ACCESSION (2018) with filmmakers Tamer Hassan and Armand Tufenkian and plant conservationist Jeremie Fant: Block Museum - Northwestern University
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ACCESSION (2018) with filmmakers Tamer Hassan and Armand Tufenkian and plant conservationist Jeremie Fant

A seed held in a palm
Image credit: ACCESSION
Cinema
February
8
7 PM

Event Details

Date & Time:

Thu February 8, 2024
7 PM

Location:

The Block Museum of Art
40 Arts Circle Drive
Evanston, IL 60208

Audience:

Open to the public

Details:

ACCESSION (2018)

with filmmakers Tamer Hassan and Armand Tufenkian and an introduction by Dr. Jeremie Fant (Chicago Botanic Garden)

 

RSVP 

 

ACCESSION is a work of exquisite textures cultivated from grains of film, the grains of the voice, and the grains of the field and the garden. The film springs from a trove of letters, written to accompany packets of seeds shared between friends and strangers, which collectively narrate centuries of American horticulture. To trace the connections between the diverse communities linked by these seed exchanges, Tamer Hassan and Yervant Tufenkian crisscrossed the United States over five years, shooting on a range of (mostly expired) film stocks and harvesting images of arresting beauty. Over these scenes, a chorus of voices read the letters aloud, patiently unfolding minor histories of American life and the social and natural relationships that shape its farms, flowerbeds, and wilds. 

Preceded by Colectivo Los Ingravidos’ short film SEEDS, a pulsating ode to plant fecundity shot in vivid super-8mm.

The program will feature an introduction by Dr. Jeremie Fant, Conservation Scientist at the Chicago Botanic Garden and Senior Scientist in Northwestern's Plant Biology and Conservation program. An expert in genetic diversity and the restoration of rare species, Jeremie will speak to the relationship between the diverse geographical exchanges depicted in ACCESSION and the forms of ex-situ conservation and reintroduction he and his colleagues employ to conserve biodiversity across different environments.

Following the screening, filmmakers Tamer Hassan and Armand Tufenkian will appear to the germination of ACCESSION and its unique exploration of time and place.

About the artists: 

Armand Yervant Tufenkian
is an Armenian filmmaker and artist, born in 1988 to parents from Aleppo, Syria. His films include
Accession (2018), which maps an informal network of letter correspondence about the exchange of seeds. He works as a fire lookout in the Sequoia forest of the Sierra Nevada and teaches in the Department of Visual Arts at the University of California, San Diego. In the Manner of Smoke, a long-form observation of disparate perspectives on forest fires, is forthcoming late 2024.

Tamer Hassan
has screened his films internationally including at Viennale, Art of the Real at Lincoln Center, Mar Del Plata International Film Festival, and Sheffield DocFest. He has been a fellow at the Flaherty Film Seminar and participated in the Berlinale Talents program. He has taught at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and currently teaches at Parsons School of Design.
Jeremie Fant has been the Molecular Ecologist and Conservation Scientist at the Chicago Botanic Garden since 2003 and is a Senior Scientist in Northwestern's Plant Biology and Conservation program. Dr. Fant has devoted his career to understanding and advancing the conservation of rare plants and their genetic diversity. By using genetic approaches to his areas of focus – rarity, restoration, and ex situ conservation – Jeremie’s work provides valuable insight into the future of rare and endangered plant species by identifying risks and potential management improvements that can contribute to their preservation and recovery.

aotr_accession_01-1600x900-c-default.jpgImage credit: ACCESSION

This event is part of the SEED TIME film series, a selection of films screening in Winter and Spring quarter 2024. 

Supported by the Sloan Foundation and the Coolidge Corner Cinema’s Science on Screen program, each of the screenings in the series invites viewers to observe poet William Blake’s proverb, “in seed time, learn,” through informative introductions and discussions with scientists, filmmakers, researchers, and archivists involved in cultivating and preserving seeds and films alike.

An initiative of the COOLIDGE CORNER THEATRE, with major support from the ALFRED P. SLOAN FOUNDATION.

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Contact The Block Museum of Art for more information: (847) 491-4000 or email us at block-museum@northwestern.edu