Events

Margaret Tait Award Commission 2022 | Sulaïman Majali, ‘in the house of names’

Part of Margaret Tait Commission

6 March 2023
6.30–7.50pm

Glasgow Film Theatre
12 Rose St, Glasgow, G3 6RB
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Free

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Looking down on a desert floor, made up of sand, rocks and sticks, an arched mirror lies flat on the ground at the centre of the image between two pale bushes, reflecting a grey/blue sky and white clouds.
Sulaïman Majali, ‘in the house of names’, 2023 (production still). Courtesy of the artist.

We are delighted to present Sulaïman Majali’s new commission in the house of names’ at Glasgow Film Festival. The recipients of the 2023 Margaret Tait Commission and Margaret Tait Residency will be announced at the screening. The screening will be followed by a drinks reception at Civic House.

in the house of names’ is a moving image work that takes the clown and the magician as devices to consider the liberatory. The work applies the poetic and conceptual strategies of the crease and the fold to move through the fugitive geography of a sleep cycle.

Walking through stages one to four of sleep, the film is inhabited by (and inhabits) an​‘impossible protagonist’. Amidst the land-mind-body disintegration of the dream as a site and realm of exile, this impossible protagonist forms a vehicle and question in the work.

Filmed solely on the device, the work thinks towards the breakdown and dissolve of the digital and the neural as fixed spatialities and separate, confined and defined states. In doing so, the filming device is at once a​“phone”/camera, a research tool and a mode of production, but more than its technological application, the device becomes poetic, cinematic and literary.

Working with the archival, constructed, (re)staged, costumed, remote, translated, refused, imagined, disrupted and encountered,​‘in the house of names’ engages the studio as itself a site of rupture and methodology of collapse to produce film as a​‘thinking and thinkable thing’. Through treating site, production and research as entangled processes,​‘in the house of names’ reveals an editorial and compositional geometry that plays between sleep, seasonal and solar/​lunar cycles, in which​‘narrative is best left to its own devices’.

in the house of names’ will be accompanied by captions and audio description by Collective Text.

Following the premiere at Glasgow Film Festival 2023, Sulaïman Majali’s commission will tour to venues across the UK and be presented at LUX’s exhibition space in London.

Programme:

Introduction by Kitty Anderson, Director, 10 mins

in the house of names’, Sulaïman Majali (2023), 70 mins

Total running time: 80 mins

SULAÏMAN MAJALI

Sulaïman Majali (b.1492/1771/1991/2042) is concerned with performance-led research in a thinking practice that plays with image, sculpture, sound and writing expansively. Considering art as an already thinking and speaking thing, Majali brings into play rupturing, grieving and dreaming as methodologies of collapse, fleeing towards poetic and conceptual strategies to undergo the liberatory in the neurodigital, psychospiritual, ontoepistemological or otherwise (already), anyway

Exhibitions and events include; THE FUTURE IS DEAD LONG LIVE THE FUTURES, part of Age of Many Posts expanded public programme, The Barbican, London, England (2022). ripe fruits before battle, part of breathe, spirit and life 呼吸、靈魂與生命, The Bluecoat, Liverpool, England (2022). Arab resting by a stream, part of Meet me at the threshold, Talbot Rice Gallery, Edinburgh, Scotland (2022). false dawn, a solo exhibition at Studio Pavillion for Glasgow International Biennial 2021. IMG_​5917, produced with Camara Taylor, commissioned by Artists’ Moving Image Festival, GIVE BIRTH TO ME TOMORROW: PART 6, LUX Scotland,​“online” (2021). assembly of the dispersed, part of The Internet of Things, Darat al-Funun, Amman, Jordan/”online” (2020). strange winds, a sound commission for The Common Guild’s In The Open (2020). a dream for scheherazade, EVERYTHING HAPPENED SO MUCH, 66th International Film Festival Oberhausen, Germany (2020). saracen go home, a solo exhibition at Collective Gallery, Edinburgh, Scotland (2019). something vague and irrational, Celine Gallery, Glasgow, Scotland (2019). Mene Mene Tekel Parsin, Wysing Arts Centre (2017). towards an archive, 8th Cairo Video Festival (2017).

Access

in the house of names’ is captioned and audio described by Collective Text.

A transcript of the introduction will be available.

If possible, please request an audio description headset before arrival. To do so, please contact Glasgow Film Theatre duty manager on +44 (0)141 352 8603 /​email hidden; JavaScript is required.

The event is free to attend, but ticketed. A limited number of wheelchair accessible tickets are available. Tickets are available to book directly through Glasgow Film Theatre here.

Sensory content notes:

The film contains flashing images.

The film failed the Harding Test with 9 incidents/​774 frames of Luminance Flash and 3 incidents/​76 frames of Red Flash. The report showed no incidents of Spatial Pattern or Extended Failure. The Harding Test is an automatic test for photosensitive epilepsy (PSE) provocative image sequences in video content.

Venues:

Glasgow Film Theatre has level access at the main entrance with a permanent ramp. Cinema 1, an accessible toilet and the upstairs bar can be reached via lift. For more information on venue accessibility please see the access section of Glasgow Film Theatre’s website here and the venue access guide here.

Civic House is located on Civic Street, accessible by Cowcaddens subway station and 7, 17, 60, 61 and 75 buses, a 10 minute walk from GFT. There is limited on street parking outside Civic House. There are 4 steps up to the main entrance. For step-free access to the building, there is a platform lift adjacent to the main entrance. There is accessible and gender neutral toilets on the ground floor, where the reception is taking place. For more information, please visit their website. For questions about access at Civic House, please contact Katie on email hidden; JavaScript is required.

A map of the venue locations can be seen here.

Image description: Looking down on a desert floor, made up of sand, rocks and sticks, an arched mirror lies flat on the ground at the centre of the image between two pale bushes, reflecting a grey/​blue sky and white clouds.

Closed Captions

Audio Described

Contains flashing imagery

Partners

Part of Margaret Tait Commission

The Margaret Tait Commission is a LUX Scotland commission delivered in partnership with Glasgow Film, backed by the National Lottery through Creative Scotland.

Learn more