Là, (2024)

Sirah Foighel Brutmann and Eitan Efrat

 

 

 

 

 

Là, 2024

Multi-screen installation, 16mm film, slides, video and sound.

Curator Karima Boudou
Form giver Ot Lemmens
Latex screens Sabrina Seifried
16mm projectors Els Van Riel and Erwin van t Hart
Programming Stijn Schiffeleers
Assistant (intern) Raouf Moussa

The title Là refers to Là-bas, the 2006 film by Belgian director Chantal Akerman (1950 – 2015). Phonetically, Là (meaning ‘there’ in French) means different things in Arabic and Hebrew. In Arabic, لا means no (the negation of hegemonic narratives on the land). In Hebrew, לה means for her (a tribute or a sort of offering to Chantal Akerman). Là simultaneously represents a continuation of Brutmann and Efrat’s imaginary dialogue with Chantal Akerman and an audio-visual journey between Belgium and the Negev/al-Naqab desert in Israel/Palestine, whilst examining the belief of belonging through natural elements and historical accountability.

One of the projects cornerstones is Akerman’s last film No Home Movie (2015). In many respects, this film signifies the culmination of the intense triangular relationship between Akerman, her mother, and Brussels. Là draws its roots and inspiration in the opening shot of No Home Movie, which shows a tree struggling against the fierce desert wind against a backdrop of spectacular desert hills stretching up to the horizon. This shot and four others – which also feature in No Home Movie – is intended to be understood as a generic desert, i.e., “any desert”. The elastic landscape serves as a crucial, decisive counter-shot to the claustrophobic Brussels apartment of Akerman’s mother dominating the rest of the film. When Sirah Foighel Brutmann and Eitan Efrat watched the film, they were moved by the familiarity of this particular desert that Akerman shoots in such a way as to give spectators enough time to observe and be immersed in this landscape. Yet, unlike other viewers, Brutmann and Efrat traced the exact location of this supposed “generic image” in Israel/Palestine, an information not credited as a location in Akerman’s film. The second desert shot in No Home Movie is a tracking shot filmed from a car window. This shot exposes us to its precise location as the road between the Israeli city Arad and the Masada archaeological site. The second place in Akerman’s filmed shot is an unmarked road off the main road extending beyond the desert hills. This particular road leads to the unrecognised Bedouin village of Al-Buqayʿah, akin to the many others that Israel has tried – and in many cases succeeded – to eradicate since its creation in 1948.

Là takes a close look at the desert environment along the road where Chantal Akerman filmed No Home Movie in 2015. Là looks at how the landscape is shaped by colonial practices on the land, including depriving Bedouin villages from water and electricity, while creating artificial oasis for pilgrims and tourists. In the same environment, trees imported by the British and Zionists from across the British Empire (such as for instance, the eucalyptus brought from Australia and Tanzania), are being irrigated from distant water sources. The exhibition takes the time to focus on the resilience of plants to desert wind, drought, repeated floods, and heat, giving the opening shot of Akerman’s No Home Movie a particular context.

Là is a multifaceted work that represents a reconciliation with Chantal Akerman’s death on the one hand, and, on the other, with the impossibility of being able to communicate with her after her death. Drawing on the work of Jacques Derrida, and Akerman herslef, the project engages in an imaginary dialogue with Akerman as a way to grieve. Là is a reassessment of the European Jewish accountability to Israel and the ongoing Palestinian Nakba from an anti-Zionist perspective, in line with the rich history of Belgian Jewish anti-fascist movements from both communities. Primarily featuring new artworks, Là produces an audio-visual environment where the production and presentation processes and mechanisms of moving images and sound feature spatially and expansively to invoke a layered perception of place.

Là includes the works Un Âne, [anan], Là Ensamble, Horizons and NFUEF

Supported by Kunstendecreet, S.M.A.K and Messidor