This program features independent media artworks by Canadian artists of Latin American heritage. This screening is a celebration of Groupe Intervention Video, which is celebrating its 40th anniversary in 2015.This program features independent media artworks by Canadian artists of Latin American heritage. This screening is a celebration of Groupe Intervention Video, which is celebrating its 40th anniversary in 2015. …
Chapters
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Intro
Intro
0:00
Intro
0:00
Black
Black
0:50
Black
0:50
Workshops
Workshops
3:29
Workshops
3:29
Resistance
Resistance
6:46
Resistance
6:46
Youth Resistance
Youth Resistance
7:33
Youth Resistance
7:33
Fear
Fear
10:11
Fear
10:11
Use CTRL+F to find key words if it is a longer transcript.
Intro
0:00
[Music]
0:09
hi
0:10
my name is my movie is called suburban
0:14
origami and it’s the one where
0:16
i’m making origami huge origami pieces
0:19
and putting them
0:20
outside of my suburban home in
0:22
scarborough
0:23
that was made a few years ago so i’m
0:25
just trying to remember
0:28
what i was thinking at the time but uh
0:30
actually at the time i was doing some
0:32
performance-based
0:33
kind of work making large-scale origami
0:36
pieces so that was
0:38
uh part of that pro that time and
0:41
uh yeah and and this is jorge lozano he
0:45
did
0:45
he didn’t introduce himself
Black
0:50
oh yeah the the video black was made in
0:53
cali colombia
0:54
and uh is the result of workshops that
0:58
we did in that
1:00
neighborhood that is called siloa in
1:01
cali it’s a very dangerous uh violent
1:04
uh almost against uh jews
1:07
a lot of youth died in that in that
1:10
they die very young in that neighborhood
1:12
because of uh
1:14
gang-related problems because uh
1:17
the drug drug lords take over the
1:20
territory or the guerrilla groups take
1:22
over the territory or the police takes
1:24
over the territory there’s always a
1:26
conflict
1:26
so we were doing workshops in there
1:30
and we were shooting a video by black
1:34
which is the guy that
1:35
you see at the end on the lying down
1:38
with the blood
1:39
so we are shooting his video and
1:42
engineering i was i was
1:46
there were some kids in there and she
1:48
was looking at this kid that
1:50
began crying and he started to cry
1:53
because he
1:53
saw black on the ground with blood and
1:55
his father had died just a few a week
1:57
ago two weeks before that
1:59
so she was impacted by that and then she
2:02
wrote a story
2:04
the walking is just walking getting out
2:06
of the neighborhood at some point and
2:08
uh uh uh guillermo
2:12
i asked you a minute to shoot the the
2:13
the stairs so i held her
2:15
and she just did all it’s just one take
2:18
then later when we came in here
2:20
i was actually doing a workshop with
2:22
peter mina taking
2:24
doing some like more advanced video so
2:26
we brought this material together and
2:28
we just put it together and we wrote a
2:31
bit detects
2:32
uh to go with the colors of the
2:35
the the houses in you know just just
2:37
like related detects a bit with
2:39
the walking and ended with the shooting
2:42
of
2:42
a bit of a black’s film but that’s
2:46
basically say how much
2:47
all this youth who who died there
2:50
basically in in in of the ones that
2:53
worked in the workshop they’re still
2:55
alive
2:55
because they change because of the
2:57
workshops they change their lifestyles
2:59
began doing something else and black
3:01
right now is is uh
3:03
he’s an editor and i’m going to be
3:05
working with him actually in a project
3:07
uh doing workshops uh uh
3:09
positively really soon and he’s going to
3:10
be facilitating instead of participant
3:14
uh why why do you guys do workshops
3:17
in dangerous neighborhoods in cali why
3:20
would you guys expose
3:21
yourselves to do that and um
3:25
yeah that’s my number one question i
3:27
have many more
Workshops
3:29
now the workshops is natural
3:33
thing that i’ve been doing since i came
3:36
here to canada because i learned video
3:38
and i had equipment and i was surrounded
3:40
by
3:41
friends who had lots of talents and
3:43
didn’t have the resources so i began
3:45
doing workshops in my
3:46
house eventually they expanded to
3:48
through
3:49
working in alucina they expanded to
3:51
working with latin youth in here in
3:53
toronto
3:53
in in the suburbs so in the ghettos as
3:56
they call it
3:58
a youth latin youth who very talented
