23 - 27 April 2025 ↳ Festival 23 April - 25 May 2025 ↳ Exhibition
Media artists from all over the world can start entering their works for the European Media Art Festival 2025. The online platform https://emaf.filmchief.com/entry-forms is now open.
We are looking forward to receiving works from the areas of Film, Installation and Expanded (live projects such as performances, interactive works, or workshops). The deadline for entries is 10 January 2025. Our curatorial team will develop the festival programme based on these entered works.
Entering works is free of charge. Artists’ fees will be paid for all entries selected for the festival.
News
10/29/2024EMAF 38 - Start of film series „Looking in order to listen“
How do we remember the past and whose voices do we echo when we talk about it? Over the coming months, EMAF, in collaboration with Kino in der LAGERHALLE, will be showing films from four decades and different parts of the world. They span different times and places, explore the blurred edges of political upheaval and uncover the buried traces of historical events. They employ various forms of documentary narrative in which personal and collective memory, the spoken word and mediated history overlap.
The series begins on 20 November at 7pm with:
The Halfmoon Files by Philip Scheffner, DE 2007, 87’ (English, Hindi, Punjabi, Gurkha with German subtitles)
“Once upon a time there was a man. He ended up in the European war. Germany took this man prisoner. He wants to return to India. If God is gracious, he will make peace soon. Then this man will leave from here.” The words of Mall Singh, spoken into a gramophone horn on 11 December 1916 in the town of Wünsdorf near Berlin, fade away with a crackling sound. 90 years later, Mall Singh is a number on an old shellac record in an archive, one of hundreds of voices of colonial soldiers from the First World War. The Halfmoon Files is a ghost story, a documentary and an investigation into the entanglements of politics, colonialism, science and the media. Philip Scheffner follows these voices to the place where they were recorded.
Admission: 6 Euro, reduced 5 Euro
10/25/2024EMAF 38 - A warm welcome to our new film programmers!
The viewing process for the upcoming festival has begun, and we are very pleased to announce our new programming team today: Juan David González Monroy, Rita Macedo, Christina Stuhlberger and Clarissa Thieme will be working together with Katrin Mundt over the next few months to select the films for the International Selection and Features before presenting them at the festival. We are looking forward to the exchange and the joint work on the programme!
Juan David González Monroy is a visual artist based in Berlin. Since 2010, he has collaborated with Anja Dornieden under the moniker OJOBOCA. Their artistic practice focuses on photochemical film and explores cinema as a social ritual. OJOBOCA’s films, installations, and expanded cinema performances have been featured in numerous solo screenings and group exhibitions, including at the Museum of the Moving Image, ICA London, Wexner Center for the Arts, Anthology Film Archives, Haus der Kulturen der Welt, as well as at film festivals such as the Berlinale and the New York Film Festival.
Rita Macedo is a filmmaker and video artist based in Berlin. Since 2018 she is an artistic associate at Braunschweig University of Art, where she teaches several film related subjects. Her work operates within the realms of documentary and speculative fiction, with a focus on meaning, memory and history, and has been shown at numerous exhibitions and festivals, such as European Media Art Festival, Berwick Film and Media Arts Festival, Shortfilm Festival Hamburg, IndieLisboa International Film Festival, Kasseler Dokfest, amongst others.
Christina Stuhlberger is an artist and filmmaker based in Vienna and Brussels. She co-founded elephy, a collective and platform for film and audiovisual art, and serves as a guest programmer for the Courtisane Film Festival in Ghent. In addition to her artistic work, she is a doctoral researcher in the arts at the LUCA School of Arts in Brussels and teaches in the Doc Nomads international master’s program in documentary filmmaking.
Clarissa Thieme is a filmmaker and artist. Her films, installations, and performative interventions focus on the fissures between individual memory and its translation into processes of historical objectification. Her new work explores a living archive as a new commons and vulnerability as an artistic strategy of resistance and solidarity. Thieme co-founded ARchipelago, a site-specific archiving platform, and the open-archive initiative Između Nas/Between Us at the Sarajevo Video Archive. She is a PhD candidate at the Artistic Research Center (ARC) at the Vienna Film Academy (mdw).
