Kathy Rae Huffman on Wed, 22 Jan 1997 13:56:36 +0100 |
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Novi Sad - VideoMedeja, Dec.1996, 1/3 |
[written by Kathy Rae Huffman for Telepolis Online Journal telepolis pop~Tarts - http://www.heise.de/tp/fpo.htm";] ********************** Novi Sad authors initiate VideoMedeja: the first Video Summit for East European Women. Introduction: Novi Sad, a bustling University town in Serbia, is the first metropolitan stop after the border check from Hungary into Yugoslavia. You would arrive in Belgrade in one hour by staying on the train. Traveling by train to VideoMedeja, the First International Video Summit (with Diana McCarty, MetaForum Conference organizer, Budapest), we found a warm reception upon our arrival. A festival driver eased our fears of how to find the festival....he was waiting for us on the platform, holding up a big sign with our names on it. We really didnt know what to expect, and even though we had been in contact with the festival via email for over a month and were reassured that it was safe for us to travel. News reports sounded grim, with sensationalist reporters predicting violence would erupt before Christmas from the student demonstrations, which at that time in Belgrade had become a firmly entrenched daily activity that stopped traffic, busses, and all forms of movement in the central city. Instead, we found Novi Sad prepared for the holiday season, and even Christmas lights were strung in the shopping downtown area, near the Orthadox cathedral. The shops were full of goods, and even though prices were high the stores had customers. Meals were especially costly, i.e.: a modest business meal for two cost 85 DM in the hotel cafe. Most shop people spoke a little German or English, and we were later told that because of the large, well respected language department at the University, Novi Sad had a larger than normal foreign population for Yugoslavia. Novi Sad residents are proud of their pacifist tradition. The regions farmers are said to have sheltered many young men who did not want to fight against their neighbors in Bosnia and Croatia. There has been little violence in the area, even since 1991, when the country fell apart and split into separate countries. But, even so, the residents of Novi Sad have suffered from a general depression about their future, and of course from economic crisis and political censorship. I heard stories of many suicides. Communication has only recently been possible between Yugoslavia and the neighboring countries of Croatia, Slovenia, Bosnia, etc., not to mention other European cities. The VideoMedeja Summit was located near the city center, a large open square with a central sculpture of a former hero. Bounded by the city hall, the central Orthodox church and McDonalds. Every evening, it hosts 1-2 thousand of students who joyfully demonstrate for political honesty, in solidarity with the Belgrade students. We participated on Saturday night and although we missed a few videos, found the experience both important to understand the community feeling, and personally rewarding. ************************************* VideoMedeja - Novi Sad, Yugoslavia December 20 & 21, 1996 Organized by VideoMedeja / Association "Apostrof" Executive organizer: Branka Milicic-Davic Editor (curator): Vera Kopic With immense excitement, the first VideoMedeja Summit took place in the Novi Sad Theatre, December 20 & 21, 1996. It was the first festival of videoworks by women from Eastern Europe. Screenings took place on Friday and Saturday night in the Novi Sad Theatre, a well worn cinema with fixed seats for approx. 200. It was bitterly cold and raining, but it didnt seem to hinder the audience from attending. The symposium on Saturday morning was held in the lounge of the Ben Akiba Club, adjacent to the cinema, a local meeting place. Although it used the title Female Narcissus - Lie an Identity, the symposium was actually a local discussion that concentrated on the problems of networking to other festivals, production and equipment access for the video makers. A few men were present at the symposium, and typically - they frequently dominated the conversation. Some of the older women in the circle suggested that subsequent festivals include men, because after all -- they help [us] so much. The organizers resisted, by sayin this is not part of their plan. All in all, VideoMedeja was extremely unpretentious. The fact that it was a no frills event (no receptions, free drinks, or special dinners) did not in any way detract from the sincere mood of the organizers and guests, and the quality of the program. Only three Western guests attended, besides Diana and myself, Adele Eisenstein (who like Diana is an American living in Budapest) was present. Three representatives from the Mediawave festival in Gyor, Hungary [April 28-May 3, 1997], made a presentation of the upcoming festival. they spoke little English, so we had limited communication. The organizers were aware that the escalating local demonstrations (and understandable fear of political unrest) would most likely keep many visitors from traveling to Yugoslavia. But they wanted to realize their plans regardless, for the sake of the local artists and audience. Why VideoMedeja? With the extreme economic crisis, and recently lifted embargoes on communication, mail, food, and almost everything, the question quickly comes to mind, why a festival for women in Eastern Europe at this time, and why in Novi Sad? It seemed an unlikely place, out of the main traveled links and definately not a focal point for new media. The unstable and volatile political climate would discourage most Western organizers from attempting the most simple program. I learned that there is a strong tradition in Novi Sad for film and new media. According to Lidija Srebotnjak, who teaches at the Academy of Fine Arts, Novi Sad has maintained a multimedia classes since the 1970s. She was quite proud to inform me that Marina Abramovic had been a student assistant (for one year) during her studies, there. Classes in feminist theory have also been a regular part of the University curriculum. Fund for an Open Society: The Fund for Open Society, which has operated in Novi Sad for the past few years, primarily supports childrens workshops. Classes are available for various cultural electives, like English classes, puppet making, and drama. Also, a team of psychologists offer special counseling to adults, especially to refugees. The entire population has been affected by the large number of new residents in Novi Sad, most are victims of the war. The refugees kids in the classes make up 80 % of the kids, according to Sarita Matijevic, coordinator of the Novi Sad program. It is a main goal of the OSI to integrate these kids into the local scene. We took the quick tour through the cramped offices of OSI, and had to push our way up the stairway, which was packed with dozens of excited teenagers, waiting for their class to begin. OSI Novi Sad was the main financial sponsor for VideoMedeja. [Internal Link to article about the Soros Centers for Contemporary Art/OSI]