Sky Hopinka (Ho-Chunk Nation), “American Traditional War Songs” (The Yale Film Society)

Event time: 
Wednesday, March 6, 2019 - 7:00pm to 9:00pm
Location: 
212 York Street See map New Haven, CT 06510-1714
Event description: 

The Yale Film Society is excited to invite award-winning video artist Sky Hopinka to campus to present a program of his short works. Mr. Hopinka is a tribal member of the Ho-Chunk Nation and a descendent of the Pechanga Band of Luiseño Indians. His elusive, “ethno-poetic” videos journey through indigenous lands across the U.S., engaging dense layers of testimony, folklore, and song in their unsettled exploration of homeland and language.

The screening will take place in 212 York Street on Wednesday, March 6, at 7 PM. It will be followed by a Q&A with Mr. Hopinka.

This event is co-sponsored by Films at the Whitney, the Native American Cultural Center, and the Yale Center for the Study of Race, Indigeneity, and Transnational Migration. It is free and open to the public.

THE PROGRAM:

Visions of an Island (2016, 15 min)
Anti-Objects, or Space Without Path or Boundary (2017, 13 min)
I’ll Remember You as You Were, Not as What You’ll Become (2016, 12 min)
Dislocation Blues (2017, 16 min)
Fainting Spells (2018, 11 min)

Total runtime: 70 minutes

ABOUT THE DIRECTOR

Sky Hopinka (Ho-Chunk/Pechanga) was born and raised in Ferndale, Washington and spent a number of years in Palm Springs and Riverside, California, Portland, Oregon, Milwaukee, WI, and is currently based out of Cambridge, Massachusetts. In Portland he studied and taught chinuk wawa, a language indigenous to the Lower Columbia River Basin. His video work centers around personal positions of Indigenous homeland and landscape, designs of language as containers of culture, and the play between the known and the unknowable. He received his BA from Portland State University in Liberal Arts and his MFA in Film, Video, Animation, and New Genres from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. He is currently a fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University and Sundance Art of Nonfiction Fellow for 2019.

His work has played at various festivals including ImagineNATIVE Media + Arts Festival, Images, Wavelengths, Ann Arbor Film Festival, Sundance, Antimatter, Chicago Underground Film Festival, FLEXfest, and Projections. His work was a part of the 2016 Wisconsin Triennial and the 2017 Whitney Biennial. He was awarded jury prizes at the Onion City Film Festival, the More with Less Award at the 2016 Images Festival, the Tom Berman Award for Most Promising Filmmaker at the 54th Ann Arbor Film Festival, the New Cinema Award at the Berwick Film and Media Arts Festival and the Mary L. Nohl Fund Fellowship for Individual Artists in the Emerging artist category for 2018.

http://www.skyhopinka.com/wecould/