In the Manner of a River: Autoethnography, Ethics of Continuity and Collective Becoming in Pranami Koch's Multidisciplin: Screening of Boi Thaka and Koro Gochongni, followed by Pranami Koch in conversation with Mehdi Jahan and Sayanth R S

25 June 2026 

Date: 25 June 2026
Time: 6:00 - 8:00 PM
Venue: New CRT, SRFTI 

OPEN TO ALL

 

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In the Manner of a River: Autoethnography, Ethics of Continuity and Collective Becoming in Pranami Koch’s Multidisciplinary Practice brings together a screening of Boi Thaka (The Flow of Resilience) and Koro Gochongni (Echoes Within), followed by a conversation with filmmaker and artist Pranami Koch alongside Mehdi Jahan and Sayanth R S. Through the screenings and discussion, the programme opens up a space to reflect on questions of belonging, inheritance, memory, and collective futures. Bringing together cinema and multidisciplinary artistic practice, it foregrounds modes of storytelling that reimagine community, continuity, and coexistence through lived experience, shared histories, and embodied forms of knowledge.

 

This event is an EAEFF Satellite Programme.

 

Emami Art Experimental Film Festival (EAEFF) is a platform dedicated to generating and cultivating critical discourses around experimental films, video, and artists’ moving-image practices. The festival employs an expansive format that brings various forms, media, and perspectives engaging with diverse spatial and temporal sensibilities. Through an expansive curatorial framework, EAEFF brings together filmmakers, artists, scholars, and curators to create dialogues around contemporary moving-image cultures and experimental practices. In addition to the festival format, EAEFF extends the engagement through year-long Satellite Programmes comprising screenings, lectures, workshops, masterclasses, and conversations, facilitating a sustained critical exchange and pedagogical interaction.

 

 


 

 

 

About the Speaker:

 

Pranami Koch is a queer Indigenous multimedia artist, designer, and filmmaker from Assam in Northeast India. She holds a Master of Design degree from the National Institute of Design. Drawing from her lived, borrowed, and inherited experiences, she explores the politics of representation and depiction through a multidisciplinary lens. Her work delves into themes of memory, intimacy, and identity, weaving cultural narratives that connect human relationships with the environment and the land. Apart from her artistic pursuits, she derives joy from cooking, and gardening as outlets for self-expression. In her spare moments, you'll likely find her tending to her cherished collection of plants.