Outer Worlds

Date

Thursday March 7, 2024
6:00 pm - 9:00 pm

Location

The Screening Room, 120 Princess Street, Kingston.

Free Screening. All Welcome!

Thursday, March 7, 2024

6:00 p.m.

The Screening Room, 120 Princess Street 

Outer Worlds film screening with an introduction by Dr. Janine Marchessault Artists Oliver Husain, Leila Sujir, and Mani Mazinani will be in attendance.

Outer Worlds is an extra-ordinary film program that features five, experimental IMAX films by Canada’s leading artists: Oliver Husain, Lisa Jackson, Kelly Richardson, Michael Snow, and Leila Sujir. The theme of the commissioned program is in keeping with the cinematic genre typical of IMAX films—the larger-than-life landscape that forms an outer world beyond the limits of the human sensorium.

Each of the films explores expanded cinema through different ecologies of the non-human: the forest, lichen, snails, water, and sky. The works propose different worlds of experience and distinct grammars of immersion through a meeting with the camera. The films imagine common worlds by reflecting upon the exigencies of intercultural and interspecies communication, a task that has taken on great urgency in the 21st century as we grapple with how to adapt to the ecological realities brought about by anthropogenic climate change.

Janine Marchessault is Professor in Cinema and Media Arts at York University, and holds a York Research Chair in Media Art and Social Engagement. Her research engages with the history of large screen media (from multiscreen to Imax to media as architecture and VR). She belongs to the CinemaExpo67.ca research group. Her latest project is an expanded cinema project, Outer Worlds () – commissioning five IMAX films by artists, which premiered at the Cinesphere in 2019 and will begin touring soon.

She is the Director of  (2018–2024), a research collaboration involving more than 20 community and artist-run archives devoted to diverse histories from Indigenous, LGBTQ2+, immigrant, and women’s communities. Her most recent monograph is Ecstatic Worlds: Media, Ecologies, Utopias (MIT, 2017) and co-edited collection Process Cinema: Handmade film in the Digital Age (MQUP, 2019).

Leila Sujir is an artist working in video and video installation. Over the last forty years, Sujir has been building a body of video art works using a mix of fiction, fantasy and documentary with visual and audio collage techniques. Her video art works have been shown in group shows at the Museum of Modern Art (New York) and the Tate Gallery  (Liverpool), as well as galleries all over the world. Her work is in collections including the National Gallery of Canada and the Glenbow Museum. Leila Sujir is a professor emerita in the Studio Arts Department at Concordia University. She leads an art research studio-lab based at Concordia University, Elastic 3D Spaces, that most recently received a SSHRC grant, Thinking Allowed (2022), and a Canada Council production grant (2022).

Oliver Husain is an artist and filmmaker. His projects are often collaborations with other artists and friends; and often begin with a fragment of history, a rumour, a personal encounter or a distant memory. He uses a wide range of cinematic languages, technical experiments and visual pleasures — such as dance, puppetry, costume, special effects — to animate his research and fold the viewers into complex narrative set-ups. Recent exhibitions include Beauties of Lucknow,  a site-specific installation commissioned by Massey College, Toronto; Lenticoolers at Gallery Susan Hobbs, Toronto (with Malik McCoy); I don’t know you like that at University of Buffalo Art Galleries and Exposure at Camera Austria, Graz (both with Kerstin Schroedinger); all 2023. His website is ; his livestream performances (with Amy Lam) are available on 

Mani Mazinani was born in Tehran in 1984, he lives and works in Toronto. Mazinani’s interdisciplinary practice includes installation, video, film, sculpture, photography, multiples, sound, and music. He makes work that connects scale and perception, improvisation and ancient thought. Recent exhibitions and performances include Monitor 15 (SAVAC, 2023), Stories and Storefronts, Toronto (2022); Tate Modern, London (2019, with Michael Snow); The Bentway, Toronto (2018); Tehran International Electronic Music Festival (2017); Suzhou Industrial Park Culture and Arts Centre (2016); Asian Art Museum, San Francisco (2015); and CAB Art Centre, Brussels (2013).

