Event
Production still from Thieves, by Michelle Williams Gamaker. 2023. Digital video, duration 27 minutes 27 seconds. Courtesy of the artist.

Screening from the LUX Collection: ‘This ending will make sense in time’

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When
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18:00 - 20:00
Book Tickets

Presented in collaboration with LUX Collection and alongside Marcos Kueh’s solo exhibition ‘Smooth Sailing, 一路順風’ at esea contemporary, this screening features artist’s moving image works that imagine futures made possible through acts of re-telling.

Stories do not always arrive whole. At times, they emerge in fragments, scattered by historical accounts and migration trajectories. At other times, they end abruptly, leaving only traces of what might have been. By transforming these gaps into spaces for new narratives, these moving images in this programme ask how reclaiming what is missing might reshape our sense of self and possibility.

In ‘Black Cloud’ by Lawrence Lek, a lone surveillance AI searches for its own desire in the ruins of a smart city, guided by a caretaking AI Guanyin. Michelle Williams Gamaker’s ‘Thieves’ stages a fictional act of revenge, where Anna May Wong and Sabu reclaim the roles denied to them in Hollywood’s past. In ‘Early Years’ by Morgan Quaintance, Barbara Samuels recallsher beginnings and creative life in London, where selfhood is shaped through continual departures and arrivals.

The programme will be introduced by Sun Park, Programme and Communications Manager at LUX and is presented as part of esea ArtClub, supported by The National Lottery Heritage Fund.

Booking is essential, as spaces are limited.

'Black Cloud' by Lawrence Lek, 2021.
'Black Cloud' by Lawrence Lek, 2021.
'Thieves', by Michelle Williams Gamaker. 2023.
'Thieves', by Michelle Williams Gamaker. 2023.
'Early Years' by Morgan Quaintance, 2019.
'Early Years' by Morgan Quaintance, 2019.
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Programme

Lawrence Lek, ‘Black Cloud’, 2021 (11 min)
Set in an unspecified near future, ‘Black Cloud’ follows a lone surveillance AI as they confront their existential crisis while watching over the streets of the abandoned smart city of SimBeijing. Left with nothing to do, but still obliged to perform their endless tasks, the AI discusses their troubles with their built-in therapist — a self-help AI called Guanyin. Not all is as it seems in the smart city. Originally built as a replica of the Chinese capital to test autonomous vehicles, SimBeijing has mysteriously become a ghost town. As Black Cloud gradually opens up to Guanyin, they reveal the darker reasons behind why the city has been abandoned. ‘Black Cloud’ is the first part of Lek’s ‘Smart City’ trilogy of CGI noir, followed by ‘NOX’ (2023) and ‘Empty Rider’ (2024). The series continues Lek’s ongoing Sinofuturist universe, an interwoven series of animated films and video games that explore questions of identity, agency, and emotion in the age of AI.

Michelle Williams Gamaker, ‘Thieves’, 2023  (27 min)
In the second instalment of Critical Affection Trilogy, and Williams Gamaker’s first film in Fictional Revenge, Thieves is a fantasy adventure retelling of the 1924 black-and-white and 1940 Technicolor versions of 'The Thief of Bagdad'. Williams Gamaker reimagines the films’ marginalised characters, Chinese-American actor Anna May Wong and Indian-born American actor Sabu claiming leading roles in her film, uniting as fictional allies, to challenge the racial discrimination of the film industry. Told as a movie within a movie, in Thieves, Anna May Wong is found on set by Sabu, but there is something wrong: she is in black-and-white while everything else is in Technicolor, and both find themselves trapped in their screen-images. Both must navigate the structural violence on set with the help of the Annamaytons and Silver Maiden (in this case, the casting of white actors to replace actors of colour) by joining forces to overthrow the set and those in charge.

Morgan Quaintance, ‘Early Years’, 2019 (15 min)
‘Early Years’ is a portrait of Jamaican-born artistic polymath Barbara Samuels. It features an account of her first generation, diasporic experience in London, and her discovery of the liberatory possibilities for self-actualisation offered by an early entry into creative life.

About LUX Collection

The LUX collection is the UK’s largest collection of artists’ moving image by more than 1000 international artists, with over 6,000 works dating from the 1920s to the present, and it continues to grow with the addition of new works by contemporary artists and restorations of historic works. The collection is available for loan for screenings and exhibitions in the UK and internationally. Many of these can be viewed in the LUX library for research purposes.

LUX is an arts organisation that supports and promotes visual artists working with the moving image.

Founded in 2002 as a charity and not-for-profit limited company, the organisation builds on a long lineage of predecessors (The London Film-Makers’ Co-operative, London Video Arts and The Lux Centre) which stretch back to the 1960s.

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Biographies
Lawrence Lek
Michelle Williams Gamaker
Morgan Quaintance
About this series
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