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February 11, 2020

New York Mills: a visual art exhibition + indie film screenings

COVID19 UPDATE: The reception on March 20 has been cancelled. The NYMCC gallery is implementing “soft close” this week with shorter hours while they clean the space. If someone wants to see the show, they will be allowed in. All events at NYMCC are postponed or cancelled for the rest of the month. Stay tuned for the decision about how we will proceed with the film series.

ORIGINAL DESCRIPTION: Mizna partners with SooVAC to bring contemporary arts programming by Southwest Asian + North African (SWANA) artists and filmmakers to greater Minnesota. Visual arts exhibition Let There Be Spaces in Your Togetherness will travel to New York Mills Cultural Center (March 4–April 3, 2020) accompanied by a selection of notable films from Mizna’s Twin Cities Arab Film Fest. These events are for any and all who are curious about SWANA/Arab/Muslim narratives — all are welcome!

Join us for an artist talk + reception on Friday March 20, 4:30–6:30pm. More info here.


About Let There Be Spaces in Your Togetherness

This visual art exhibition features the work of emerging US-based artists from the Southwest Asian and North African (SWANA) region or of SWANA descent. Named from a quote by the famed Lebanese poet Khalil Gibran, Let There Be Spaces in Your Togetherness showcases the perspectives, practices, and artworks of a new generation of US-based SWANA creatives as we look toward another two decades of cultivating rich spaces. Spaces in which, in Gibran’s words, “the oak tree and the cypress grow not in each other’s shadow,” spaces in which the diversity and artistry of our community is celebrated and sustained. This show was juried by Essma Imady, Hend Al Mansour, and Lamia Abukhadra, three Arab artists based in the Twin Cities, who will show works alongside the selected artists.


About Mizna’s Arab Film Fest

Having just completed its fourteenth year, the Arab Film Fest is breaking out for a special “best of the fest” tour to greater Minnesota — an unmissable chance to see thoughtfully curated films from SWANA filmmakers. The selected films tell stories from Jordan, Sudan, Palestine, and Tunisia, and span a variety of genres, including horror and documentary.

Dachra—Wednesday March 11, 7pm

Abdelhamid Bouchnak / Horror / 113 min / 2018 / Tunisia / Arabic + French with English subtitles

Set against the backdrop of contemporary Tunisia, Dachra revolves around 3 journalism students who set out to investigate a coldcase. As they pursue their investigation, the three friends stumble into the archaic and ominous world of Dachra, an isolated countryside compound filled with goats, silent women, mysterious drying meat. When a jovial but menacing local invites them to stay overnight, Yasmin is drawn into Dachra’s dark secrets and a desperate attempt to escape alive.

Speed Sisters—POSTPONED Wednesday March 18, 7pm
*Family-friendly*

Amber Fares / Sports Documentary / 80 mins / 2015 / Palestine / Qatar / Canada / English + Arabic with English subtitles

Despite a tangle of roadblocks and checkpoints, a thriving street car racing scene has emerged in the
West Bank. Held at improvised tracks, the races offer a release from the pressures and uncertainties of life under military occupation. The fanfare and rivalry between cities brings spectators out in droves, lining rooftops and leaning over barricades to snap photos of their favorite drivers and to catch the final scoreboard. A riveting documentary, Speed Sisters follows the first all-women racing team in the Middle East. Grabbing headlines and turning heads, the film weaves together their lives on and off the track.

Sudanese Shorts—POSTPONED Wednesday March 25, 7pm
*Family-friendly*

Ibrahim Shaddad, Eltayeb Mahdi, Suliman Elnour / 4 shorts / 66 mins total / Sudan

Wa Lakin Alardh Tadur / Al Dhareeh / Al Mahatta / Jamal

During the late ’70s and early ’80s, a group of filmmakers at the Sudanese Department of Culture issued a periodical named Cinema. In April 1989, they founded the Sudanese Film Group to gain more independence from the state and to fully engage in all aspects of film production, screening, and teaching, as well as maintaining the passion of the Sudanese for the cinema. However, the June 30, 1989 coup d’état, which brought with it a suspicion of all forms of art, terminated any cultural aspirations and banned all civic society organizations. Finally in 2005, the heavy hand of the state was loosened somewhat, and the SFG was able to re-register. Arsenal—Institute digitally restored selected works by these filmmakers in 2018.

Wa Lakin Alardh Tadur / It Still Rotates / ولكن الأرض تدور
Suliman Elnour / 19 min / 1978
Suliman Elnour’s graduation film Wa Lakin Alardh Tadur depicts a typical school scene in Yemen during the time the film was made.

Al Dhareeh / The Tomb / الضريح
Eltayeb Mahdi
17 mins | 1977

Al Dhareeh tells the story of a man who claims to be able to heal people.

Al Mahatta / The Station / المحطة
Eltayeb Mahdi
16 mins | 1989

In Sudan, in the late 1980s, people cross the desert on foot or cover long distances by car and truck. Al Mahatta shows encounters at one of the large crossroads between the capital Khartoum in the center of the country and Bur Sudan on the Red Sea.

Jamal / A Camel / جمل
Ibrahim Shaddad / 14 mins / 1981 
Jamal is a report from the life of a camel, most of which plays out in a dreary, small room—a sesame mill.

Tiny Souls—POSTPONED Wednesday April 1, 7pm
*Family-friendly*

Dina Naser / Documentary / 86 mins / 2019 / Jordan / Arabic with English subtitles

This documentary follows Marwa, her siblings and her mother in 2012 as they settle into Jordan’s Zaatari refugee camp after escaping war in Syria. Over their four plus years at the camp, the director follows Marwaʼs everyday life as she blossoms into a young woman, one who imagines herself as a “free pigeon” unrestricted by walls and barbwire. Their “settled” life takes an immense turn when her brother is called in for questioning, revealing the uncertainty of their situation.


About New York Mills Cultural Center

The Center is a multidisciplinary arts organization that has been dedicated to expanding the cultural and creative opportunities for rural Americans since its inception in 1990. They also present a year-round performing arts series, display visual art in our historic gallery on Main Avenue in New York Mills, and offers classes and workshops for all ages with a focus on lifelong learning.

This activity is made possible by the voters of Minnesota through a grant from the Minnesota State Arts Board, thanks to a legislative appropriation from the arts and cultural heritage fund.


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