental films including emerging, mid-career and established filmmakers titled Landscape, Home and Abstraction in Canadian Experimental Film. 

 

Gusztáv Hámos and Katja Pratschke are media artists and artistic researchers whose artistic practice includes video, film, photography, interactive and site-specific installations, walk-in 360° cinema spaces, as well as the curation of exhibitions, symposia, film series, workshops, and publications. Their curation titled Time Travel Images/ Photofilms purports to look at photofilms and how they reference the past in the “cinema’s present” and thus permits us to think (about) all further time dimensions.

 

Under the EA Locus in Focus banner, which offers discursive spaces to local and regional communities through ongoing short and long-term projects, the festival brings a selection curated by a Guwahati-based filmmaker and video artist Mehdi Jahan of experimental films crafted by young multidisciplinary artists from East and Northeast India to contemplate the intimate relationship between their immediate socio-political reality and collective memory.

 

FILMMAKER IN FOCUS

German artist/filmmaker Wolfgang Lehmann is the EAEFF 23 Filmmaker in Focus. He will present a selection of films and two masterclasses. Working with the materiality of the image in film or video is an artistic strategy that uses the image as a central part of the visual design. Lehmann intends to take the audience on a subjective journey through the possibilities of working with film and video as material in the artistic film and video history concerning his work. Goethe-Institut / Max Mueller Bhavan Kolkata supports this section of the festival.

 

 

SPECIAL SCREENING, WORKSHOPS & MORE

 

A special screening of Argentinian experimental filmmaker and musician Claudio Caldini’s 2022 short film Promesa will be on view throughout. The Festival also includes Masterclasses by Indian filmmaker Ashish Avikunthak and Switzerland-based contemporary artist, researcher, and writer Budhaditya Chattopadhyay. The Festival also includes several Panel Discussions and conversations.

 

EAEFF 23 is supported by

Goethe-Institut / Max Mueller Bhavan Kolkata,

The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada 

The Swedish Arts Grants Committee.

 

FnB partner : KCC Cafe

 

©Emami Art 2023