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7 films in package
Sada [regroup]
Former artists of Sada came together again, reflecting on their creative and disparate lives since that time: Sajjad Abbas, Ali Eyal, Sarah Munaf, Rijin Sahakian, Bassim Al Shaker​
Documentary Course
Director Ahmed Kamal films the lives of students attending a documentary film course at the Independant Film and Television school (Baghdad). Students in the course explain how they risk their lives getting to the school each day, pick their subjects for their films, and the way that war torn Iraq manages to alter their studies, from almost every angle. Eventually, the class is eventually shut down after two students are abducted and a car explodes on the streets right below the school.
Baghdad Days
Hiba Bassem is a film student from Kirkuk, who returns to Baghdad after the war in order to continue her film studies and films a video diary turned documentary of her experiences. She struggles to find housing, negotiates her feelings about the Iraqi elections, thinks about her relationships, and attempts to find a place in the film world as a woman. Bassem graduates from the Art Academy despite the aftermath of the war and her film showcases the many emotions and experiences she had to go through.
Hiwar
A group of Iraqi artist wanted to establish a cultural center in Baghdad, but plans were continually put off due to war. Finally, the artists decided to set up the Hiwar Centre in an old house in 1992, and it became a meeting place for artists and creatives to talk, leave each other messages, exhibit their work, and became a “lung through which intellectuals could breathe,” at a time where this was impossible in most other facets of life for Iraqis. In 2005, the center was given a grant to rebuild the center.
Dr. Nabil
Thinking About Leaving
Discussion between Rijin Sahakian (filmmaker/ founder of Sada) and Dina Ramadan

VOICES OF IRAQ showcases a selection of films produced by SADA and the Independent Film & Television College, two grass roots initiatives founded by independent Iraqi artists with a common goal of empowering Iraqis to tell their stories and shape their own narratives during times of war. 


SADA, a virtual and physical ad hoc arts education project for Baghdad-based artists and art students, was founded by artist Rijin Sahakian and operated from 2011 to 2015. It provided a safe space for Iraqi artists to explore and create in the midst of conflict and uncertainty. Almost a decade later, former SADA artists came together to reflect on their experiences and create an experimental anthology film that explores individual and collective art practices in the context of occupation and warfare. Sada [regroup] compiles the video works of artists Sajjad Abbas, Ali Eyal, Sarah Munaf, Rijin Sahakian, Bassim Al Shaker.


In this program is also a selection of documentary works created by students of the Independent Film & Television College, co- founded in 2004 by Maysoon Pachachi and Kasim Abid, filmmakers of Iraqi origin. This free-of-charge film training program aimed to give Iraqis a voice by teaching them how to tell their stories through film. Despite the difficult and dangerous conditions in Baghdad, the college's students completed short documentary films that illuminate ordinary life in Iraq during the war and occupation, from a perspective missing in the mainstream media.

Sada [regroup] , Sajjad Abbas, Ali Eyal, Sarah Munaf, Rijin Sahakian, Bassim Al Shaker​

2022, 54 min.

Arabic with English subtitles, and English with Arabic subtitles

Commissioned by documenta fifteen


From 2011-2015, Sada, an online and in-person ad hoc art school, was set up in Baghdad to support artists working through the aftermath of US-led invasion and occupation. Nearly a decade later, former artists of Sada came together again, reflecting on their creative and disparate lives since that time. Artists Sajjad Abbas, Bassim Al Shaker, Ali Eyal, Sarah Munaf, and Rijin Sahakian each created video works, comprising one experimental, interconnected anthology film on individual and collective art practice in a protracted era of international warfare.


Using street footage, narrative, and documentary, Sajjad Abbas’s Water of Life tracks its filmmaker’s urge to forge protest that is bigger than himself, following monumental artwork, migration, and the return to place and protest. In Ali Eyal’s The Blue Ink Pocket, a mysterious letter from an artist is authored to communicate the futility of describing violence in full, its scattering of meaning, and the power it derives through its lesser understood perpetrators and permutations. In Journey Inside a City, shot in Iraq, Turkey, and Ukraine, Sarah Munaf layers her experience as a sculptor and as part of a threatened community of artists and residents in Baghdad, and, later, as a refugee finding her way in coastal Turkey as her parents navigate life in Ukraine. In Barbershop, stop-motion animation, cut-out drawings, and first-person storytelling give shape to the artist Bassim Al Shaker’s memory of his own kidnapping and its impact on his personal and creative life in the years that followed. Taking moments from popular and political culture during the 1991 Iraq war and the second invasion of Iraq, Rijin Sahakian’s Anthem argues against the use of multinational warfare in its varying methodologies— from technology to the arts—to extinguish life.



ABOUT THE FILMMAKERS


Sajjad Abbas is a multidisciplinary artist. Born in Baghdad, he graduated from the city’s

Institute of Fine Arts in 2014. Since 2011, Abbas has created many graffiti works in Baghdad and has worked on almost ten films in the art department at the Iraqi Independent Film

Center, where he was also a student. In addition to videos and films, he has completed two

independent animation films. In his work, Abbas both creates and participates in political and social satire, protest, and community activism.

 

Ali Eyal was born in The Forest, Small Abandoned Farm. He lives and works in no home yet.

After earning a diploma from the Institute of Fine Arts, Baghdad in 2015, he studied from 2016 to 2017 at the Home Workspace Program, an independent study program launched by Ashkal Alwan in Beirut, Lebanon. Eyal’s work explores the complex relationships between personal history, transitory memories, politics, and identity, using a variety of mediums, with a focus on drawing transformed through other artistic modalities, such as text, installation, photography, and video.

 

Sarah Munaf graduated from the Baghdad College of Fine Arts, Baghdad University in 2011, with a focus on sculpture and painting. She completed an MA in Sculpture in 2013. Her work

explores form as one part of Iraq’s long history of production and formal education, and

experiments with new forms of composition and storytelling. Munaf uses everyday objects

as holders of history and as vehicles for a range of communal and personal experiences. She lives and works in Turkey.

 

Rijin Sahakian has written and developed programs focused on Iraq as a site of prolific engagement. Her work responds to formations of American political, military, and cultural life through propaganda disseminated to enable global violence in Iraq and to diminish Iraq’s long-standing experience of, and resistance to, these extraordinary conditions. Sahakian received an MA in Art and Politics from New York University, founding and directing Sada, an arts education initiative for Baghdad-based students (2010–15) soon after.

 

Bassim Al Shaker is an Iraqi artist based in the United States. Bassim was born and raised in Baghdad during a period of political conflict and humanitarian torment. He received a BFA

from the Baghdad College of Fine Arts, Baghdad University with a focus on drawing and

painting. His style is the culmination of a background in academic drawing and painting techniques and the exploration of contemporary art. Bassim obtained an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.


  • Year
    2022
  • Runtime
    54 minutes
  • Language
    Arabic, English
  • Country
    Iraq
  • Subtitle Language
    English, Arabic
  • Director
    Sajjad Abbas, Ali Eyal, Sarah Munaf, Rijin Sahakian, Bassim Al Shaker​
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