A comparative visual study on the subjectivity of the filmmaker.
Two filmmakers enter public spaces together, armed with camcorders, and start capturing the place.
In collaboration with |RG|
A feature length documentary, displaying the everyday lives of six people, ranging from 19 to 75 years old and living in Western Europe. It ponders the important choices they have made and how those choices led them into certain directions: love, career, children, passion, wealth, happiness…
The film gently visits these persons' intimate worlds, offering glimpses of variations of western middle-class lives, whilst asking itself: what is the best way to spend our limited time on Earth?
In collaboration with Jeroen De Schepper
An audiovisual performance that presents a bricolage of camcorder footage shot in the 1990s in the Democratic Republic of the Congo by a Belgian missionary. The video is accompanied by an electronic soundtrack, performed live and in direct interaction with the visuals, creating a dialogue between image and sound.
In collaboration with |RG|
A video essay on everyday life in Belgium. Inspired by slow tv, this film unfolds in long, static shots of seemingly ordinary scenes. Each shot functions like a moving postcard, quietly sketching the textures of middle-class existence in contemporary Belgium. The ambient soundtrack slowly evolves and unravels as the film progresses.
In collaboration with Jeroen De Schepper
A mid-length documentary about Sevapur, a small community in southern India founded by Belgian Lea Provo in 1968. Devoting her life to the casteless, Lea sought to create a better future by establishing a self-supportive village. Combining archival footage, interviews, and everyday observations, the film weaves a layered narrative around four inhabitants of Sevapur, fifteen years after Lea’s passing.
In collaboration with Ward Collin and Jeroen De Schepper