4:00
who
4:01
most of the time they’ve been in jail
4:03
because um uh
4:05
when they come here to canada from
4:06
salvador colombia whatever
4:08
uh they hang around and they hang around
4:10
in groups because they have to protect
4:12
themselves from the other
4:14
groups from jamaica from
4:18
somalia from whatever right so so they
4:20
had to foreign groups and when they
4:23
as he works in here with the police is
4:24
that if you if the police goes into
4:26
those neighborhoods and they see a group
4:28
of
4:28
young people hanging around together
4:31
they are considered a gang
4:33
and they go and take them away they tend
4:35
into jail
4:36
because of being a gang and so they
4:39
spend a lot of
4:39
time just going to jail basically you
4:41
know all their lives and and the
4:42
workshops
4:43
have helped them to to to they’re very
4:46
talented and they already have a lot of
4:48
visual information so when we go
4:49
there into those neighborhoods it’s
4:50
really easy to do the workshops they do
4:52
really amazing work some of the works
4:54
that we done in the workshops they’ve
4:56
been shown in festivals in one prizes
4:58
and some of them have won
5:00
scholarships to continue studying films
5:01
so it’s been very successful
5:03
and then they saw in the columbia this
5:05
works and
5:06
we were invited to do it in in colombia
5:09
when we show them the works that we’ve
5:11
done with the
5:12
youth in here in toronto the colombian
5:14
youth who were looking at us very
5:16
suspicious because they
5:17
you know you go into this neighborhoods
5:19
and they immediately assume that you’re
5:20
just going to go in
5:21
and use them right because uh they’ve
5:24
been used before by people who goes into
5:25
the neighborhoods and they don’t leave
5:26
anything
5:27
so but when they see the work that we’ve
5:29
done in here with the youth
5:30
immediately at the end and we never talk
5:32
to them we just show them
5:34
we say okay we got 12 youth in there
5:36
says we’re going to do a workshop with
5:37
you guys but we want you to see this
5:39
works
5:39
so they look at the work that the youth
5:41
in here
5:42
uh have done and immediately at the end
5:45
they say i can do better than that
5:46
and they’re just hooked into the
5:47
workshops and they do actually produce
5:49
incredible works and
5:50
and and so the workshops the works that
5:53
we do in the workshops they serve
5:54
as a as a way to
5:58
teach the other ones in and other places
6:01
to get involved in in in in and to see
6:04
that it’s possible because they’re
6:06
they they they they’re very creative and
6:08
they don’t just
6:09
just need to be to see themselves doing
6:12
something after they see themselves
6:14
they they don’t believe that they’re
6:15
going to be doing the work
6:17
that they do until the end and when they
6:20
see it they just don’t want to get out
6:21
of the workshops and they just
6:23
most of them continue doing work and
6:25
also they get
6:26
um they they form groups and start
6:28
facilitating workshops themselves in
6:30
their neighborhoods
6:31
so so that’s basically yeah
6:34
i think any questions about uh
6:37
black and the whole extension of this
6:39
piece that was inspired
6:41
like or essay and any one of the youth
6:43
work
6:44
in colombia yes um i just wanted to say
Resistance
6:48
thank you for
6:49
thank you for your work and sharing um a
6:52
bit of the context in the background
6:54
um of it i just um what it sort of
6:58
the film kind of started getting me to
7:00
think about was
7:02
resistance and i think you already
7:04
started talking a bit about
7:06
that already but i was just wondering if
7:08
in the workshop that you were doing in
7:11
kali that if there were communities
7:15
youth if they were already organizing
7:17
and challenging
7:19
racism and justice and the violence that
7:21
was happening
7:23
in their communities and if and if that
7:26
was something that was encountered
7:28
in the workshops at all and whether the
7:30
youth are vocalizing that in the work
7:32
that they’re doing
Youth Resistance
7:33
yeah no i believe that youth in in in
7:35
here in toronto and in in the ghettos or
7:38
or or in colombia youth uh lead by
7:41
resistance i mean
7:42
they resist every day in in a in
7:45
um i mean they’re still alive i mean
7:48
they go to jail all the time and they
7:49
still and when you bring them into the
7:51
workshops
