This collection of writings by artist and
filmmaker Tiffany Sia gathers six essays that offer a framework for an
exilic, fugitive cinema. Sia addresses geopolitics in cinema, image
circulation, and national imaginaries, highlighting the stakes of
deterritorializing the discursive formation of new media and film
practices, and making the case for the continued relevance of cinema in
an era of networked images and screen ubiquity.
An essential counterpart to Sia’s films and
artworks, this volume is a critical intervention into global film
studies, the politics of film/photographic practices, and experimental
approaches to documentary. As a practitioner and thinker, Sia has been
at the forefront of a new generation of filmmakers working with new
vernacular media to trace and comment on social unrest and political
crackdowns. Drawing from personal experience and historical study, the
essays in this volume offer urgent reflections on a cultural landscape
changed by national-security policies, shadow bureaucracies, censorship,
and surveillance.
Written in the wake of the 2019-2020 Hong Kong Protests ignited by
the Anti-Extradition Bill Movement, Sia’s essays survey the rise of a
new documentary vernacular and fugitive cinema being produced by a wave
of emerging filmmakers who have broken from the nostalgic overdrive of
Hong Kong’s cinematic golden age. Turning her focus to the Cold War, the
artist confronts its afterlives and visual regimes, attending to ad hoc
distribution networks, speculative and performative modes of
re-enactment, and countergeographic landscape imaging that disrupt the
politics of place, representation, and nationhood. Sia advocates for an
exilic practice that moves beyond categories of national identity,
media, and genre.
The publication includes a foreword by film
and media studies historian, Jean Ma. Film stills from filmmakers Chan
Tze-woon and the anonymous collective Hong Kong Documentary Filmmakers;
photographs by the artist An-my Lê; and images from Sia’s short film, The Sojourn (2023), are interspersed between each essay, inviting the reader to construct or consider a cinema by other means.
Tiffany Sia is an artist, filmmaker, and
writer living in New York. Her work explores the politics and relations
of media circulation and considers how material cultures, particularly
print and film/video, trace and enable power, governance, and
perception, and how such forces play out and construct imaginaries of
place, especially Hong Kong. Sia has directed several short films,
including Never Rest/Unrest (2020), Do Not Circulate (2021), and What Rules the Invisible (2022),
which have screened at New York Film Festival, Toronto International
Film Festival, MoMA Doc Fortnight, Flaherty Film Seminar, and elsewhere.
She has exhibited work at venues including Artists Space, New York; the
Museum of Modern Art, New York; Seoul Museum of Art; FELIX GAUDLITZ,
Vienna; and Kunstverein für die Rheinlande und Westfalen, Düsseldorf.
Her books include Too Salty Too Wet (Speculative Place, 2020) and Salty Wet (Inpatient Press, 2019), and her essays have appeared in Film Quarterly, October, Artforum, and LUX Moving Image.