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Artworks
Festival Spearheads New Section on Visual Art & Culture as a Medium to Create Change and Challenge The Status QuoEmami Art joins hand with I-View World that will be showcasing 50+ shorts, documentaries and feature films from South Asia, Canada, Britain, Italy, Sweden, Netherlands, Argentina, Australia, Turkey/Syria, Iran and Thailand. The I-View World Film Festival kicks off on International Human Rights Day, Thursday, December 10, 2020, at the DLF CyberHub in Gurgaon, Haryana, with a socially distant red carpet, COVID-conscious screening and intimate panel discussion around Deepa Mehta’s FUNNY BOY, the film, which Canada has submitted as its official entry for the 2021 Academy Awards. The I-View World Film Festival, powered by Engendered, will launch its virtual presence on the Plexigo mobile app and website.For the first time the festival line-up includes a Visual Culture section, featuring experimental shorts, art documentaries and video-art works that blur the line between cinema and art. Supported & presented by Emami Art, Kiran Nadar Musuem of Art (KNMA), British Council & Prince Klaus Fund the curation engages visual artists from around the world to discuss issues of gender, politics, human rights and the power of the moving image to influence change.“It gives us immense pleasure to be part of I View World Human Rights Film Festival 2020. We at Emami Art strongly believe in the right to freedom of thought, equality and respect for all human being. There is no discrimination among any individual in the entitlement of these rights. Art that transcends language and even cultural barrier is a powerful tool for advocacy and human rights awareness. In a great painting, performance or film, the artist is entitled to the fullest liberty and freedom to express his/her mind, thoughts and emotions, making sense of a new meaning for existence. Hence, I would request everyone to be part of this festival and help spread the awareness of human rights.” Richa Agarwal, the CEO of Emami Art and
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*I-View World’s 2020 programming, which includes premiere screenings, industry panels, in-depth discussions and debates, will be available exclusively on Plexigo, an OTT platform created by UFO Worldwide, from December 10, 2020 to January 24, 2021.All screenings and panel discussions will be FREE and available to cinephiles all over India. For the complete festival lineup, trailers, synopses and images, please visitThe Visual Culture Programming:October Rumbles – I-View World is delighted to offer a virtual screening of remarkable short film by the highly-acclaimed Thai filmmaker Apichatpong Weerasethakul, winner of the Palme d’Or (Golden Palm) and Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival. October Rumbles is a poignant response to this time of global crisis, and is accompanied by Apitchatpong’s writing; it focuses on three ideas: rain and regeneration, empathy and politics and Buddhism in a time of crisis. A series of 5 other short films (Monsoon, Luminous People, Nimit, Blue & A Letter to Uncle Boonmee) by Apichatpong will have a physical screening in Jan 2021 as an extension of the same program.CAN ART STOP A BULLET?William Kelly’s Big Picture - Throughout his life, internationally renowned artist and human rights activist William Kelly has suspected that art has a profound ability to break through the vicious rage, that narrows minds, to create calming insights. Through the voices of 26 of the world’s most socially engaged artists and thinkers, the documentary explores these questions in the search for an alternative path for humanity. Produced by winner of more than 44 awards, filmmaker Fiona Cochrane and directed by Mark Street, it is an award-winning peace film at New York Festivals and in the Houston International Film Festival.WE ARE HERE - A series of artist film programmes, investigates how some of the UK’s most outstanding emerging and established contemporary artists disrupt old narratives and encourage new global discussions on topics such as climate change, national identity, marginality, intimacy, community and the future of the city. I View World will show a selection from amongst these films. The selection calledRADICAL INTIMACIES investigate the role of gender and sexual identities in a social, political, and cultural moment that has seen the momentous erosion of hard-won rights and the value of freely expressing difference. Presented in the programme are various intergenerational perspectives that affirm lives lived outside the norm and celebrate all that has been made possible by those before us.Half A Life Tamara Shogaolu’s, short film part of the MOMA DocFortnight is a timely story of activism and hope.The Threshold For Whiteness, is by an experimental short by Iranian artist, Babak Haghi, exploring masculinities in Iranian culture via visual poetry.High Commission of Canada in India, Italian Embassy Cultural Centre, New Delhi, Embassy of The Kingdom of The Netherlands, KNMA, Embassy of Sweden, Emami Art, Embassy of Argentina, British Council and European Union, DLF CyberHub, PVR, Pearl Academy, Prince Claus Fund, NYCSAFF and ArtHub among others.