7:52
they immediately their resistance gets
7:55
directed towards creativity and they did
7:58
and they see the potential of that
7:59
resistance
8:00
through culture in in in fact what
8:02
happened is that uh
8:04
when their friends see that friends that
8:06
are very troubled you know friends who
8:08
like like for instance i i met one that
8:10
is a really young guy about 16 and
8:12
in his he was he’s he’s killed quite a
8:15
few people already
8:16
he has you know he carries again and he
8:18
talks about kaelin and all the stuff
8:19
he’s very
8:20
you know lots of uh uh adrenaline is
8:23
what he says you know
8:24
he gets the adrenaline heist he you know
8:27
he can kill
8:28
and but he wanted always to be part of
8:30
the workshops because he wanted to be a
8:31
narcissist he wanted to be
8:33
you know he wanted to express himself
8:34
culturally you know with again so
8:36
get them the the tools change they are
8:38
the guys for the for video
8:40
it may it may it may
8:43
change their lives right so so they are
8:45
into resistance i mean to be youth in
8:47
those neighborhoods you have to resist
8:49
i am from a poor neighborhood in
8:52
colombia
8:52
we have to resist you know yours is uh
8:54
the violence in the neighborhood you’re
8:56
always
8:57
uh finding strategies to to to
9:00
to get in trouble and we know or not to
9:02
get in trouble
9:03
but you don’t want to die right so so it
9:05
is resistance and
9:06
and uh the workshops are are basically
9:09
that the workshops are
9:11
a tool to resist differently
9:15
in a more coherent way probably in a
9:16
more creative way
9:18
and in a way that it will expand in the
9:22
neighborhood which
9:23
which he has done and and i just got an
9:25
email the other day from one of the
9:27
guys in here that was in the neighbor in
9:29
the in the in the workshops
9:31
and he was so grateful he has a career
9:34
now
9:34
and as an editor he’s making a lot of
9:36
money because he was christian
9:38
and i think that he’s editing a lot of
9:40
the christian videos he has his own
9:42
company right now and he probably has a
9:44
lot of money right now you know he was
9:45
really
9:46
thank you very much and all that stuff
9:47
but i mean you cannot change his
9:50
belief in whatever he believes but at
9:51
least he is doing something different
9:54
right
9:54
and in that that is
9:57
you know i i really like the
10:01
whole metaphor of shooting film instead
10:04
of shooting people
10:06
that’s quite it’s just an image that
10:07
came to my mind it’s beautiful
10:09
uh julian has another question yes like
Fear
10:13
i’m actually from cali and i was a
10:15
nominal neighbor
10:16
for me to go because it is like up in
10:19
the mountains so you know it’s very
10:20
dangerous people
10:21
always are saying like please make sure
10:23
you don’t go there because you’re gonna
10:25
be raped you’re gonna be healed
10:27
rob anything so fear like
10:31
i know you weren’t there with
10:32
guillermina and she’s from argentina
10:34
she has curly hair she’s quite white and
10:38
and green eyes and and you’re getting
10:42
there
10:42
and you know in colombia argentinians
10:45
are usually
10:47
in latin america in general they have a
10:49
very sti uh
10:50
like a very specific way to describe
10:54
argentinians they say they are obnoxious
10:56
and they are different and they don’t
10:57
believe they are part of latin america
10:59
that’s like the cliche right so when you
11:01
went there
11:02
how did you manage fear were you did you
11:05
have any fear
11:06
you and her like how did you manage fear
11:08
and how do you actually
11:10
make sure like fear helped you too
11:14
get somewhere yeah i i don’t know about
11:16
guillermina
11:17
but i mean one of the reasons i’m going
11:18
to answer about me
11:20
you know i mean it’s very little very
11:23
very strong personality and she swears a
11:26
lot
11:26
and they loved it you know and she would
11:29
fly with it she would get really you
11:30
know and
11:31
they were like and they were just all
11:34
that good
11:34
and they would love her right she really
11:36
connected with them in that way and and
11:38
also her accent you know we like our
11:40
argentina accent in colombia you know
11:42
that you know it’s to us it sounds
11:43
really beautiful
11:44
uh so so it was perfect in terms of the
11:47
fear
11:48
no i don’t have fear i never have here
11:49
