Presented in partnership with Speller Street Films and The Luminal Theater as part of their monthly BLK Docs series.
“The archive” has never been a neutral body of material. Documents, images, and ephemera—often viewed as objective witnesses of history—themselves reflect the power dynamics and material conditions under which they were made and collected. Tension between what’s been captured and, more tellingly, what’s been excluded, renders the archive a site of both presence and absence.
Drawing on a wide range of archival material, the filmmakers in this program attempt to cohere questions of Black identity that have been obscured, suppressed, or erased by white supremacy and other dominative forces. These films move seamlessly between personal and political—between family albums, home movies, text correspondences, official documents, news clips, historical footage, and advertisements.
Like the narrator of The Otolith Group’s In the Year of the Quiet Sun, we use the phrase “instant ancestry” with knowledge of the limits of excavating identity from what's been institutionally preserved. The series attempts not to instantaneously recover lost and retrievable histories, but to illuminate gaps in the archive and these filmmakers’ ongoing efforts to fill them.
Friday November 13th at 11AM EST with The Otolith Group’s Kodwo Eshun and Anjalika Sagar
Tuesday, November 17th 7PM EST Q&A with Terence Price II, Ephraim Asili, and others TBA
Special live broadcast screening Friday, November 17th at 7PM EST of In The Year Of The Quiet Sun
Full Program
Special live broadcast screening Friday, November 17th at 7PM EST
In The Year Of The Quiet Sun
The Otolith Group, 2013, 34 min.
In the Year of the Quiet Sun (2013) takes its name from the decrease in solar surface temperature that occurs every eleven years. From November 1964 to November 1965, the nation states of the world issued postage stamps to commemorate the first scientific expedition to study the sun. As the stamps turned their face towards the sky, they overlooked the unstable land of Africa’s newly independent states.
BLK Docs Started by Speller Street Films and The Luminal Theater, BLK Docs is an initiative to help build an authentic documentary film culture within the African-American community through film screenings, webinars, and more interactive film events.
The Luminal Theater is a nomadic cinema that provides fully-curated exhibitions of diverse cinema and media of the Black/African diaspora (African-American, African, Caribbean, Afro-European, etc.), allowing these artists to present their work within our unique brand of shared audience experiences, centered in Bedford-Stuyvesant (Bed-Stuy), Brooklyn, Central Brooklyn, and surrounding communities.