Nostalgia for the Future
Sunday, September 13, 12:30 - 13:58
Kijkhuis 2
Images of wildfires in Australia, floods in Venice, and plastic pollution in the sea are becoming omnipresent. Climate change is completely reshaping our memories and ideas of these places and ecosystems. Is there a way we can imagine a future separate from these images? Can we imagine a world surviving the climate crisis or is our future doomed to a slow cancellation?
This session, inspired by the work of British writer Mark Fisher, asks why we long for a romanticized era of being close to nature, and how our inadvertent tendency for nostalgia can often force our current reality to slowly slip away. Our imaginations of the future cannot be separated by the economic conditions we live in, and Fisher writes that it is often “easier to imagine an end to the world than an end to capitalism”. Instead of fantasizing about rewinding time, we have to look ahead to see what lies beyond the destructive forces of capitalism.
Duration
88 min.
Lake Urmia in Northern Iran was once the biggest lake of the Middle East.
Transcending a portrait of place, the quiet, eternal rhythms of the small fishing cove Penberth are caught, landed and served up in this stark and gentle handcrafted celluloid poem.
In a remote coastal village in Colombia, a little girl named Dulce is learning to swim. Her mother is trying to help her, but Dulce is scared and wailing inconsolably.
California on Fire is a video and sound artwork by southern Californian artist Jeff Frost. It uses the catastrophic effects of climate change as a backdrop to examine the experience of grief and loss.