Atlantic Ragagar
Atlantic Ragagar is an experimental film on seaweed and industrial extractivism on the Moroccan Atlantic coast, inviting the spectator into a process of ecological transformation. The film is an attempt to «listen» to pollution and its effects on coastal life, inviting the spectator into a process of ecological transformation.
If pollution often remains hidden in the landscape, the effects of toxicity are rendered through the voice and bodily presence of performer Imane Zoubai. The film unfolds through her vocal interventions, first on the beach and later in the studio during improvised sessions. As she hums, sings, breathes, and silently interacts with algae, a new figure progressively emerges, maouj, an aquatic body open to transcorporeal and interspecies speculations.
Shot and produced by Gilles Aubry in 2019–21.
31'43'', HD video
World premiere and special mention at Ji.hlava International Documentary Film Festival (IDFF) 2022.
Imane Zoubai, born 1995 in Fez, is an artist and musician based in Tetouan. She graduated as a visual artist at the National Institute of Fine Arts in Tetouan (INBA) and received a musical education (vocals and oud guitar) at the Tetouan conservatory. Her artistic work combines these two practices, focusing on embodied and cultural aspects of sound and visuality. She uses experimental music notation formats, drawing, installation, and performance. She performed and exhibited at various art spaces, galleries, and festivals in Morocco, including Venise Cadre in Casablanca, Sakhra Festival in Moulay Bouchta, and Documenta_15 in Kassel.
This video is part of the Norient Online Special Sawt, Bodies, Species, a joint publication with adocs, extending Gilles Aubry’s physical book Sawt, Bodies, Species: Sonic Pluralism in Morocco into a digital publication with additional video and audio materials. The Open Access publication of this book was made possible with the support of the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF).
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Published on May 04, 2023
Last updated on September 18, 2023
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Ecology describes the relationships among living organisms. At Norient, we add sounds and music, asking, for instance: what does a field recording tell about the environment it was recorded?
From instruments made of plastic waste of the ocean to questions about a futurist naturalism which embraces technology for aesthetic emancipation.