Come, let us soar beyond the moon... - Whitechapel Gallery

Come, let us soar beyond the moon…

  • Baesianz 6

    Baesianz

Past Event


This event was on Thu 14 Aug, 6-9pm

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Baesianz 1

Baesianz

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Performance & Screening
Come, let us soar beyond the moon…

This event is now fully booked. Please contact infodesk@whitechapelgallery.org or call +44 (0)20 7522 7888 to be added to the waitlist.

Come, let us soar beyond the moon… is an evening curated by Baesianz responding to pioneering artist Hamad Butt (1962-1994) and his retrospective Apprehensions at Whitechapel Gallery, taking the dream-like visual poetry of Pakeezah (1972)—a Bollywood film that featured heavily in Butt’s psyche—as Baesianz‘ starting point. 

Tracing the dance between danger and desire found within Apprehensions and the epic musical drama Pakeezah, the evening will feature a specially commissioned live performance by artist Sami El-Enany and a programme of short films, untangling the poetics of risk, longing, and diasporic memory, and how bodies, histories, and collective energies often exist in tension. 

Small, complementary cinema snacks will be provided by Nitesh Tailor.

Films: 

  • Kink Retrograde (2022) by Basyma Saad 
  • Letter From Your Far-Off Country (2020) by Suneil Sanzgiri
  • Mast-del (2023) by Maryam Tafakory

 

This event accompanies our current exhibition Hamad Butt: Apprehensions.

Supported by the Centre for Public Engagement at Queen Mary University of London.

More about the films

Kink Retrograde (2022) by Basyma Saad

Shot in 2019 in a sea-side landfill on the outskirts of Beirut, against a backdrop of environmental collapse and toxicity. In the original plot, intoxicated characters decide the social contract with sovereign powers has always been breached; they must devise a novel type of contract aware of its own abjectness, risk, and deviance—one of total kink. The remake revises and rehearses that call for a risk-aware kink.

Letter From Your Far-Off Country (2020) by Suneil Sanzgiri

Shot with 16mm film stock that expired in 2002—the same year as the state-sponsored anti-Muslim genocide in Gujarat—and filmed amid the anti-CAA protests in Delhi, the filmmaker traces lines and lineages of ancestral memory, poetry, history, songs, and ruins from his birth in 1989.

Mast-del (2023) by Maryam Tafakory

Two women lie together in bed. As the wind bashes against the window, one recalls a past date to the cinema. A love song that would never pass through the censors, Mast-del is about forbidden bodies and desires, both inside and outside post-revolution Iranian cinema.

Sami El-Enany

Sami El-Enany is an artist who works with sound, fraying the edges of modern classical, electronica and found sound. His work includes multi-channel installation, electroacoustic composition, sound design, record production and image-sound collaboration. His score for the feature film Walking With Shadows was nominated for an Africa Movie Academy Award and his tone poem Creation of the Birds has received accolades from Grand Prix Nova, BBC Radio Awards and Phonurgia Nova.

As a musician and improvisor Sami is currently developing tape collage techniques as a tool for listening and reflection. The source material for the tapes are a scrapbook of exploratory recording sessions, off-cuts from film scores, and found sound spanning his travels as a field recordist. Sami narrates the tape collages with improvisations at the piano. Through his practice and research, Sami is delving into the sonics of solidarity, exploring sound as resonance for union.

@samielenany

Nitesh Tailor
Nitesh Tailor is an interdisciplinary artist, archivist, and educator. His work considers how archives are and can be recreational, transient spaces, and why imagining them as such is integral to the creation of anti-colonial pathways into the archive. Exploring mediums such as food, textiles, and performance, he creates educational experiences which investigate themes of community, resistance, and faith. In 2024 he founded Sahani Saani, a food learning programme which engages people in the culinary histories of Western India and the Swahili Coast through suppers and workshops.
Baesianz

Baesianz is a London-based interdisciplinary collective that cultivates Asian-led narratives from all over the globe, founded by Sami Kimberley, Sarah Khan and Roxanne Farahmand in 2019. Born from a shared need to nurture their Asian roots and uplift Asian artists and communities, the collective organises multidisciplinary events including exhibitions, film screenings, solidarity fundraisers, workshops, radio shows, artist residencies, and audio-visual performances. Now a team of seven, Baesianz curates and exhibits the art and voices of Asian heritage folk living both within and outside of Asia to create an evolving archive that can be experienced by all.

@baesianz

baesianz.com

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