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Sol Negro

Laura Huertas Millán

2016 00:43:00 France, Colombia, United StatesSpanishColorDolby 5.116:9HD video

Description

"The title (Black Sun) is as evocative of solar eclipse as it is of the 'dark spleen' which doctors, all through Antiquity, used to attribute to melancholic and suicidal drives, especially as they affected artists. Here such drives end up striking the existence of Antonia, an opera singer whose dark beauty brings light to the film. Through discreet and elliptical staging, Laura Huertas Millán presents Antonia’s multi-faceted character.

Family bonds are delicately explored not so much for an origin of evil but as a kind of introspective polyphony: the voices of aunt, mother and daughter (the director herself) are heard as she struggles, through fiction, to escape from her family’s fate. Relationships between body and mind, as well as depression and artistic creation, are highlighted through snippets, ongoing questioning and infinite tact. The film gradually spreads some of the poison gnawing at one’s mind and causing stomach aches, slowly releasing melancholia and deep sadness as they flow away from the bodies so closely looked at through words, breath, singing or weeping, and at times even while eating. Breathing in, breathing out: a task much harder than it might seem at first.

The quest for truth unfolds through Antonia’s lifetime, both at times of strength and vulnerability: the soprano is condemned to sing in an empty hall, much like a sun no-one can look at directly without having one’s eyes burned."

–Céline Guénot, FIDMarseille catalogue, 2016

About Laura Huertas Millán

Laura Huertas Millán is a French-Colombian filmmaker and visual artist, whose practice stands at the intersection between cinema, contemporary art, and research.

Selected in major cinema festivals such as the Berlinale, Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF), Rotterdam International Film Festival, New York Film Festival and Cinéma du Réel, her films have earn prizes at the Locarno Film Festival, FIDMarseille, Doclisboa and Videobrasil, among others. More than twenty retrospectives and focus of her work have been organized around the globe, in cinematheques such as Toronto ́s TIFF Lightbox, Harvard ́s Film Archive or Bogota ́s cinematheque, and leading film festivals as Mar del Plata, Rencontres du Documentaire de Montréal and Thessaloniki Doc.

In the art field, her latest solo exhibitions were held at the MASP Sao Paulo, Maison des Arts de Malakoff and Medellin ́s Modern Art Museum. Her films have also been exhibited and screened in esteemed institutions (Centre Pompidou Paris, Jeu de Paume, Guggenheim Museum NY, Times Art Berlin) and biennials (Liverpool, FRONT Triennial, Videobrasil, Videonnale). They are part of private and public collections (Kadist, CNAP, Banco de la República de Colombia, CIFO, FRAC Lorraine, and others).

Huertas Millán holds a practice-based PhD on « Ethnographic Fictions » developed between PSL University (SACRe program) and the Sensory Ethnography Lab (Harvard University). She works regularly as an educator. Since 2019, Huertas Millán is part of a research-based duo with curator Rachael Rakes on critical anthropology and the aesthetics and politics of the encounter.

About the work:

Laura Huertas Milláńs formally adventurous works entwine ethnography, ecology, fiction and historical investigation. Sensuous and immersive, her films propose embodied and emotional experiences where aesthetics and politics are indissociable. Between 2009-2012, Huertas Millán created a series of works around « exoticism » including Aequador (2011) and Journey to a Land Otherwise Known (2012), where colonial narratives of « othering » and racialised oppression were deconstructed through sci-fi, speculative fiction and lo- fi fantasy.

Afterwards, she established the project « Ethnographic Fictions » which includes the films Sol Negro (2016), La Libertad (2017), and jeny303 (2018). The paradox at the core of this series was that ethnography as an ensemble of narratives rooted in colonialism could be considered as a form of fiction-making. Meanwhile, some of the most interesting attempts at contemporary decolonial practices of ethnography have embraced fictional language tools. Her « Ethnographic Fictions » series reflects upon those ambiguities and complexities inherent to anthropological practices, while building cinematic spaces of their own.

Since 2018, Huertas Millan has been working on the notion of « pharmakon » (an entity both a poison and a healer). More specifically about the coca plant and its non-human subjectivity, its cosmological non-western uses, its role on the war on drugs and psychotropics prohibition. The Labyrinth (2018), Jíibie (2019), and an upcoming feature film are part of this research.