Showing 3971 results

Archival description
1326 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects
Te Sentirás Limpia
ES ES-OVNI RSC-1269 · Item · 1995
Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

A cascade of images, advertising, film, television, simultaneously offering a kaleidoscope of different perspectives. A woman runs down a hallway, another provocative moves her chest, another places a slip, a miss, a teenager, a nail is broken, the blood mixed with the water reaches the drain, it drops into the void, the bowl is broken, looking for the exit but the elevator door opens and closes uncontrollably ... On the relations of the cleaning and sex they have already enlightened us, know let's see some pictures ...

Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)
Taxi to the Dark Side
ES ES-OVNI CTX-S014-SS001-0098 · Item · 2008
Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

This disturbing and often brutal film is the most incisive examination to date of the Bush Administration's willingness to undermine human rights in its prosecution of the ‘war on terror'. By probing the torture and death of an innocent taxi driver in 2002 at the Bagram Air Force Base in Afghanistan, the film exposes a policy of detention and interrogation that condones torture and grants immunity to government officials for crimes against humanity. It included never-before-seen images from inside the Bagram, Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay prisons.

Untitled
Tawattor / Tensión
ES ES-OVNI CTX-S009-SS002-0014 · Item · 1998
Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

How do you represent that which has been drained of meaning, misrepresented to the point of oversaturation, yet underappreciated and neglected to the point of absurdity? Time stretches eternally, oppressing your daily life to the smallest and largest degree, in humiliating detail, regular check points, opening boxes, behavior engulfed by silence. Masharawi succeeds brilliantly in silently depicting the daily abuses of life under occupation, the regulation and control superimposed, and the suffocating repression enacted and enforced by the Israeli military presence in Palestine. (Jayce Salloum, fragment)

ES ES-OVNI CTX-S018-SS002-0001 · Item · 2016
Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

Tarajal: Dismantling Impunity on the Southern Border is a documentary research project by the production company Metromuster, which previously produced the influential activist documentary Ciutat Morta. It has been commissioned by Observatori DESC, which is collaborating in the research process. Tarajal is based on statements from migration experts, journalists, lawyers, police spokespersons, and activists, as well as official declarations from the Interior Ministry, edited together to reveal the many contradictions in the accounts of the events leading to the death of 15 migrants at Tarajal. Above all, it suggests that the events may not have simply been a matter of police negligence, but part of a strategy designed for the application of migration control policies.

ES ES-OVNI CTX-S014-SS001-0086 · Item · 2009
Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

Taqwacore: The Birth of Punk Islam follows Michael and his kindred spirits as they travel across the U.S. in their green school bus, challenging Muslims and non-Muslims with punchy anthems like “Sharia Law in the U.S.A.” Their spiritual odyssey leads them to Pakistan, where they bring punk to the streets of Lahore and reconnect with Islam in a bold new way.

Untitled
TANGIER INTERZONE
ES ES-OVNI DIF-S022 · Series · 2024
Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

/ Passport Interzone I /

/ Passport Interzone II /

SCREENINGS, PRESENTATIONS, DEBATES.

Centre Cívic Convent Sant Agustí

25 - 26 September 2024

Noble Hall from 6:30 pm to 10:00 pm

Beginning in the mid-1950s , Tangier emerged as a vibrant nexus for artists, poets, and intellectuals. Heavily influenced by the presence of Paul Bowles , members of the Beat Generation were drawn to this northern Moroccan city, seeking not only inspiration and completion of their creative works but also an escape into the mystique of the Moroccan dream. While some engaged meaningfully with the local culture, most were in pursuit of experiences that transcended the conventional confines of their realities.

During the era known as “INTERZONE ,” Tangier became a site where the East and West intersected in a chaotic interplay of misapprehensions, with each side anticipating revelations or secrets from the other. Yet, this encounter was often marked by mutual disillusionment; neither side fulfilled the other’s expectations, highlighting a deeper impasse in cross-cultural understanding. For some, Tangier represented a fertile ground for intercultural exchange; for many, however, it underscored the inadequacies inherent in reductive “culturalist” interpretations of reality.

In the anarchic vision of William S. Burroughs , cultural identities are seen as constructs shaped and manipulated by bureaucratic forces for strategic ends. His critique of the failed East-West encounter resonates with Edward Said ’s analysis of the flawed mutual perceptions each culture holds of the other. Said’s theory of Orientalism encapsulates the West’s constructed narrative of the Orient, a narrative subsequently appropriated and recontextualized by Eastern institutions. Tangier thus stands as a liminal space, a crossroads of these cultural “pharmacies.”

The film program, “TANGIER INTERZONE ” , endeavors to probe the porous boundary between reality and fiction, delving into the imaginative dimensions that shape our understanding of this “reality.”

TANGIER INTERZONE PROJECT / BEST OF

(CONCEPT AS IT IS) CREDITS: