Ane Hjort Guttu: "Time Passes" – Oslo premiere

January 25 2016

Fritt Ord hosts the Oslo premiere of Ane Hjort Guttu’s film Time Passes on Monday the 25th of January 18.30-20.30 at Filmens hus (in Tancred). The screening is followed by a conversation between Guttu and Mike Sperlinger, professor at Oslo National Academy of the Arts (KHIO). Welcome by Bente Roalsvig at Fritt Ord. “Time Passes” explores the relationship between art and politics, and looks at the public attitude towards poverty.

Registration: registrering@frittord.no
Free admittance.

The film is centered around art student Damla and her ongoing performance project, which consists in her begging on the streets every day, together with Romanian Bianca. “If she has to sit like that, then we must actually all do it. And in art, you can change on the small scale what you really want to change on the large scale,” says Damla when explaining the project to her class at Bergen Academy of Art and Design.

Damla’s work starts as an impulsive sympathy action, but recieves critique and opposing views from her teacher, class mates, and Bianca. “Time Passes” discusses in what ways art can absorb and problematize other people´s precarious lives. What is the value of political art, and how can one, as an individual, respond to injustice?

After the screening, Ane Hjort Guttu and Mike Sperlinger will discuss questions raised by the film: Is art a resource for political activism, or is it rather a kind of trap? How well does contemporary ‘aesthetic education’ prepare young artists for engaging critically in a broader public sphere? And why might fiction filmmaking offer possible lessons for contemporary art?

“Time Passes” was produced for the 2015 International Festival Exhibition in Bergen Kunsthall, and premiered at CPH:Dox film festival in November 2015. The film screens at Rotterdam International Film Festival and Gothenburg Filmfestival in the spring of 2016. The film will have its American premiere in February at Doc Fortnight 2016 at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York.

Time Passes is co-produced by Bergen Kunsthall. Fritt Ord has supported the production.

The film’s web site
The film’s Facebook page

News

Frie stemmer Deeyah Khan:

November 24 2024

Dokumentarfilmskaper Deeyah Khan startet sin karriere med å lage en dokumentar om en kvinne som ble utsatt for æresdrap. Filmen ble vendepunktet i hennes anvendelse av ytringsfriheten, sier hun. Khan er basert i London og jobber internasjonalt.

– Det som skiller Norge fra mange andre land, er evnen til å delta i konstruktiv offentlig dialog rundt vanskelige og ofte polariserende temaer. Samtidig kan vi bli flinkere til å inkludere et større mangfold og flere minoritetsstemmer, sier hun.

Intervjuet er på engelsk.

Refuse to be silenced. Free Media Awards handed out in Oslo

September 17 2024

We refuse to be silenced.
That was the common message when six media outlets, journalists, and editors from Georgia, Azerbaijan, Ukraine, Russia, and Belarus received the Free Media Awards 2024 on September 17 at the Nobel Institute in Oslo.
– Threatening, attacking, kidnapping, and murdering journalists has become a war tactic, said documentary filmmaker Tonje Hessen Schei in her speech to the prize winners.

Fritt Ord's grants for master’s degrees

September 9 2024

Is your master’s project about freedom of expression, social debate or journalism? If so, you can apply for a student grant from the Fritt Ord Foundation.

The History of History – graphic novels can shed light on history in new ways

September 9 2024

Graphic novels that address historical topics was this year’s focus among the 144 public libraries that responded to the Fritt Ord Foundation’s call for applications from libraries for 2024, "The History of History».
According to graphic art creators as well as librarians, graphic novels can recount history in new ways to new groups of readers. Forty-four libraries have been granted MNOK 2.6 to organise meetings on nonfictional prose, fiction and graphic novels. This is the largest amount since the calls for applications from libraries began in 2008.