Forma

Melisa Zulberti

Sobre si mismo (About itself) (2023)
Melisa Zulberti
Selected by Fundación Proa, Buenos Aires

The body becomes a focal point for exploring movement in relation to its surroundings. Its displacement doesn’t follow a straight path or fixed destination but unfolds in a shifting rhythm of oscillations, falls, and suspensions—instability as a constant state.

Contact with water, earth, and gravity doesn’t just frame the action; it transforms it. Engaging with these elements dissolves the boundaries between solid and liquid, the fleeting and the enduring. Movement is more than a reaction to the environment—it is an active force that reshapes it, challenging familiar spatial and perceptual structures.

The setting shifts unpredictably, as if guided by an internal, dreamlike logic. The sequence unfolds in fluid terrain, where landscapes continually reconfigure themselves—earth turns to water, the horizon bends, bodies emerge and disappear in transitions that feel arbitrary yet hint at an underlying coherence.

Time no longer moves in a straight line but folds into cycles, where each fall marks a new beginning. This recurrence is not mere repetition but a subtle variation, a space where change becomes possible. Through movement and suspension, presence and disappearance, the tangible and the intangible, intertwine.


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Sobre si mismo (About itself)

Details
Artist: Melisa Zulberti
Title: Sobre si mismo (About itself)
Year: 2023
Duration: 6:07 mins

Credit: Melisa Zulberti, Sobre si mismo (About itself), 2023. © the Artist. Courtesy of the artist and Fundación Proa, Buenos Aires. Selected for AFI'25 by Fundación Proa, Buenos Aires.

Sobre si mismo (About itself) (2023)
Melisa Zulberti
Selected by Fundación Proa, Buenos Aires

The body becomes a focal point for exploring movement in relation to its surroundings. Its displacement doesn’t follow a straight path or fixed destination but unfolds in a shifting rhythm of oscillations, falls, and suspensions—instability as a constant state.

Contact with water, earth, and gravity doesn’t just frame the action; it transforms it. Engaging with these elements dissolves the boundaries between solid and liquid, the fleeting and the enduring. Movement is more than a reaction to the environment—it is an active force that reshapes it, challenging familiar spatial and perceptual structures.

The setting shifts unpredictably, as if guided by an internal, dreamlike logic. The sequence unfolds in fluid terrain, where landscapes continually reconfigure themselves—earth turns to water, the horizon bends, bodies emerge and disappear in transitions that feel arbitrary yet hint at an underlying coherence.

Time no longer moves in a straight line but folds into cycles, where each fall marks a new beginning. This recurrence is not mere repetition but a subtle variation, a space where change becomes possible. Through movement and suspension, presence and disappearance, the tangible and the intangible, intertwine.

https://forma.org.uk/assets/_large/frame-difusión.jpg

Melisa Zulberti, Sobre si mismo (About itself), 2023. © the Artist. Courtesy of the artist and Fundación Proa, Buenos Aires. Selected for AFI'25 by Fundación Proa, Buenos Aires.

https://forma.org.uk/assets/_large/frame-difusión-1.jpg

Melisa Zulberti, Sobre si mismo (About itself), 2023. © the Artist. Courtesy of the artist and Fundación Proa, Buenos Aires. Selected for AFI'25 by Fundación Proa, Buenos Aires.

https://forma.org.uk/assets/_large/frame-difusión-2.jpg

Melisa Zulberti, Sobre si mismo (About itself), 2023. © the Artist. Courtesy of the artist and Fundación Proa, Buenos Aires. Selected for AFI'25 by Fundación Proa, Buenos Aires.

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Artist Q&A

What does a democratic and international film program like Artists’ Film International mean to you as an artist?
A program like Artists’ Film International is an opportunity to expand the boundaries of cinema and art, fostering cross-cultural dialogues between diverse contexts. I am particularly interested in the potential to decentralize perspectives, allowing non-hegemonic narratives to find their place within an international circuit. For me, cinema is both a political and poetic tool capable of challenging power structures. A program of this nature reinforces the idea that moving images constitute a global language, capable of transforming how we understand reality.

