Shokouk, Film Still, 17min

Shokouk: A Cosmicomedy in Four Acts, 17min, 2022

VO: Kazakh, Russian, Uzbek, Chinese, and English.

EXHIBITIONS:

Rewinding Internationalism
Group Exhibition
Villa Arson
Nice, France
June 18-Aug 27, 2023
LINK

Histoires Vraies
Group Exhibition
MAC VAL
Paris, France
Feb 4-Sept 17, 2023
LINK

Rewinding Internationalism: The 1990s and Today
Group Exhibition
Van Abbemuseum
Eindhoven, Netherlands
Nov 19, 2022-April 30, 2023
LINK

Shokouk: A Cosmicomedy in Four Acts
Solo Exhibition as Part of Images Festival Presented by VTape
Toronto, Canada
April 1-29, 2024
LINK


SCREENINGS:

Tampere Film Festival
’Shokouk’ International Competition
Tampere, Finland
March 6-10, 2024
LINK

Berwick Film & Media Arts Festival
’Shokouk’ International Competition
Berwick-upon-Tweed, UK
March 9, 2024
LINK

Arkipel 10th Jakarta International Documentary Experimental Film Festival
’Shokouk’ Official Selection
Jakarta, Indonesia
Sept 28, 2023
LINK

26th Media City Film Festival
’Shokouk’ Official Selection
Windsor, Canada
Nov 9, 2023
LINK


REVIEWS:

Mister Motley

Shokouk: A Cosmicomedy in Four Acts is a transhistorical hybrid documentary that traces a polyphony of characters, sites and encounters related to infrastructures of space travel and cosmic imaginaries. Following a vertiginous narrative connecting various cosmic machinations from the 12th century Persianate world to the Baikonur Cosmodrome in the present moment, the film weaves historical facts and archival fabulations, and questions our common perceptions of time and space. 

A crowd gathers to watch a mock televised rocket launch, staged to resemble the Cosmodrome in the aftermath of its closure to foreigners following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The spectators perform a ‘gossip score’ developed by Ulyana Toporovskaya and Lera Kim based on field research in the Ulytau Region, Kazakhstan; a region within the flight path and ‘fall zones’ of international launches. As the rockets ascend, at times exploding mid-air, they release large volumes of highly toxic heptyl fuel blanketing several hundred thousand square kilometers. The vastness of territories affected, multiplied by the protracted temporality of decades of launches, shifts the scales of violence from the original launch event toward a delayed destruction that is dispersed across time and space, a slow corporeal and environmental violence.

Tracing the spectral waves, we arrive at Baikonur, at the genesis of Russian/Soviet colonial cosmic imaginaries. We meet the archival fiction of Ukrainian Researcher Valery Pimenov, who in 1978 created the character of Nikifor Nikitin, a Russian tradesman who in 1848 is serving a sentence of hard labor in the Kazakh copper mines for the crime of making seditious speeches against the Tsar. According to Pimenov’s fabricated fragment from the Moscow Provincial Gazette of the same year, Nikitin had attempted to incite the public to evade the Tsar’s rule by fleeing to the moon, making him the first cosmonaut.

Nikifor ejects us to the present where a karaoke event celebrating the inauguration of a fictional Chinese infrastructure company ‘Skybridge Unlimited’ is held in Uzbekistan. Filmed on a Chinese-owned sand mine bordering a central Asian branch of China’s Belt and Road railroad, the Karaoke takes the shape of a duet between the 12th and 13th century astronomers and polymaths, Omar Khayam and Nasirdin Al-Tusi. Their dialogue is a speculation on the variable luminosity of Polaris and its correlation with tellurian politics during the Reconquista of the Iberian peninsula and the alleged demise of the Islamic golden age.

The spatio-temporal scale shifts once again and we arrive in geostationary orbit aboard an abandoned MIR Space Station. The camera floats in zero gravity towards a 10th century Arabic astrolabe as audio excerpts derived from the 1997 movie "Out of the Present" by Andrei Ujică play. Heard through the dissonant noise, Sergei Krikalev—the lone cosmonaut stuck on MIR for 313 days following the dissolution of the USSR— reflects on the sublimity of seasonal changes against the backdrop of dizzying geopolitical shifts on the planet. Shokouk ends with an anachronistic loop that connects the teachings of Italian physicist, Carlo Rovelli, around the fragmented essence of time to the original televised rocket launch in Baikonur.

In collaboration with:

Scene 1: Dialogs written and researched by Ulyana Toporovskaya and Lera Kim

Scene 2: Monologue written by Iraqli Qolbaia.

Scene 3: Poem written by Felix Kalmenson & Rouzbeh Akhbari and translated by Tiange Yang.

Scene 4: Animated by Jacopo Falsetta, audio excerpts derived from the 1997 movie "Out of the Present" by Andrei Ujică and lectures by Carlo Rovelli. 

Sound Design: Jokūbas Čižikas

Shokouk, Film Still, 17min

Shokouk, Film Still, 17min

Shokouk, Film Still, 17min

Installation at Van Abbemuseum

Installation at Van Abbemuseum

Installation at Van Abbemuseum

Shokouk Trans-historical Index, Risograph Print