So where you been for so long?
So much has happened since August, internally and externally.
I went to
Iran to visit my dad and in the short visit; I managed to meet the great
Left Bank collective in Tehran and had the most amazing day of showing films
and running a super 8 workshop. It is beyond my words to explain the feeling of meeting
the inspiring and talented young filmmakers. The fresh blood for the future,
the youth of the nation.I am hoping to work on the material we shot and see where we can take it.
I screened Essy’s film in a small Cafe, The house of Theory in the vibrant neighbourhood of Iran Shahr. Essy lays his small stall along with other mostly young traders close to this café. It was great to bring him, his friends of his generation, passer byes and regulars of the café, some old and new friends together to watch his story. Essy had difficult life in recent years but he is still strong and always full of joyous ideas for life.
There is so much to carry emotionally .The memory of war present in every random conversation, frustration of prolonged insatbility in every aspect of life but also a strong urge to take hold of any possible space to live.
Following
BEEF’s 10 anniversary programme, I hosted Amirlali Ghasemi from Parking
Video Library project for a presentation and a screening of collection of films
at Kitform. It was a great shame that he could not obtain a visa to be with us
but still, the show went on and it was great to listen and learn from his endeavours
of sustaining an autonomous archive amid all the ups and downs.
Ripple Effect is now playing at Nunnery Galler’s Visions Programme curated by Oneyka Igwe.
In the mean
time I am looking to learn new skills, find jobs in the age of AI, and work on the Rock Paper
Scissors project in between.
These are
all the exteriors though.
The interior
is turbulent from extreme ecstasy to sorrow, all going intense on all direction while I try to contain everything.
Somehow I still manage to pull myself together to update the blog.



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