Axis 3 | Ghosts and Songs

Screening
February 25, 2026 at 6:30–9:30pm
In-Person

La lumière collective
7080 Rue Alexandra #506, Montréal, QC H2S 3J5

Free Admission
(no RSVP necessary)


Feminist Media Studio is delighted to announce the second edition of The Political Aesthetic screening series, unfolding from October 2025 to April 2026, curated by Farah Atoui and Sanaz Sohrabi.

Join us for the third screening, Ghosts and Songs.

Image Description: A low-colour saturation still from Noor Abed’s film, Our songs were ready for all wars to come, showing two women dressed in long black clothing, caught in movement as if running or dancing.

More Info

   

Program:

Chanson pour le Nouveau-Monde,
Miryam Charles, Canada 2021, 9 min.

Our songs were ready for all wars to come, Noor Abed, 2021, Palestine,  22’

Solmatalua, Rodrigo Ribeiro-Andrade, Brazil, 2022, 15’

Avant seriana (Before Seriana), Samy Benammar, Canada, 2024, 19 min 

The screening will be followed by a discussion, guests TBA.

Film Synopses:

Chanson pour le Nouveau-Monde, Miryam Charles, Canada 2021, 9 min.

Years after the disappearance of her father in Scotland, a young woman recalls her childhood on a Caribbean island (La distributrice de films).

Our songs were ready for all wars to come, Noor Abed, 2021, Palestine,  22’

Our songs were ready for all wars to come (2021) is a 22-minute film of choreographed scenes based on documented folk tales from Palestine. It begins with four minutes of darkness and the haunting sound of a woman’s voice. The perforated edge of the film, occasionally silhouetted by flashes of light, highlights the nature of the work as a mediated document. Images of women performing draw connections between latent stories of water wells and communal rituals associated with disappearance, mourning and death. The only narration in the film is a song, which is sung by Palestinian singer Maya Khaldi. Its lyrics are a collage of different folk tales. The film explores the critical stance of ‘folklore’ as a source of knowledge and its possible connection to alternative social and representational models in Palestine. How can folklore become a common emancipatory tool for people to overturn dominant discourses, reclaim their history and land, and rewrite reality as they know it? (Ikon Gallery). 

Solmatalua, Rodrigo Ribeiro-Andrade, Brazil, 2022, 15’

A ritual greeting to Creation and a photograph of a slave ship initiate this organic visualization of memories from the African diaspora. “The history of Brazil has been written by White hands. Both Blacks and Indigenous people who lived here haven't had their history written yet.” Rodrigo Ribeiro-Andrade, who previously explored similar territory with scenes from sugar plantations in The White Death of the Black Wizard,  stays well clear of traditional historical reconstruction in this intuitively edited composition of archive footage, singing and other, impressionistic, elements. This is film as an act of protest, in and of itself. It is as if Ribeiro-Andrade is drawing directly from the source, a dream world of memories, as he blends images of early settlements and children at play in favela alleyways. Performances, dances and provocative activist acts jostle with abstract light, the sound of nature, modern music and melancholy vocals. This is no “objective” historical record, but a poetic essay that connects us directly with a collective consciousness (IDFA).

Avant seriana (Before Seriana), Samy Benammar, Canada, 2024, 19 min 

Mom, you brought me back to our homeland. All I know about these harsh landscapes I learned from books written by the hand that burned these mountains. I try to undo the colonial myths engraved into my memory, but the hills escape my gaze. Do you think I, too, have become the white djinn spoken of by the legends surrounding our martyrs? Avant Seriana is an essay film shot in Super 8 in the Aurès region of Algeria. Observing the landscapes of my native land, I realize that they are divided into several images and times. Two different countries are formed: the Algeria of the mountains and an imaginary one born of the tales I’ve read in colonial archives. My gaze no longer belongs to the places where I was hoping to return to my roots. – Samy Benammar


Ghosts and Songs is the third screening in the second season of the Political Aesthetic screening series, which takes place from October 2025 to April 2026.

Admission is free and no RSVP is needed. Please come on time to ensure access to seating.

 

Concordia University
Communications & Journalism (CJ) Building
CJ 2.130, 7141 Sherbrooke St. W.
Montreal, Quebec H4B 1R6
Canada

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