Block By Block: Short Films About Chicago
Other
40 Arts Circle Drive,Evanston IL 60208
29 April, 2022
Description
A program of short experimental works celebrating Black life in Chicago plus a discussion with filmmakers BLOCK BY BLOCK: SHORT FILMS ABOUT CHICAGO This program brings together four recent short films that celebrate Black life in Chicago while interrogating the historic and contemporary effects of segregation, redlining, and disinvestment in the city. Centering images of joy amidst architectures of adversity, these films also foreground the voice, using interviews, testimony, lyrics, and intimate conversations to imagine filmmaking as a form of community dialogue. Following the screening, the Block will welcome filmmakers Domietta Torlasco, Jazmine Harris, and Kristin Reeves for a discussion of their films and the communities they represent. About the films: Garfield Park, USA (Domietta Torlasco, 2021, 32 min, digital) Botany, urban planning, children’s play—how do these practices intersect in the history of violence and racial segregation that has shaped a major American city? What asymmetrical mappings of space do they reveal? What signs of resistance do they offer? In Garfield Park, USA, filmed on the Chicago West Side, Domietta Torlasco reframes narratives of crime and criminality by looking at the city as an overlay of borderlines and patterns of exploitation, the consequence of measures that reach back to the origins of racial capitalism. In keeping with the style of the film essay, she asks questions in order to weave relations—between voices, histories, and visions—and counter the drive to chart and divide both territories and living beings. (Domietta Torlasco) Some Thingz Never Change: Monologues From A Stoop In Bronzeville (Jazmine Harris, 2019, 12 min, digital) Some Thingz Never Change: Monologues from a Stoop in Bronzeville is an ongoing performance ethnography project, which explores collective memory, post-migration history, and contemporary urban experiences through an intergenerational lens. Inspired by Gwendolyn Brooks's first published poetry collection, "A Street In Bronzeville," language and intimate memories of individuals navigating and residing within a historically black and disfranchised urban space are viscerally recounted. Using interviews transcribed verbatim, oral renditions performed kinda not verbatim, and the memories and labor of past and present residents of 49th and Washington Park Court, a block within Bronzeville, this piece attempts to draw on questions revolving around change, language duality, and safety. (Jazmine Harris) CPS Closings + Delays (Kristin Reeves, 2017, 7 min, 16mm Film/HD Video) The Chicago Board of Education made history in 2013 approving the closure of 50 schools, the largest public school closing to date in the United States. I documented all 50 schools on a 100’ roll of 16mm film while my DSLR caught vignettes of their communities. (Kristin Reeves) Hail Mary (Sasha Phyars-Burgess, 2021, 22 mins, digital) A photographic and video lament on race, class, and space in one of Chicago’s westernmost neighborhoods – Austin. Beginning in the late 1960s, Austin experienced dramatic demographic changes due to white flight, redlining, and economic disinvestment. Both an expression of what is on the surface and what emerges when one takes a moment to look deeply, this project aims to capture the ongoing effects of these changes in the everyday lives of Austin residents. Through a mixture of straight photographs, in-camera aberrations, developmental mistakes, and recorded footage, the work aims to center the subjectivity of these residents by garnering awareness of a community whose narrative has been lost and evacuated of nuance. This screening is supported by the Comparative Literary Studies Program and the Department of French and Italian at Northwestern.
Discussion
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