Don’t forget to send us your latest films, installations und expanded projects. Our Call is still open until January 10: https://emaf.filmchief.com/entry-forms.
09/23/2024EMAF 38 - Call for Entries
Media artists from all over the world can start entering their works for the European Media Art Festival 2025. The online platform https://emaf.filmchief.com/entry-forms is now open.
We are looking forward to receiving works from the areas of Film, Installation and Expanded (live projects such as performances, interactive works, or workshops). The deadline for entries is 10 January 2025. Our curatorial team will develop the festival programme based on these entered works.
Entering works is free of charge. Artists’ fees will be paid for all entries selected for the festival.
Reorientation of Prizes
From the next edition of the Festival, we will be reorganising the awarding of prizes. Up to now, the three festival prizes have been awarded from among all the films selected for the International Competition. In future, we will divide the available prize money equally among all the short and medium-length films selected for what will be known as the International Selection. These films will be equal winners of the EMAF Award and will receive €400 each.
We believe that films do not need a competition to prove their uniqueness. Our selection and programming is based on the dialogue that develops between films and between films and audiences. We also see the decision to dispense with competitions as a further step towards more fairness and transparency in the work of festivals. In line with the consistent payment of artists’ fees and the rejection of premiere restrictions, it is intended to strengthen the EMAF as a place where exchange and encounter take precedence over competition and exclusivity.
A jury of the VdFk will award the EMAF Media Art Award of the German Film Critics’ Association to one of the films from the International Selection. The prize is non-monetary.
German short films selected for the International Selection can be considered for the awarding of 5 reference points in accordance with current FFA regulations. For the EMAF Media Art Award of the German Film Critics´ Association, a distinction will still be made between nominated and winning films when it comes to the awarding of reference points.
The 38th European Media Art Festival will take place from 23 to 27 April 2025. The exhibition at Kunsthalle Osnabrück will be on view until 25 May 2025.
04/29/2024EMAF 37 - Juries award three prizes
After five days, the 37th European Media Art Festival ended yesterday in Osnabrück. We are pleased about the great interest shown in the festival and the good discussions that took place. Three prizes were awarded at the EMAF in the Kunsthalle Osnabrück on Saturday evening.
We would like to thank all artists, helpers and our sponsors, especially nordmedia, the city of Osnabrück, the Lower Saxony Foundation, the VGH Foundation, the Sievert Foundation for Science and Culture and the Osnabrücker Land Regional Association e. V..
The exhibition of the 37th EMAF can be seen at the Kunsthalle Osnabrück until May 26th.
04/25/2024EMAF 37 - Opening
We are pleased that the starting signal for five days of the European Media Art Festival was given yesterday evening in the Kunsthalle Osnabrück. Around 1,000 people were there when Anna Jehle & Juliane Schickedanz (Head of the Kunsthalle Osnabrück), Wolfgang Beckermann (First City Councilor, City of Osnabrück), Dr. Jörg Mielke (Head of Lower Saxony State Chancellery) and Alfred Rotert & Katrin Mundt (head of EMAF) opened the festival in fairly cool temperatures.
“As international and diverse in terms of artistic approach as the selected works are, the curators of the exhibition and the film programs are just as international and diverse. And so these diverse approaches and perspectives are reflected in the 5-day program of the festival, the exhibition, the almost 100 films, the numerous performances and contributions,” said Wolfgang Beckermann, the first city councilor of the city of Osnabrück, yesterday evening said at the opening of the 37th European Media Art Festival in the Kunsthalle Osnabrück.
Accordingly, we now continue with four days of a full programme. Here we have put together some tips for you:
As part of the Sudden Flash themematic programme, we will be showing the film Memoria tomorrow (Friday) at 8:30 p.m. in the Hasetor film theater. It deals with a Scottish orchid grower, Jessica (Tilda Swinton), spends time in Bogotá with her sister and her sister’s family. An unexplained and unevidenced bang wakes her, and she tries to track it down: to recreate it, to share it with someone, to find out what it is. Swaths of indefinite stillness begin to tingle: at any moment they might be cut through by an image or a sound that seems to have no origin and, to most, no impact—a catastrophe without precedent, or consequence. Impact registers on Jessica’s face: a gasp in public, or a look of wonder, or tears. Origins are buried, occluded, built on top of, but Jessica finds herself attuned to them. A hole is found in a skull: to let something out, or let something in.
