Mykonos Biennale 9 AMPHIBIAN

Video Graffiti

Official Film Selection

ARENA Poster

Arena

dir. by Khalil Charif, Brazil
runtime: 4 min
In a world where freedom is constantly under threat, democratic societies are always on the lookout to ensure that the hard-won conquests of the historically recent past are not rolled back, but rather evolve towards individual and collective freedoms of expression and coexistence.
Monument Poster

Monument

dir. by Jeremy Drummond, Canada, United States, United States
runtime: 18 min

Beginning in ghostly abstraction and accumulating texture by texture into a droning meditative trance, Monument deepens to a visual and sonic intensity, mixing Super 8 film with video footage to create a complicated, multilayered encounter with the tension of protest and reclamation. A vivid and energetic durational experience of collective resistance and celebration.

Super 8 footage of the decaying monuments of Presidents Park (Croaker, VA) are layered with video footage captured on Monument Avenue (Richmond, VA) during the Covid-19 pandemic and Black Lives Matter protests of 2020. Themes of registration and re-calibration are explored through form and content and the distinct features of the media employed.

Presidents Park was once a ten-acre sculpture park (originally located in Williamsburg, VA) that contained 18- to 20-ft tall white busts of 42 U.S. presidents, from George Washington to George W. Bush. The park was foreclosed in 2010 due to financial troubles and the busts were relocated to nearby Croaker, where the crumbling statues still sit, abandoned in an overgrown acreage.

Marcus-David Peters was a Virginia man who was shot and killed by police officer Michael Nyantakyi on May 14, 2018, while Peters, unarmed, was having a mental health crisis. In 2020, during the George Floyd and Black Lives Matter protests, Peters’s death was a major focus of local Virginia protests. That summer in Richmond, Virginia, the greenspace surrounding the approximately 60-ft tall Robert E. Lee statue (one of several Confederate monuments along the city’s Monument Avenue) became a vibrant community gathering space. Over several weeks, the statue of Robert E. Lee was reclaimed by protesters and activists and neighbors who collectively transformed it into a living monument. It became a public work of art, a mutual aid center, a place for kids to shoot hoops, a memorial to people who were killed by police, and a space for communal organization and celebration symbolizing positive change and transformation. The circle that held the statue, and this blossoming community vision, was renamed Marcus-David Peters Circle in his honor. That year, The New York Times named the Robert E. Lee monument — in its revised state — as the most influential form of American protest art since World War II. The site of this monument has since been leveled and transformed into an unnamed, non-pedestrian garden.

Reveal the Truth Poster

Reveal The Truth

dir. by Pamela Falkenberg, Jack Cochran, United States
runtime: 3 min
Experimental found poem created from graffiti discovered on the streets of Austin, TX.
SHUFFLE AGAIN Poster

Shuffle Again

dir. by Marie Chiriac, United Kingdom
runtime: 5 min
My poems and short films follow the stream of consciousness. This one is about places and music - which both evoke memories and sometimes perhaps we are trying to forget. Also, being on the spectrum means perception is often distorted and feelings augmented and the undesired effect is quite fitting here.
Shades of Earth Poster

Shades Of Earth

dir. by Montana Catherine, Dorte Van Duijn, United States/Canada
runtime: 3 min
Shades of Earth is an experiment with letting nature overcome mind. While in a residency in Nova Scotia, I had to relearn the land, reestablish my surroundings and overcome challenges I had never faced before. Being alone for two weeks, I listened to the land in a new way that I was not familiar with in Maine, leading me to work with the land in another way. I came across some red cliffs where things felt right, where mind and landscape came together. Shades of Earth is about speaking with, and combining myself with the earth. I became one with the beeswax and salt, working together in a combination that felt safe and mutual. The video is a ritual piece that plays and shares communion with the land around me.
St. Agatha's Garden Poster

St. Agatha's Garden

dir. by Zelikha Shoja, United States
runtime: 3 min
A grave watcher's meditations on caring for the living and the dead.
Urban Dichotomy Poster

Urban Dichotomy

dir. by Sofia Ivanova-Kozhevnikova, Cyprus
runtime: 5 min
[urban dichotomy] is a visual project that delves into the contrasting realities of Nicosia, Cyprus. the project comprises two short films crafted from landscape shots of the Nicosia old town near the green line United Nations buffer zone and the vibrant ‘New Town’ area. the abandonment of the old town, juxtaposed with the rapid urbanisation of the modern part of Nicosia, has resulted in a disorienting imbalance, creating a complex tapestry that demands exploration. viewers are encouraged to reflect on the socio-political consequences of the past and the present, raising questions about identity, memory, care, and the dynamics of urban transformation. this project captures the essence of Nicosia’s urban landscape, weaving together stories of displacement, resilience, and the enduring human spirit. [urban dichotomy] invites viewers to engage with the complex narrative of a city caught between its fragmented history and the relentless pursuit of progress.
Wild Hive Poster

Wild Hive

dir. by Robin Lancaster Bisio, United States
runtime: 3 min
In a paean to an imperiled pollinator, Wild Hive honors the wild bee as it faces decline from the ravages of climate change, pesticides, changing land use policies and competition from managed hives. Dropped into a darkened vortex, an intricate geometry emerges as the dancer unspools against extravagant patterning. Watch the invisible become visible when Arianna Hartanov enters a mysterious world of nectar and cultivation.
Women of Water Poster

Women Of Water

dir. by Editta Braun, Austria
runtime: 10 min
A play about showing and concealing, moving and being moved. A ballet for isolated limbs, a trio for dancers flowing, floating, swimming and gliding. Carried by Thierry Zaboitzeff's marvellous sounds and tones, breathtaking through unprecedented perspectives, the piece writes a new, purely female story of creation out of the water.