In October 2016, we organized a symposium in Basel, Switzerland, in commemoration of Chantal Akerman. Through screenings of her films, as well as talks, presentations, and accounts of friends and collaborators, the event focused on issues of remembering and forgetting. In Akerman’s films, history insists, returns, refuses to disappear. Memories are haunting and haunt those who were, and are, persecuted. The conference examined Akerman’s cinematic strategies of taking time to forget in transforming the traces of history into resistive forms. In working with cinematic forms of alienation, repetition, and permutation; in inventing shots that point to the lacking and the missing; in transmitting unexpected voices and sounds; and in creating hyb...
[Extract] In the seventy-three years since Primo Levi extolled us to ‘never forget’ the genocide of ...
Memory, Haunting, Discourse brings together the work of scholars from ten countries. In twenty artic...
Abstract The essay focuses on the relationship between memory and history, which has changed inmanyw...
To challenge the increasing tendency to read Chantal Akerman’s oeuvre autobiographically, this artic...
Chantal Akerman is now one of the most highly regarded filmmakers in Europe with a long career reach...
Chantal Akerman is now one of the most highly regarded filmmakers in Europe with a long career reach...
AS MUCH ABOUT FORGETTING... Viborg Kunsthal 6 September – 25 November Large scale co-curated e...
In the wake of the ‘archival turn’ the digitization of archival collections has been regarded as an ...
Six Fragments, (Moving Imagery and sound, 32.58 minutes, 2014-2016) and Remembering, (Moving Imagery...
Trauma, Memory and Silenced History is a reflection on my progress as a practising visual artist dur...
Can we already discern the structures of future memory cultures? From this fundamental question, I w...
What would our idea of memory be without the moving image? Memory, Forgetting and the Moving Image e...
Abstract: This article examines stasis in Chantal Akerman's cinema by means of a genealogical study ...
Memories Made in Seeing considers the relationship between memory and film through examining what is...
Book synopsis: This edited collection explores the political dimensions of cultural memory work in i...
[Extract] In the seventy-three years since Primo Levi extolled us to ‘never forget’ the genocide of ...
Memory, Haunting, Discourse brings together the work of scholars from ten countries. In twenty artic...
Abstract The essay focuses on the relationship between memory and history, which has changed inmanyw...
To challenge the increasing tendency to read Chantal Akerman’s oeuvre autobiographically, this artic...
Chantal Akerman is now one of the most highly regarded filmmakers in Europe with a long career reach...
Chantal Akerman is now one of the most highly regarded filmmakers in Europe with a long career reach...
AS MUCH ABOUT FORGETTING... Viborg Kunsthal 6 September – 25 November Large scale co-curated e...
In the wake of the ‘archival turn’ the digitization of archival collections has been regarded as an ...
Six Fragments, (Moving Imagery and sound, 32.58 minutes, 2014-2016) and Remembering, (Moving Imagery...
Trauma, Memory and Silenced History is a reflection on my progress as a practising visual artist dur...
Can we already discern the structures of future memory cultures? From this fundamental question, I w...
What would our idea of memory be without the moving image? Memory, Forgetting and the Moving Image e...
Abstract: This article examines stasis in Chantal Akerman's cinema by means of a genealogical study ...
Memories Made in Seeing considers the relationship between memory and film through examining what is...
Book synopsis: This edited collection explores the political dimensions of cultural memory work in i...
[Extract] In the seventy-three years since Primo Levi extolled us to ‘never forget’ the genocide of ...
Memory, Haunting, Discourse brings together the work of scholars from ten countries. In twenty artic...
Abstract The essay focuses on the relationship between memory and history, which has changed inmanyw...