The panel How to Resist as an Artist? on Saturday at 3 p.m. in the Kunsthalle Osnabrück will address the background of the “Strike Germany” movement. Jury member Marwa Arsanios, the artist Caitlin Berrigan and the cultural theorist and philosopher Sami Khatib discuss with moderator Franziska Pierwoss about the impact of the resistance of cultural workers against the discrimination of filmmakers from No Other Land by politics and the media during and after the Berlinale can unfold. How do cultural workers deal with cancellations, scandal and repression? How do they maintain space for contradiction and disagreement without excluding individual voices from institutional contexts? The panel is intended to give guest speakers and the audience space to share their thoughts, experiences and strategies.
Also on Saturday, at 7 p.m., three prizes will be awarded in the Kunsthalle Osnabrück: the EMAF Award (worth 3,000 euros), the Dialog Award (worth 2,000 euros) and the EMAF Media Art Award of the Association of German Film Critics (worth 2,000 euros). The award ceremony will be followed at 8:30 p.m. by the live music set COOL FOR YOU.
On Sunday at 2 p.m. the performance voice under – sensory assembly can be seen in the Kunsthalle Osnabrück, followed by a group discussion led by Ester M. Bergsmark and Anna Zett.
The performative film screening voice under is an invitation to bring your body to the cinema: to listen with your eyes, to see with your back, to respond to the screen with the felt sense of your own experience. Here, filmmaker Ester M. Bergsmark will present a shorter version of this transdisciplinary work, which consists of three parts: film screening, board game and meditation. Focusing on the spine and our peripheral nervous system, the performance puts into question our frontal cerebral sense of orientation, creating space for positive uncertainty and porous narratives about queer deep time, threat, dissociation, and reconnection.
30 people can take part in the performance – please register in time at presse@emaf.de.
We wish all guests and friends of the festival a good time and interesting insights at the 37th European Media Art Festival!!
Many greetings from the EMAF 2024 team!
CONCEPT AND FESTIVAL MANAGEMENT
Katrin Mundt, Alfred Rotert
www.emaf.de
Supporters of EMAF 2024
04/15/2024Feelers, Sensors: Seismic Vibrations & Cultural Noise - DIY Workshop with Lotta Stöver
For International Museum Day on May 19th, the EMAF is offering a workshop with the artist Lotta Stöver in the Kunsthalle Osnabrück from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m.: “Feelers, Sensors: Seismic Vibrations & Cultural Noise”
Earth is never static, always moving. So, naturally, Earth is a conductor (and constant generator) of low frequency pressure waves (sound). In this workshop, we will build our own seismic instruments to sense; feel those vibrations that traverse Earth’s surface. We can listen to “cultural noise” through Earth, see seismic activity in real time, or amplify this messy mix of earthy vibrations to make it tactile.
Lotta Stöver is an emerging artist in the fields of media, technologies and research. Her works engage with phenomena and matters as they converse, align, disobey, transform, de/transition and mutate along with (new) technologies. Through
processes of poetic engineering, digital imaging methods, writing, and involving data and matter in an embedded and embodied manner, her artifacts pose questions about (social) norms implied by natural and technological environments. Her work forms around this materially thinking-with the social domain of technologies, resulting in observations, critique, queer alternatives and utopian proposals.
Please register via e-mail at presse@emaf.de
Picture Copyright: EMAF/ Lotta Stöver
04/12/2024EMAF 37 - Campus
An important meeting place for emerging artists, the EMAF Campus presents current projects by classes from leading European art and film schools. This year, classes from Germany, Belgium, Norway, and Spain will be guests, presenting exhibitions and film screenings developed especially for the festival.
On the occasion of its 35th anniversary, the Academy of Media Arts Cologne is presenting a broad selection of experimental short films from recent decades, showing student productions in various media formats: from web series to material films, from found-footage music videos to autobiographical films.
The film programmes of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts Kask in Ghent, which were created in 2022 and 2023 by master’s students in film, animation, and photography, move thematically between alienation from and immersion into one’s own world.