in situations like that really i had
11:51
fear
11:52
before you know like uh let’s say i
11:55
can’t have a fear to go in a plane and
11:57
think uh
11:58
that i’m gonna die and but it’s before i
12:00
go into the plane but when i’m in the
12:01
plane i don’t care really
12:02
there’s nothing that you can do so when
12:04
you go in this neighborhood what i am
12:06
aware is to be very strategic
12:08
in in how you relate with the
12:09
neighborhood so uh for instance i don’t
12:12
stay too long
12:13
you know the workshops cannot last a
12:15
month because you never know you know i
12:18
mean you
12:18
the longer that you stay there the
12:20
longer that they know your routines and
12:21
the more attracted that
12:23
the equipment gets to them you know not
12:25
not to the ones that you’re working with
12:26
because they don’t take anything
12:28
but the other people around so it could
12:29
become dangerous
12:31
in fact i a lot of the equipment that
12:34
we use in the workshops i i will go
12:37
there
12:38
come back to canada and i will leave
12:39
cameras with them so they could use them
12:41
and i will go back next year and they
12:42
will give them back to me
12:44
right so so that’s not the problem the
12:46
flowers is being there for too long and
12:48
and and people figuring out your
12:50
routines and then
12:51
eventually i mean they they get killed
12:52
there themselves so why shouldn’t i you
12:54
know what i mean
12:55
this can happen to me so now fear is not
12:57
the case and there’s
12:58
if you have fear then you cannot do
13:00
anything and we were in a situation for
13:02
instance that
13:02
uh we were shooting a scene outside in
13:06
in the outside
13:07
thank you i just moved too much in my
13:10
mouth my head my
13:11
microphone moves
13:12
[Laughter]
13:17
we were in a scene shooting the scene
13:19
outside outdoors in
13:21
in i i realized later that we were in a
13:24
place that we shouldn’t be but they told
13:26
us to go there
13:27
and uh i am behind the
13:30
behind the camera with the person that
13:31
is doing camera one of the the
13:33
participants
13:34
and took scrum they just walked into and
13:37
pulled a gun and tried to kill one of
13:38
the actors
13:40
so my instinct was to turn the camera on
13:43
immediately but the camera was on and i
13:44
turn it off instead
13:46
you know so which it was actually very
13:48
good because uh
13:49
uh it would have been very bad to have
13:51
that material in there
13:52
you know they may if they know you have
13:55
it something can happen
13:56
anyway so but that happened and i did
13:58
not have here the guy
14:00
oh the gun didn’t gone so he just walked
14:04
away like that and
14:05
and not the light that was beside me
14:08
and and the guy who was gonna get killed
14:10
just when
14:11
walking to him right that’s the way that
14:14
they are right and then they just steal
14:15
it and they just left
14:17
and then uh suddenly the whole
14:19
neighborhood
14:20
mobilized in phone calls
14:24
they were gonna kill the guy they call
14:25
all the gangs you know and i had to have
14:27
a meeting with all of them and say look
14:28
if you kill that guy you’re going to
14:30
ruin the film
14:31
you know we cannot shoot it anymore
14:32
seriously let’s move out and continue in
14:34
another place and i and
14:36
and it’s nothing really seriously i told
14:37
him that and if you want to kill it it’s
14:39
very stupid if you do it right now
14:40
because they’re going to know that it’s
14:41
you so
14:42
don’t be just have some time to think
14:44
about it
14:45
you know i mean you have to talk to them
14:47
in in their language right i mean
14:48
it’s it is not it is not a a matter of
14:52
ethics to me it’s just the life i didn’t
14:54
invent a life and i cannot change them
14:56
right
14:57
so you got to go with with try to
14:59
respect in some ways their
15:00
their their their their rules you know
15:03
like the neighborhood has rules
15:05
you know uh we i shouldn’t be telling
15:08
you this because this is this is real
15:10
violence right and
15:11
and we were in uh we were in a meeting
15:14
there and uh
15:15
and uh they knew that some guy was
15:17
trying to rob
15:18
us in the neighborhood they knew there
15:21
was a guy
15:22
with a gun and they were gonna
15:24
eventually some point attacked us and
15:25
they told me
15:26
blah blah then two weeks later i i went
15:29
there and the neighborhood has
