Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Iranian Doc Semester Summary: Influences and Process



June 1, 2014

                                          
My work is focused on my documentary about Jewish women’s experiences emigrating from Iran as a result of the Islamic Revolution of 1979. Video artist Dana Levy suggested I shift from writing out the story to constructing it using interview material. This involved sifting through hours of interview footage that I’ve collected to date, conducting and filming additional interviews, and thinking through, researching and filming visuals to effectively tell the story. This will ultimately be expanded into a feature length documentary. Starting small, I built a 5-minute segment, which Dana called the spine of my film. Constructing this simplified segment helped me understand the cutting process, but this was no easy task as it involved recutting several times to evoke tension and emotion. My interest in investigating the experiences of these Iranian Jewish women stems from my curiosity and unanswered questions about my Turkish paternal grandmother’s experience living in and emigrating from Smyrna in 1920, moving to Paris for one year, and finally settling in Montreal.

Women’s voices tell this story, which includes themes of domesticity, displacement, and cultural preservation. Through my readings, film screenings, and work with Dana this semester, I have begun to appreciate visual art that involves thoughtful conceptualization and presents multi-layered ideas in intelligent ways. In their catalogue Global Feminisms, Maura Reilly and Linda Nochlin present broad, inclusive re-definitions of “feminism” and examples of feminist work with themes of domesticity, displacement, and political activism that resonate for my work and personal life. For example, Polish artist Elzbieta Jablonska, featured in the catalogue, bases her work on the rituals of everyday life like preparing a family meal, the nurturing experiences of motherhood, and her acceptance of the expectation that women should uphold traditional domestic ways. One layer of my film will be about women today who perpetuate culture and tradition through the preparation of food and other domestic arts. Another will show how women often wear more than one hat as both professionals and nurturing mothers or caretakers.

            The exhibition and catalogue She Who Tells a Story also stimulated my thought processes. Juxtapositions by several artists in their mise-en-scenes catalyzed my thinking about how to better deliver my messages and use this tool in my filmmaking. For example, in her Qajar series (1998), Iranian Shadi Ghadirian poses veiled women against a painted backdrop from the Qajar era (1786-1925) with a modern object, like a boom box or Pepsi can, which were either forbidden or restricted in 1998. These juxtapositions suggest the tensions between tradition and modernity, restriction and freedom, and public and private in Iranian society-- all of which are themes in my documentary. Further, Shirin Neshat’s dual format—video art and narrative film—in her work Women Without Men (2009), can be applied to my work. Following her lead, I may choose to also do a video installation that would focus on several of the characters. Rather than have all the information unfold as in a documentary format, viewers would have to make their own connections and draw their own conclusions by moving in and out of the installation space.

I’ve also been wrestling with what it means to craft truth in documentary storytelling and the ethical and moral implications of accurately or inaccurately depicting truth. In their book Crafting Truth: Documentary Form and Meaning, Louse Spence and Vinicius Navarro discuss Ruth Ozeki’s 1995 film Halving the Bones, where she resorted to falsifications and fabrications to tell her story about three generations of women in her family. I question whether I should I fill in the major gaps in my grandmother’s story by creatively imagining what she went through. What are the implications of fabricating in art and filmmaking? The Canadian documentary filmmaker Allan King once said about what’s “really real” in his films: “What the hell does that mean? Either the film means something to you, or it doesn’t.”

Crafting Truth also stimulated my thinking on how to creatively present the information and visuals in my documentary work. For example, Chantal Akerman’s film News from Home (1976) includes shots of locations in New York City to depict overarching themes of displacement and being away from home. In Nobody’s Business (1996), documentary filmmaker Alan Berliner uses symbolic displacement by showing the image of a house falling off its foundation when his father discusses his divorce from his mother.

Through research and video experimentation, I am building on interview material and visuals, which I began collecting in 2008 as a novice student filmmaker, to tell a creative and engaging story about Iranian Jewish women’s resilience, endurance, and strength in the face of great challenges and adversity.

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