Cinema

Susana | Finding Christa

Fri, Jun 24–Fri, Aug 26, 2022
Fri, Jun 24, 2022
Lecture Hall
2.30 pm
Admission included in exhibition ticket
Fri, Jul 1, 2022
Lecture Hall
2.30 pm
Admission included in exhibition ticket
Fri, Jul 8, 2022
Lecture Hall
2.30 pm
Admission included in exhibition ticket
Fri, Jul 15, 2022
Lecture Hall
2.30 pm
Admission included in exhibition ticket
Fri, Jul 22, 2022
Lecture Hall
2.30 pm
Admission included in exhibition ticket
Fri, Jul 29, 2022
Lecture Hall
2.30 pm
Admission included in exhibition ticket
Fri, Aug 5, 2022
Lecture Hall
2.30 pm
Admission included in exhibition ticket
Fri, Aug 19, 2022
Lecture Hall
2.30 pm
Admission included in exhibition ticket
Fri, Aug 26, 2022
Lecture Hall
2.30 pm
Admission included in exhibition ticket

Every Friday

2.30 pm

Admission with exhibition ticket

Courtesy Susana Blaustein Munoz, Distributed by SAQMI - The Swedish Archive for Queer Moving Images

Susana

D: Susana Blaustein Muñoz, Argentina/USA 1980, 23 min, English OV

In this reflexive work of autobiography, Susana Blaustein Muñoz asks friends and family members to speak about her and weaves their testimonies together with her own responses and an array of filmic and photographic materials. Through this chorus of conflicting perspectives, a fragmentary picture of Susana as a lesbian artist who has left her traditional family in Argentina to live abroad takes shape. According to film critic Beatrice Loayza, the filmmaker “creates a portrait of herself as viewed by other women. The question becomes not whether these women are able to hit the bull’s-eye on who exactly Susana is; it’s about exploring the different sources from which identity can be constructed.”

Courtesy of Third World Newsreel

Finding Christa

D: Camille Billops and James Hatch, USA 1991, 55 min, English OV

In Finding Christa, Camille Billops reunites with her daughter twenty years after giving her up for adoption at age four. More than simply telling the story of a family, Billops and Hatch weave together heterogeneous modes of discourse to reflect on freedom, responsibility, Black women’s construction of selfhood, and the persistence of the past in the present. As Billops puts it, “Finding Christa is a plea for women to think about their choices. You should never let anyone take those choices away from you.”