15:30
had eliminated the guy because the guy
15:32
has been stealing
15:34
not only us but and other people so
15:37
that’s the way that they deal
15:38
they try to keep a balance right and and
15:41
i don’t agree with it but that’s their
15:42
life and i cannot change it
15:44
so so the what happened to us is that
15:47
when they see us with cameras
15:49
they all want to be actors and in fact
15:51
they are all really good actors
15:53
you know because those kids are visually
15:55
they have visual information they
15:57
they they see they live of visuals
16:00
you know they they just they just need
16:03
to have the
16:04
the tools and they are amazing
16:07
uh actors and filmmakers you can get the
16:10
best actors in there and they’re all
16:11
beautiful looking the the guys and the
16:13
and the girls you know that
16:14
the woman and men they’re beautiful
16:15
looking you know
16:17
incredible mixture of people so
16:22
they know how to act their own lives and
16:25
their life is very rich and complex
16:27
so
16:30
any other questions on the floor
16:34
i have a question for sujin if you want
16:35
to talk a little bit about uh
16:38
the giant origami what were you
16:41
reflecting at that time
16:42
did you manage to remember that
16:45
remember what were you thinking about
16:48
the time that you made that film
16:50
yeah i do remember now
16:52
[Music]
16:54
so at the time i was uh i was living out
16:57
in scarborough and
16:58
uh there’s a lot of i mean even though
17:00
it’s nowhere near dangerous that’s some
17:02
of the
17:03
dangerous places in the world uh there
17:05
is a stigma in the city about what it
17:07
means
17:08
what scarborough represents and how
17:10
dangerous it is and people would be
17:12
turned off
17:12
a lot of times when i said that i lived
17:15
there so
17:16
so i did this original project about
17:18
scarborough where i put an
17:20
ad in the newspaper and random and
17:22
people call me
17:23
and then they would invite me to their
17:24
homes and i would program them so
17:26
it was kind of an extension of that
17:29
project or some of the ideas that i had
17:31
from that project
17:32
from 2008 probably and so
17:36
what i wanted to do is uh all everything
17:38
is so centralized in the downtown
17:40
core that i wanted to bring some of the
17:43
downtown into
17:45
into that area and to make it more
17:46
exciting or just to just to activate it
17:49
as a
17:49
as a place that can be activated with
17:51
art and so i lived on top of a bar
17:54
called
17:55
the dog house on kingston road and
17:58
uh and it was really it was safe because
18:01
uh there will be drunk people
18:03
at my doorstep every at all hours so it
18:06
was quite safe to go home
18:07
at any time but um so i uh yeah so i
18:10
just had this idea that i would
18:12
put these boxes and create sort of these
18:14
abstract uh
18:16
buildings that would represent buildings
18:18
some of the things that we see in
18:19
toronto and
18:21
in the downtown area and my friend
18:23
alexander was
18:24
in the audience helped me
18:29
yeah i recreated this little cube in my
18:31
living room
18:32
so i was you know inside the cube making
18:35
cubes and then
18:36
and then i was i was outside of the cube
18:38
putting the cubes
18:40
around the cube so yeah so that’s more
18:43
or less
18:43
what i was thinking at the time thank
18:46
you
18:47
yeah so there’s a installation that you
18:50
did at the same time
18:52
that i saw this the first time and it
18:54
you were using the cubes as screens
18:57
in the gallery oh yeah so that was uh
19:00
that it was the same piece that played
19:02
but they were projected onto the cubes
19:04
because i created a yeah there were i
19:06
think nine of them and
19:08
i just projected onto them so yeah i was
19:11
just
19:11
kind of referring back to the cube
19:15
the many layers of the cubes but uh
19:18
yeah oh you saw that i didn’t know you
19:21
saw that
19:22
awesome
19:24
[Music]
19:25
[Laughter]
19:37
is that is very ironic and interesting
19:39
in
19:40
in working in colombia working here is
19:42
that the youth in here the latin youth
19:44
in here
19:45
who don’t commit crimes they are in jail
19:48
all the time
19:49
and you think colombia do commit
19:52
you know violent acts they don’t go to
19:55
jail
19:56
because of the impunity so
20:08
[Music]
20:18
do
20:21
you
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