4:22 minutes
Manuel Correa’s short film Didn’t Know I Died is a testimonial portrait of the acclaimed Colombian poet Olga Elena Mattei. Earlier in her life during a simple medical operation, Mattei was declared medically dead. In the film, she recounts her first memory upon waking up, a dream. Today, the poet remains secluded in her beautiful chaotic apartment. Coming together largely by chance, Correa shot the film after a dinner party one evening at Mattei’s residence (she is the grandmother of one of the artist’s friends). Recorded from an unconventional angle, Didn’t Know I Died allows the viewer to become a fly on the wall in the poet’s private space, where the room is equally as fascinating as the poet herself. From the onset, the visual material of the film mirrors what the poet says. It opens with a black screen and a voiceover of Mattei narrating her near-death experience. Correa holds space for the breadth of the poet’s experience with a fixed angle. Following the black screen, the film shows Mattei in a red dress sitting comfortably on a large brown leather couch. The rest of the screen is taken up by floor to ceiling bookcases filled with books, magazines, over 12 marble and brass statues, a telephone, a telescope, family pictures, lamps, and a ladder. The busy, seductive, and domestic room reflects and animates her state of moving between memories and dreams. A short documentary biopic, Didn’t Know I Died traces how autobiographical memories become archival documents and eventually history.
Manuel Correa’s practice deals with the reconstruction of post-conflict intergenerational memory in contemporary societies. As an artist often working with the visual language of documentary, Correa is critical of the relationship between cinema and the notion of “truth.” His work as a Forensic Architecture researcher also informs his films, which oftentimes feature strong visual data analysis graphics. By moving between intimate shots and data synthesis, the artist creates informative, sympathetic, and powerful films. Correa’s body of work is diverse and internationally recognized. His thorough investigations track transnational post-conflict traumas and draw connections between its subjects globally. For example, his 2018 film La Forma del Presente (The Shape of Now) , addresses the search for collective meaning and accountability in the wake of Colombia’s 50-year-long armed conflict. More than anything, Correa’s practice is about the process of creating historical memory, both its promise and its fallibility.
Manuel Correa’s documentary Four Hundred Unquiet Graves is a powerful and vulnerable visual essay about the descendants of those who were disappeared during the Spanish Civil War from 1936–1939...
With Sway's Blessing, SF Rapper Frak Is Ready to Level Up | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture With Sway's Blessing, SF Rapper Frak Is Ready to Level Up Nastia Voynovskaya Feb 9 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Frak at Billy Goat Hill in San Francisco on Feb...
Manuel Correa’s documentary Four Hundred Unquiet Graves is a powerful and vulnerable visual essay about the descendants of those who were disappeared during the Spanish Civil War from 1936–1939...
La Forma del Presente (The Shape of Now) by Manuel Correa follows a group of survivors of Colombia’s 50-year long armed conflict facing the impossible task of agreeing on a shared past...
Une Assemblée de poète.sse.s civiques — A Convening of Civic Poets — KADIST — Exhibition — Slash Paris Login Newsletter Twitter Facebook Une Assemblée de poète.sse.s civiques — A Convening of Civic Poets — KADIST — Exhibition — Slash Paris English Français Home Events Artists Venues Magazine Videos Back Une Assemblée de poète.sse.s civiques — A Convening of Civic Poets Exhibition Drawing, installation, poetry Marion Scemama & David Wojnarowicz, Last Night I Took a Man, 1989 (extrait) Courtesy des artistes, collection KADIST Une Assemblée de poète.sse.s civiques A Convening of Civic Poets Ends in about 2 months: October 6, 2023 → February 4, 2024 Une assemblée de poète.sse.s civiques — Fondation Kadist La fondation Kadist présente une exposition engagée et engageante qui répond à l'énergie de son sujet, l'intervention poétique dans.....
Was Rauschenberg’s grand prize win at the 1964 Venice Biennale a US plot, or just good PR? Art market Museums & heritage Exhibitions Books Podcasts Columns Technology Adventures with Van Gogh Search Search Film review Was Rauschenberg’s grand prize win at the 1964 Venice Biennale a US plot, or just good PR? A new documentary delves into the machinations that led to the upstart American artist’s stunning triumph at the art world’s Olympics David D'Arcy 15 December 2023 Share Robert Rauschenberg (right foreground) receives from Italian Minister of Education, Luigi Gui (left foreground), the top prize for the best foreign painting at the Venice Biennale in 1964 Associated Press / Alamy Stock Photo In 1964, the American artist Robert Rauschenberg was awarded the grand prize at the Venice Biennale...
Weekly Picks: Malaysia (19–25 Nov 2018) | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Weekly To Do November 19, 2018 KLEX 2018: Translucence , at various locations, 22–25 Nov An independent artist-run grassroots international festival of experimental film, video art and music...