Under the title In the Belly of the Vacuum Cleaner, the Norwegian Kabelvåg School of Moving Images is developing an exhibition around the image of the vacuum cleaner, which, like our consciousness, sucks in the environment, collects it, and reassembles it into new (dis)orders.
With BLACKBIRDS SINGING IN THE DARK, the joint exhibition of the University of Osnabrück and the Universidad de la Laguna Tenerife portrays the perspectives of a young generation marked by the current presence of crises, wars, social injustices, and social traumas.
Harmony of Mindscape, another project by students from the Department of Art at Osnabrück University in collaboration with students from Osnabrück’s Music and Art School, allows visitors to experience how they react to certain stimuli and to sense the point when they change.
You can find all the information now at www.emaf.de and in the coming weeks here and on our social media channels!
We look forward to seeing you at EMAF 2024!
Accreditations are still possible until April 19th.
Many greetings from the EMAF 2024 team!
04/03/2024EMAF 37 - Outlook on the Film programmes: Artist in Focus, Expanded Media & Performances
Artist in Focus: Phil Collins
EMAF is proud to present Phil Collins as this year’s Artist in Focus. Collins is internationally acclaimed for a socially engaged practice that addresses the intersections of art, politics and popular culture. Taking different forms – from films, photography and installations, to performative situations and live events – his work foregrounds aspects of lived experience and voices that have often been disregarded or suppressed.
In a newly commissioned essay Dominic Paterson asserts that Collins “uses his own strategic reproduction of normative media frames as the occasion to trouble (or queer) them. His work acknowledges the force of such frames through its reiterating of their strongly determining effects—a feature that is always itself performative in the work; always a matter of conspicuous gestures, demonstrations, enacted poses, and repetitions. The task Collins’ work has taken on in recent years, however, is not just to critique or subvert existing framings, but rather to collectively create conditions in which communities can shape, for themselves, the spaces in which they appear and perform as themselves.”
Among other works spanning more than twenty years, the films on show include Bring Down the Walls (2020), an argument for the abolition of the American prison-industrial complex and a celebration of the dance floor as a site of transcendence and liberation; his documentary musical Tomorrow Is Always Too Long (2014), a modern day city symphony and a love letter to Glasgow; as well as marxism today (prologue) (2010), which shines a light on the political and social upheavals since the fall of the Berlin Wall through the personal stories of three former teachers of Marxism-Leninism and an Olympic gymnast from the GDR.
Expanded Cinema & Performance
The collaboration with the analogue film collective LaborBerlin, which commenced last year under the title SPECTRAL. Unburdened Recollections, will be continued this year. The joint project is dedicated to the re-staging of historical Expanded Cinema works, and this year, it will present analogue multiple projections and film performances from the 1960s and 1970s. A classic of Expanded Cinema by Malcolm Le Grice (curated by Cinzia Nistico, Filmwerkplaats Rotterdam) and a recently restored work by Dutch artist Babeth Mondini-VanLoo (curated by Simona Monizza, Eye Filmmuseum Amsterdam) will be reconstructed. In a panel discussion, the participating artists and curators will discuss the restaging and archiving of live cinema, as well as the ethical issues surrounding the reconstruction of historical works.
Kerstin Schroedinger & Oliver Husain will premiere their new live-streaming-performance Hypericin Yellow-Red Movie (2024), which is based on research into alternative AIDS treatments in West Germany in the 1990s. Experimental medicine, photochemical processes, as well as old and new transmission media come together in unexpected ways. The performance will be shown at the festival and on drip-drop.tv, and will be accompanied by a film programme.
You can find all the information now at www.emaf.de and in the coming weeks here and on our social media channels!
We look forward to seeing you at EMAF 2024!
Accreditations are still possible until April 19th.
03/28/2024EMAF 37 - Programme online now
Feelers, Sensors – the EMAF 2024 thematic focus explores the role that sensory perception plays in the human and non-human experience of the world, and how a technologically enhanced sensorium is changing orientation and interaction in the world: making the world shareable and communicable in a different way.
We are happy to present our programme to you now! It includes the themed film programmes, the International Competition, the Feature Film section, the Artist in Focus and Expanded Cinema programmes, as well as exhibitions, many live performances, lectures, live music sets, and parties with guests from all over the world.
