Through a composite montage of images from surveillance footage and body-cams, Bill Morrison delivers a chilling political investigation in search of the truth after a man is killed by police on the street.
An exploration of the emotional divide between fiction and reality in the American sitcom, Philip Thomson’s Living Reality questions how we consume images at large.
In this haunting collage, Jay Rosenblatt reappropriates cautionary tales from educational films to illustrate the transgenerational cruelty that is boyhood. While facing uncomfortable truths, he also charts a path towards recovery.
A father takes his son to the funfair on Halloween. What should be the stuff of childhood dreams becomes, instead, the therapy material of adolescent trauma in Rachel Walden’s gut-punch roadtrip.
William E. Jones blends archival manipulation and incisive critique on sexual labour into a stimulating piece of video art.
Faye Tsakas and Enrique Pedráza-Botero’s incisive documentary incursion into the lives of teenage findoms is also a smart commentary on contemporary American society.
Leonardo Pirondi questions human perception and the possibilities of expanding our gaze beyond the realm of the physical, objective world.
The aspirations of LGBTQIA+ youth is at the centre of Tracing Utopia as much as the generation gap between millennials and GenZ is.