Teaching Cuba: Lessons Learned 

Date

Thursday February 1, 2024
1:00 pm - 2:30 pm

Location

Queen's University, Mackintosh-Corry Hall, room D 214.

Please join SNID on February 1st, at 1:00 p.m. for an in-person presentation with Dr. Karen Dubinsky, Dr. Susan Lord and Diron Luis Morejon Pérez. 

At Queen's University, Mackintosh-Corry Hall, room D 214.

Teaching Cuba: Lessons Learned 

ϳԹԴ has had a longstanding exchange program with the U of Havana. Between 2008 and 2023, hundreds of ϳԹԴ students studied in Havana through the interdisciplinary Global Development Studies course “Cuban Culture and Society.” Two Canadian instructors and a former U of Havana student, all participants in the course, reflect on experiential learning, Global South education for Canadians, the Cuba we entered and the Cuba we left.

Cuba Talk

Béatrice Cloutier-Trépanier

Béatrice Cloutier-Trépanier

Béatrice Cloutier-Trépanier

Postdoctoral Fellow

Film and Media

Postdoctoral Fellow

Béatrice Cloutier-Trépanier has a Ph.D. in Art History (2023) from ϳԹԴ. Her thesis, In and out of feminism: the experimental writings of Lee Lozano and Lucy Lippard, examined the experimental writings of Lee Lozano and Lucy Lippard. The layered connectedness of their writing practices of the 1960s and 1970s, at once autobiography, theory, fiction, criticism, conceptual art, and life/work, supported an analysis of the feminist labour that constitutes, drives, and sometimes complicates these marginal forms and early examples of autotheory. Her research, itself an autotheoretical exercise, refocuses anecdotes, citations, gossip, and footnotes, both as historical evidence and theoretical framework, and represents a personal investment in unconventional ways of knowing. Béatrice is currently a SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellow in the Film and Media Department at Queen's University, expanding her research on Lozano by placing her in feminist conversations with Yoko Ono and Yvonne Rainer.

Research interests: transnational feminist theories and histories, queer theory, feminist methodologies and pedagogies, New York art world between 1960 and 1990, radical and experimental art practices, politics of labour in the arts, conceptualism, artist writings.

Yuting Shen

Yuting Shen

Yuting Shen

MA Alumni

Screen Cultures and Curatorial Studies

Film and Media

MA Alumni

Yuting Shen is currently pursuing her master's degree in the Screen Cultures and Curatorial Studies program. She completed her BA at ϳԹԴ majoring in Film and Media. Yuting's research revolves around the curation, sensory ethnography documentary, and the profound influence of nature (land, water, air, etc.) on artistic expression. She is also passionate about contemporary archives, film photography, interactive art, digital media, and Asian cinema. Through her interdisciplinary approach, Yuting aims to illuminate the dynamic interplay between curatorial practices, sensory experiences, and the elemental forces that shape and inspire artistic endeavours.

Naomi Jaye

Naomi Jaye

Naomi Jaye

PhD Student

Screen Cultures and Curatorial Studies

Film and Media

naomijaye@gmail.com

PhD Student

Naomi Jaye is an artist, filmmaker, educator and PhD candidate in the Screen Cultures and Curatorial studies program at Queens University. Naomi's main research interest lies in research-creation, through which she explores the architecture of installation and immersive experiences. Naomi holds a MFA from York University and is a lecturer at Toronto Metropolitan University.

Eman Elharmeel

Eman Elharmeel

Eman Elharmeel

PhD Student

Screen Cultures and Curatorial Studies

Film and Media

20ee2@queensu.ca

PhD Student

Eman is a documentary filmmaker and film scholar. She studied at the University of Sussex in the UK, where she was awarded the prestigious Cate Haste scholarship, and where she gained her MA in Documentary Filmmaking (with Distinction). 