You can find all the information now at www.emaf.de and in the coming weeks here and on our social media channels!
We look forward to seeing you at EMAF 2024!
Accreditations are still possible here until April 19th.
03/21/2024EMAF 37 - Outlook on the Film programmes: International Competition
The film programmes of this year’s EMAF offer a broad overview of contemporary experimental film and artists’ moving image – from current short and feature-length film to historical works and Expanded Cinema. Numerous artists will be in attendance to show and discuss their work. Nearly 100 films and film performances from all over the world will be presented.
The International Competition, which features short and medium length films, is the heart of the film programmes. In this year’s selection, many films revolve around the different layers of space and time and the question of how we learn from the past for the present. They reconstruct historical events, imagine alternative histories, and read possible paths into the future from the memories of others. The relationship to land and territory is another focus. Both documentary and experimental, the works tell stories of origins and orientation, of loss and migration, of living and staying.
Messaline Raverdy’s Ôte-toi de mon soleil (2023) sensitively documents her encounters with an elderly man who lives in a labyrinthine universe of collected and accumulated things. Meandering conversations about knowledge and memory, about capturing and holding onto the world, unfold between the filmmaker and the man as they tidy up.
In I Am Also Part of the Three Turns (2024), Monica Maria Moraru reconstructs from oral accounts, roughly gridded images, and allegorical tableaux two Romanian landscapes that were simultaneously affected by natural disasters. Personal losses and the need to improvise with what is left, overlap with the state’s deliberate erasure of space and the creation of newly built landscapes.
Vika Kirchenbauer’s essay-performance video COMPASSION AND INCONVENIENCE (2023) explores the first public exhibitions of contemporary art in London in the mid-18th century. In a series of performed scenes, historical sources are re-read and given voice in relation to the institutional conditions under which art becomes visible today.
Alee Peoples’ Hey Sweet Pea takes a humorous and playful approach to the theme of disappearance. Between re-enacted voicemail messages from her own mother and borrowings from the youth’s science fiction The Neverending Story, a narrative space opens up that attempts to capture the very real progression of nothingness, the destruction of our environment, but also the loss of loved ones.
With further films by: Razan AlSalah, Tolia Astakhishvili & James Richards, Boris Dewjatkin, Carl Elsaesser, Ismaël Iken, Mira Klug & Johannes Gierlinger, OJOBOCA, Peng Zuqiang, Leonardo Pirondi, Martyna Ratnik, Messaline Raverdy, Steve Reinke, Ann Carolin Renninger, Margaret Salmon & Maria Fusco, Reiji Saito, Clare Samuel, Deniz Şimşek, Jordan Wong, Xin Shen, Yu Wang, Micah Weber and Chris Zhongtian Yuan.
This year´s Artist in Focus will be Phil Collins. Please find out more about his programme and about our Expanded Cinema & Performance programme at EMAF 2024 in our next newsletter.
We look forward to your visit!
Accreditations are still possible until April 19th.
The EMAF exhibition, curated by Inga Seidler and presented at Kunsthalle Osnabrück, is entitled Feelers, Sensors. It explores the possibilities and limitations of sensory perception and the environments it opens up in the age of artificial intelligence (AI). The term ‘AI’ refers to the ability of computers to capture and process sensory information in a way that resembles the human perception of the world. The exhibition’s works particularly address questions regarding the role that technology plays, and may play in the future, in the context of perception, experience and the creation of meaning.
The exhibition includes works by Caitlin Berrigan, Erik Bünger, Nieves de la Fuente Gutiérrez, Aay Liparoto, Rita Macedo, mots (Daniela Nedovescu and Octavian Mot), Tanita Olbrich, Pedro Oliveira and Lotta Stöver.
The artists featured in the exhibition explore machine perception, but also the human senses and their various forms of perception, as well as the perceptive abilities of plants and animals.
The starting point of Rita Macedo’s science fiction eco-dystopia Farewell recording for an observer of an unknown time and place for example is the so-called “Invasive Landscape Phenomenon,” a mysterious, spreading disease. This illness, reminiscent of a dissociative trauma reaction, has developed in a world on the brink of ecological collapse, where first-hand sensory experience has been replaced by a media alternative to physical presence. The narrator’s voice carries the viewer continuously through the unfolding narrative, interweaving essayistic digressions on capitalism, environmental destruction, technological progress, and death.
