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STOP INVASION OF UKRAINE
Valeria Troubina
Kasia Ozga
Marina Fomenko
The events of 1939 should have been a lesson to everybody. This is especially true now when an impossible new war has begun. Here is an excerpt of my film Looking for a Fatal Dystopia (1939).
Documentaries of that time show us an utopia of peaceful life with aeronauts conquering stratosphere, and everyday life with athletic parades and military exercises. Meanwhile, nearby the real fightings are already happening, and tension is growing everywhere on the threshold of the global war.
This film uses the materials of the Russian State Documentary Film and Photo Archive (RGAKFD) for 1939.
Natalia Smolianskaia
Yulia, Moscow Video, 2’56
Catherine Radosa
Lettre du 28.2.2022
Difficile de traduire le présent, je ne peux que tenter de retracer les derniers jours et tisser quelques liens entre les choses.
Le mercredi 23 février je prends l’avion de Paris pour Prague.
Le lendemain, le jeudi 24 février, les nouvelles nouent l’estomac, focalisent toutes pensées sur l’invasion de l’Ukraine par Poutine.
Avant de partir, j’ai relu Europeana, une brève histoire du 20.siècle, de Patrik Ourednik.
J’ai un étrange sentiment d’être restée dans le livre. Une phrase particulièrement me revient : « Et les Russes disaient que l’Europe allait à sa perte et que les catholiques et les protestants l’avaient complètement corrompue et ils proposaient de chasser les Turcs de Constantinople et de rattacher l’Europe à la Russie afin de sauvegarder la foi.»
Le jeudi soir je retrouve Simona, avec qui j’ai pris le même vol la veille.
C’est son anniversaire et je suis désolée que la date soit aujourd’hui si dure à porter.
Elle nous invite à voir une pièce de théâtre sur Jan Patočka -un des principaux philosophe tchécoslovaques et signataire de la Charte 77- qui parle de sa tragique fin dû aux interrogatoires brutales de la police en 1977. La représentation théâtrale de l’histoire est recouverte par un brouillard de l’actualité.
To read more (+Czech and English version) :
https://www.calameo.com/books/007014644e92386313865
SEBarnet
Swan sketch 2022
HD video – 45”
Alisa Berger
Ana Mendes
Manuela Morgaine
Liza Dimbleby
Dettie Flynn
to flee in search of security or to stay to fight
fuir en quête de sécurité ou rester pour se battre
PEACE in UKRAINE
МИР НА УКРАÏНИ
the name of the place – village, city… – and country where the work was made:
Champtoceaux 49 & Nantes 44, France
Ruth Maclennan
I filmed this in Odessa in 2012. The original work was shown in a wooden structure inspired by Gustav Kliutsis’s drawings. The title comes from Battleship Potemkin by Sergei Eisenstein.
major seaport and formerly headquarters of the Imperial Russian fleet. It is famous for its Jewish heritage, its humour, its writers and its counterpart on New York City’s Brighton Beach.
Sergei Eisenstein’s film The Battleship Potemkin celebrates a famous mutiny in 1905, a precursor to the Russian Revolution of 1917, showing the solidarity of the Odessan citizens with the brave sailors rising up against their oppressors. This film has one of the most famous scenes in cinema, of Imperial Cossack guards shooting the onlookers who are cheering the sailors of the Potemkin.
Katja Stuke
Anne Dubos
Michelle Deignan
Intravenous Antibiotics 5.45am
Meds 6.30am
Walk and toilet 6.35am
Call home 7.45am
Breakfast 8am
Toilet, Body and teeth Wash 9.15am
Walk around circular corridor 9.45am
Sleep 10am
Toilet 11am
Meds 12.30
Lunch 12.30
Visitor 1pm
Toilet 1.30pm
Walk around circular corridor 2pm
Exercises 2.30pm
Intravenous Antibiotics 3pm
Film out of window 3.15pm
Sleep 3.30pm
Meds 5.30pm
Dinner 6pm
Call home 7.30pm
Walk around circular corridor 8pm
Exercises 8.30pm
Toilet and wash teeth 9pm
Sleep 9.30pm
Wake 11.30pm
Toilet 11.45pm
Sleep 12.30am
Wake 2.30am
Toilet 2.45am
Sleep 3am
Vitals Checked at 5.30am
Natacha Nisic
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STOP INVASION OF UKRAINE * THE CROWN LETTER