From July onward, De Uitkijk will present a retrospective of Fiona Tan. More information will follow soon.
'Thou shalt not make graven images nor worship them.' Kingdom of Shadows is about the confrontation between Tan and this prohibition of images. This film scrutinizes complex thoughts and feelings towards the ceaseless stream of pictures, which fill life and memory. Images and our attitudes towards them have changed greatly since the invention of the camera and of printing. Few of us could imagine life now without photography or cinema. In the form of an associative collage, Tan unfolds a personal vision of how we currently relate to images, concentrating on photography – a medium we particularly employ to create a picture of the world, to piece together what we call reality. Paradoxically, the starting point for this is the final resting place for many photos: archives and collections. The film includes four individuals: a collector in Amsterdam, a cinematographer who collects amateur photographs in Budapest, a retired press photographer in Hamburg and an artist in New York who concentrates on what is not seen. All four present their most treasured photos and the individual ways in which they use, love and hate images. The pictures they show are humorous, endearing and heartbreaking. Far from a nostalgic reminiscence, all four are actively engaged in dealing with the meaning of images now. Kingdom of Shadows is a film about looking. Throughout, a personal vision of the world of photography and film is unfolded.