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6 films in package

AT THE DISPOSAL OF HUMANITY

Curated by Lila Nazemian, ArteEast Special Projects Curator


Featuring works by Shadi Harouni, Daniel Asadi Faezi, Farnaz and Mohammadreza Jurabchian, Elham Hosseinzadeh, and Saeed Dehghani.


AT THE DISPOSAL OF HUMANITY presents films made in the past two decades that share perspectives from communities on the periphery of contemporary Iranian society. With a focus on some of the many ethnic minorities living in Iran, the films in this program explore aspects of their deep-seated roots to land, relationships to their ecological environments, and their various struggles for justice against systemic oppression.


Set against a stone quarry on the far outskirts of the city of Bijar, Kurdistan province, Shadi Harouni’s I Dream the Mountain is Still Whole (2017), is an intimate conversation with a former Kurdish political activist that transcends temporal specificity. Revealing the evolution of his own political and societal beliefs in parallel to the many arduous jobs he has labored, the former revolutionary furthermore challenges listeners to question humanity's larger existential struggles in relation to nature and the universe. Harouni’s film anchors the concerns reflected in the works of the other filmmakers in this program. 


Many of the ethnic minorities in Iran inhabit the provinces on the borderlands of the state, yet their realities are becoming increasingly important to the overall struggles of the nation as a whole. Smuggling is a means of survival that many communities have resorted to, faced with political and economic circumstances beyond their control. Saeed Dehghani’s Contrast (2007), depicts the lack of opportunities and hardships faced by inhabitants of the island of Qeshm, through the point of view of an Afro-Iranian young boy whose family engages in smuggling goods by means of the Persian Gulf. 

In Elham Hosseinzadeh’s Silent Companion (2004), an Iraqi man illicitly traverses the wetlands extending across southern Iraq into Iran, in order to collect a wedding dress for his bride from his extended Arab community. Taking place a year following the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, the man faces both American bombs raining down from the sky as well as forces loyal to Saddam patrolling the waters. 


Farnaz and Mohammadreza Jurabchian’s Overruled (2016) follows the lives of four Afghan tennis players struggling to live and work in Tehran without papers. Iran’s large Afghan community, often living on the fringes of society without rights to education and livelihoods, primarily consists of over 2 million undocumented laborers, in addition to over 800,000 refugees. Most come to Iran following a precarious journey around the mountainous region separating the two countries. 


Daniel Asadi Faezi’s Where We Used to Swim (2019) is a haunting recollection of Lake Urmia, once the largest saltwater lake in the Middle East/Caucuses. Due to droughts, the rerouting of rivers, the construction of dams and the pumping of nearby groundwater, the lake shrunk to less than 10% of its original size. Located in Iran’s Azerbaijan province, Urmia is a symbol of insurmountable ecological and cultural loss. 


The films in this program explore aspects of various communities’ relationships to nature, the politics of labor, and social values while simultaneously highlighting their distinct cultural, linguistic and musical heritages. Mountains, deserts, forests, wetlands, lakes and seas have always transcended human-made frontiers. Extracted resources from these landscapes, be they water, petroleum, precious minerals or stones (among many others), rarely benefit their respective peoples who have inhabited the lands for centuries and who cannot be contained nor reduced to nation-state borders. Instead, their continued existence depends on the acute knowledge of their territories and the natural resources at their disposal, which have historically been the target of profit-seeking government forces. This furthermore echoes the ongoing oppression that these communities have faced in their unwavering individual and collective struggles for justice.

I Dream The Mountain is Still Whole, Shadi Harouni (2017)

Persian with Persian and English subtitles


Synopsis: Set in an isolated black pumice quarry in the Kurdish regions of Iran, I Dream the Mountain is Still Whole follows a lone figure, a Marxist dissident and former school teacher, recounting his struggles, hopes, and ideals as a committed revolutionary, all the while carefully negotiating the moonscape terrain of an everchanging mountain. The film is the second chapter in a multi-chapter project centered on the largely untold stories of dissidents who, following prison, were barred from intellectual work and forced into a new set of relations with society and the natural world around them.


About the Filmmaker

Shadi Harouni (b. Hamedan, Iran) is an artist based in New York. Harouni's practice is situated at the intersections of image, sculpture, text, and folklore. Her research is centered on disavowed histories of dissent, chiefly in her ancestral Kurdistan, connecting quiet personal acts of resistance to global mass movements. Harouni’s work is rooted in spaces, human and nonhuman subjects imbued with both the utopian dreams and broken promises of revolution.

Harouni is an educator, Professor and Head of the Studio Art Program at New York University’s Department of Art.

  • Year
    2017
  • Runtime
    17 minutes
  • Language
    Persian
  • Country
    Iran
  • Director
    Shadi Harouni
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