You can find more information about the exhibition here.
We look forward to your visit!
Accreditations are still possible until April 19th.
Many greetings from the EMAF 2024 team!
02/15/2024EMAF 37 - Start of Accreditation
The 37th European Media Art Festival begins on April 24th in Osnabrück. We look forward to once again becoming an international meeting place for artists, curators, researchers, students and those interested in film and art for five days.
Film and art professionals can now register to visit the festival here.
The accreditation entitles you to free entry to all film programmes, the exhibition, performances, talks and the EMAF Campus. The accreditation deadline is April 19th. Further information can be found here.
The accreditation fee is waived for press representatives - please contact presse@emaf.de in advance, also because of discounted hotel conditions.
Details about the programme will be available here in the coming weeks. We are looking forward to your visit!
In order to orientate ourselves in the world, we connect with it through our feelings and perceptions. We scan it with our senses, thereby adjusting our proximity to and distance from the Other. This year’s thematic focus Feelers, Sensors uses films, installations, sound works, performances, and spoken contributions to explore the role that sensory perception plays regarding the human and non-human experience of the world while also examining how a technologically enhanced sensorium is changing our orientation and interaction in the world.
We are observing an increasing privatisation of space, which also manifests itself in our sensory relationship with the outside, for instance when using noise cancelling to isolate ourselves from disturbing external stimuli. Online communication, as well as “smart” or “sensitive” technologies, are transforming the way we interact with each other through our senses, raising the question as to which forms of inclusion or alienation they promote. At the same time, embodied formats from group meditations to demonstrations can communalise or organise sensory and emotional experiences.
What challenge does the sentience of other living beings pose for the human self-image and the responsibility for their habitats? What or who is perceived, publicly seen, or heard is a political question. How can suffering which exceeds the individual’s perceptual capacity or paralyses speech remain communicable? How can we develop more sensitive feelers, and more equitable sensors?
An exhibition and three film programmes are developed around the thematic focus, which will be accompanied and interactively expanded by further live formats such as performances, workshops, and talks intended as spaces for encounters and exchange.
Please find more information here
We look forward to keeping you updated about the preparations for the 37th EMAF in the coming months and send best regards from the EMAF team 2024!
01/12/2024EMAF 37 - Welcome, Tanja Horstmann!
We have received countless works in the past few weeks and months. Thanks a lot to all artist for the submissions! Our entry platform is now closed and our commission and curators are in the middle of screening for the 37th European Media Art Festival.
At the beginning of the year, we would like to announce a change in the executive team of the European Media Art Festival: Tanja Horstmann will take over the festival’s management on 1 May 2024. Drawing on her many years of experience in the field of festival work, including the Berlinale, as well as project management for organisations such as Arsenal – Institute for Film and Video Art, Tanja Horstmann will take over the reins of the EMAF in the coming years and develop it further together with artistic director Katrin Mundt. Horstmann succeeds co-festival director Alfred Rotert, who co-founded the festival a good four decades ago and has helped shape it ever since, and who will be retiring in May.
“We are delighted to have found a suitable successor for Alfred Rotert in Tanja Horstmann. Her extensive festival experience and close ties to independent film culture were highly convincing during the selection process. We are very much looking forward to working with her!” says Katrin Mundt on behalf of the board of the EMAF supporting organisation.
Tanja Horstmann studied film and television studies at the Ruhr University in Bochum. From 2001 she worked for the International Forum of New Cinema and in 2006 she joined the Film Office of the Berlinale. She worked for Arsenal – Institute for Film and Video Art e.V. in various capacities. From 2007–2022 she supported the Forum section of the Berlinale during the film selection process. Since 2011, she has been responsible as project manager for a variety of film and event series organised at Arsenal, the Zeughauskino at Deutsches Historisches Museum Berlin, and the Kulturquartier silent green. Since 2003, she has also been organising the presentation of the women artists’ programme funded by the Berlin Senate Department for Culture and Social Cohesion, which is presented every two years at the Arsenal cinema.