She took her Bachelor’s degree in Egypt, where she studied Mass Communication at Cairo University. Shortly thereafter, she started working with TV and theatre. As her career grew her focus narrowed, and Eman became increasingly involved with documentary, working on over 75 such projects. Over 10 years of experience, her work has taken her to twenty countries, working with people from different backgrounds and cultures.

Eman’s career has offered her the opportunity to work in various capacities. She has directed, produced and edited films, working either as part of a team or as a one-woman crew. Her documentaries have dealt with a wide range of subjects, ranging from social developments, to cultural expressions and nature. Her films, without exception, have been broadcasted on TV channels or have participated in film festivals.

Currently, she is studying for a PhD in Screen Cultures and Curatorial Studies at ϳԹԴ. Her research focuses on Egyptian first-person documentary films. She has also an ongoing interest in interactive documentary, digital media, film curation and feminist cinema.

Latest publication:

Elharmeel, Eman (2026) "The personal is collective: Egyptian first-person – Documentary cinema as post-revolution diary," Regards: Vol. 35: No. 35, Article 3.
DOI: 10.65314/2791-285X.1184
Available at: 

Jung-Ah Kim

Jung-Ah Kim

Jung-Ah Kim

PhD Student

she/her

Screen Cultures and Curatorial Studies

Film and Media

PhD Student

Jung-Ah Kim is an artist-curator, researcher, and PhD candidate whose work bridges media and textiles through conceptual and material experimentation and re-enactment. She uses weaving as an entry point to explore broader questions of technology, media, and culture. Her research engages with the history of computing, feminist media critique, and the politics of remembering and cultural amnesia embedded in diasporic objects such as a Korean carpet discovered in a Canadian museum. Through the reconstruction of an ancient loom, she examines the tacit knowledge produced through hands-on creation and the intersections of craft, technology, and cultural memory.

Darien Sánchez Nicolás

Darien Sánchez Nicolás

Darien Sánchez Nicolás

Postdoctoral Fellow

Film and Media

Vulnerable Media Lab

darien.s@queensu.ca

Postdoctoral Fellow

Darien Sánchez Nicolás holds a PhD in Film and Moving Image Studies from the Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema of Concordia University. His doctoral dissertation, Cinematic Voyages: Québécois Transnational Filmmaking and Cuban Domesticity examined the relationships between international tourism, transnational film production and homemaking in the island. He is a cross-appointed instructor in the Social Sciences and the Humanities, Philosophies and Religions departments at John Abbott College, Montréal, Canada. He has worked as film pre-screener and programmer for the Toronto International Film Festival, Latinarte Festival and the South Asian International Film Festival of Montréal, amongst others. He has received scholarships from Mexico’s National Council of Sciences and Technology (CONACYT), the Foundation DeSève Fellowship, the MITACS Globalink Research Award, and the Fonds de Recherche du Québec–Société et Culture scholarship. Currently he is a postdoctoral fellow at ϳԹԴ’s Vulnerable Media Lab.

Fall Convocation Reception

Date

Wednesday November 15, 2023
5:30 pm - 7:30 pm

Location

Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts, Student Lounge

Fall convocation

SONY VISIT & CAMERA DEMO

Date

Friday October 27, 2023
10:00 am - 11:30 am

Location

Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts, Room 118

SONY VISIT & CAMERA DEMO

Friday Oct 27, 10:00-11:30AM

Join us Friday, October 27th from 10 to 11:30 in the Production Studio to welcome representatives from Sony Digital Imaging Canada. We will be looking at some of the Sony equipment offered in the Shop along with a technical presentation by Sony about the advanced auto-focusing system in the A7s iii. Ryan will be demonstrating an advanced camera build with the Fs-7 and Fx-9 and answering questions. At 11 am there will be a photo-op and plaque presentation to thank Sony for their generous donation to the department in 2022. Following this, the Sony representatives will be available for a brief Question and Answer session to learn more about the professional imaging product line.