What drives you to work with moving images, and when did you first become interested in this medium?
I have always conceived art as a form of expanded choreography, where movement extends beyond the body to encompass space, light, sound, and image. My interest in moving images arose from the need to capture the ephemeral and construct altered spaces of perception. Dance was my first field of exploration, but cinema allowed me to expand the notion of the body—not only in physical terms but also in its symbolic, political, and affective dimensions.

I work with moving images because I am drawn to the elastic temporality of cinema—the ability to pause, repeat, fragment, and superimpose layers of meaning. I am interested in the tension between what is shown and what is hidden, between the visible and the latent. From my early explorations in video art to my current projects, I have always felt that cinema is not merely a form of representation but a way of generating altered states of experience and perception.

Can you discuss the potential that dreams and altered states of reality offer individuals and societies? How do you think this is reflected in cinema and, specifically, in your work?
Dreams and altered states of consciousness allow us to access realities that exist beyond the limits imposed by rationality. They are territories of symbolic freedom, where time and identity deconstruct and reassemble in unexpected ways. On an individual level, these states connect us to unconscious zones of memory and desire; on a societal level, they can function as spaces of resistance, imagination, and the creation of alternative futures.

Cinema has the unique capacity to translate these states into images, sound, and movement. From early avant-garde experiments to contemporary explorations in experimental film, the screen has served as a portal to the oneiric, the hallucinatory, and the spectral. In my work, these elements appear in the way I disrupt linear narrative, in the use of the body as a site of transformation, and in how light and shadow create atmospheres that oscillate between the real and the unreal. I am particularly interested in how perception can be manipulated through editing, the fragmentation of time, and the intersection between digital and organic elements.

Share a list of books, music, films, artworks, thinkers, spaces, and places that inspire your practice and have particularly influenced your thinking around this film?

  • Books: The Material Imagination by Gaston Bachelard, Becoming-Animal by Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, Camera Lucida by Roland Barthes. I am interested in philosophical explorations of imagery and perception, as well as how nomadic thought can be applied to artistic creation.
  • Music: Compositions by Ryuichi Sakamoto and Julián Tenembaum, the experimental music of William Basinski and Tim Hecker. Sounds that stretch time and create spaces of introspection and estrangement.
  • Films: Stalker by Andrei Tarkovsky, Last Year at Marienbad by Alain Resnais, Meshes of the Afternoon by Maya Deren. Works that approach the image as a field of memory, reverie, and sensory labyrinth.
  • Artworks: Installations by Olafur Eliasson, performances by Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker, the luminous sculptures of James Turrell. I am drawn to practices that expand the perception of the body and space through light, rhythm, and materiality.
  • Thinkers: Jean-Luc Nancy and his concept of the “extended body,” Vilém Flusser and his exploration of technical images, Donna Haraway and her thoughts on the posthuman and speculative narratives.
  • Spaces and places: The Riachuelo in Buenos Aires, the Atacama Desert, Zen temples in Kyoto. I am interested in spaces where time seems suspended and where the memory of bodies and landscapes is inscribed in subtle yet persistent ways.

What new projects or lines of research are you currently working on?
I am currently developing a new work that will be premiered and co-produced by Teatro Colón. It is an immersive multidisciplinary experience that fuses performing arts, cinema, live music, and performance. The piece explores the impact of traumatic events on society, addressing human vulnerability, solidarity, and resilience.

This project represents an expansion of my research into the body, imagery, and collective memory, exploring how technology and cinema can redefine the performative experience.

Details
Artist: Melisa Zulberti
Title: Sobre si mismo (About itself)
Year: 2023
Duration: 6:07 mins

Credit: Melisa Zulberti, Sobre si mismo (About itself), 2023. © the Artist. Courtesy of the artist and Fundación Proa, Buenos Aires. Selected for AFI'25 by Fundación Proa, Buenos Aires.