View the full festival schedule here and follow the AMIF blog.
This year’s festival comprises a constellation of screenings, readings and workshops extending from an invitation made by writer and researcher Laura Guy and artist Cara Tolmie to artists Mia Edelgart, Deirdre J. Humphrys and Alberta Whittle. It features contributions from Fiona Jardine and Mira Mattar, and films by Sonia Boyce and Ain Bailey, Christian Noelle Charles, Harry Dodge, Jacqui Duckworth, Catherine Gund and Julie Tolentino, Henriette Heise, Maria Klonaris and Katerina Thomadaki, Jaguar Mary (formerly Jocelyn Taylor), Trinh T. Minh-ha and Jean-Paul Bourdier, Jayne Parker, Pia Rönicke, S. Pearl Sharp (formerly Saundra Sharp), and Ramses Underhill-Smith.
Think of a relationship as a rhythm. We eat, watch, read and rest together. The relationship is a system of negotiation. It is shaped as much by stubbornness as it is generosity. Our interaction is affected by varying states of health and ill health, unequal wage relations and different pressures on time. There are varying capacities for attention and distraction, intensity and hesitation, productivity and downtime. Everything gets pulled through this system of uneven exchange. Some things we hold on to. Other stuff falls away. There are only so many encounters you can subject a form to and it still remain intact. Think of the point where lived-in rhythms become inhospitable. Conjure a thing that repeats until it becomes illegible. Consider an object of desire that is obliterated by the very same relation that brought it into being.
AMIF 2017 explores the idea of programme as negotiation. It includes:
About AMIFLUX Scotland and Tramway’s annual Artists’ Moving Image Festival (AMIF) was established in 2012 to provide a platform for the discussion and presentation of artists’ moving image, showcasing forms of production and research alongside screenings and discursive events. AMIF is presented and produced as a collaboration between Tramway and LUX Scotland, funded by Creative Scotland as part of Tramway’s core programme with additional support from LUX.
AMIF 2017 is co-organised by Tramway and LUX Scotland as part of Tramway’s core programme, with additional support from LUX and the University of Edinburgh as part of Cruising the Seventies: Unearthing Pre-HIV/AIDS Queer Sexual Cultures.