Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Ammar Al Beik

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Native name
  
عمّار البيك

Music director
  
The Sun's Incubator

Nominations
  
Orizzonti Doc Award

Nationality
  
Syrian

Movies
  
The Sun's Incubator

Ammar Al-Beik httpsivimeocdncomportrait10456491300x300

Born
  
December 17, 1972 (age 44) (
1972-12-17
)

Known for
  
Filmmaker, Visual Artist

People also search for
  
Hala Abdallah, Sofia Shams Al-Beik, Myriam Jakiche Al-Beik

diff15 in conversation with ammar al beik and ammar abd rabbo


Ammar Al-Beik (born Damascus, 1972) is a Syrian award-winning filmmaker and visual artist based in Berlin, Germany. known for film making, photography and installation.

Contents

In the late 1990s, al-Beik began working in film after beginning his artistic practice as a photographer. Since then, he has become widely known for his multidisciplinary oeuvre.

21 film ammar al beik


Career

Al-Beik’s artistic career stems from unconventional roots. His love for photography intensified after leaving the University of Damascus where he was pursuing a degree in business administration in order to work at a camera repair shop for ten years during the 1990s. It is there where he received his formal training in the medium, exploring various methods and approaches while becoming an expert in photographic equipment. He has been exhibiting his photographs since the mid 1990s, at a time when he simultaneously began an impressive career in filmmaking. Taking his cinematic works to the international stage, he has earned critical acclaim from audiences and juries across the globe and has been honored with a number of distinctions and awards.

His choice for cinema was a choice of life, a choice of rebellion through the reality of its political, social and artistic means. al-Beik’s early cinematic works, such as “Light Harvest” (1997) and “They Were Here” (2000), provide evidence of his strong foundation in photography, as nearly each scene results in the perfect still, acting fundamentally as a sequence of images.

Having participated in screenings worldwide since 1999, his films have been featured at such events as the Venice, Rotterdam, São Paulo, Oberhausen, Locarno, Nantes and Yamagata International Film Festivals.

His invitation to the 63rd Annual Venice Film Festival - Official Selection (2006), was a first in the history of Syrian cinema, where he received the Provincia Autonoma di Trento Doc/It- Award for his film “I Am the One Who Brings Flowers to Her Grave”. Since then, this film has been touring the world to be screened in the most prestigious film festivals and events including Berlin, Locarno, Rotterdam, the MoMA and the Centre Pompidou.

Among other awards, al-Beik won The Liege Mayor Award at the 7th Liege International Video Film Festival for his film ‘Light Harvest' (2000) in Belgium, as well as the Jury Prize in the 11th Brisbane International Film Festival for 'When I Color My Fish' (2002) in Australia, and a special reward from the International Federation for Cinema Club "FICC" for his "They were Here’(2002) in Italy.

In just a little over a decade al-Beik has become one of the region’s leading filmmakers.

Equally accomplished in both genres, his photographs have been shown in venues throughout the Middle East, Europe and the US. Since joining Ayyam gallery in 2007, al-Beik has participated in solo and group exhibitions, as well as in many international art fairs.

As a result of his great artistic range and background, al-Beik’s photographs possess a cinematic quality that can only be found amidst the portfolio of a seasoned image-maker. Forever embracing experimentation, he works with an assortment of techniques. Often materializing in the form of large ultra-chrome prints, his photographs toy with the manipulation of light and contrast and delve into the art of visual storytelling, holding the narrative of his subjects up with careful scrutiny and heightened sensitivity.

He was a participant in the Syrian cultural caravan (2014–5).

Works

Ammar Al Beik's artworks are in important institutions and private collections such as the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA).

Delving into installation art since 2010, al-Beik has done so with the urgent need to fill a certain void and the desire to ignite the shock of an initial meeting between the viewer and the work within an immersion in the details of a guarded space.“Colored Earth... Black Chainsaw”, “Oil Leaks” and “Boya Boya Boya” along with other overly political works that incorporate elements of video, painting, sculpture and animation are some of his most recent.

In 2011, he returned to the Venice Film Festival - Official Selection again with the short film “The Sun’s Incubator”, a work that explores the domestic effects of the ‘Arab Spring’, to become the first Syrian filmmaker participating twice in this festival. Since then, this film has participated in more than 50 film festivals including the Palais de Tokyo, Berlin, Rotterdam and São Paulo, and has received several awards, among them the Jury Award at the Busan Film Festival in 2012.

, most recently al-Beik had a solo exhibit at Museum Neukölln, Berlin, Germany (2017) titled "Lost Images Damascus, Berlin", worth to mention that Metropolis program on ARTE did a special episode featuring al-Beik and the exhibit.

Filmography

1997: Light Harvest - 3 minutes.

2000: They Were Here - 8 minutes.

2002: Boulevard Al Assad - 1 minute.

2002: My Ear Can See - 8 minutes.

2002: When I Color My Fish- 5 minutes.

2003: Clapper- 58 minutes.

2006: I am The One Who Brings Flowers To Her Grave, Co Produced & Directed with Hala Al Abdalla

2008: Samia - 40 minutes.

2011: The sun's incubator- 11 minutes.

2011: Aspirin and A Bullet - 125 minutes.

2014: La Dolce Siria- 26 minutes.

2015: Kaleidoscope - 20 minutes

References

Ammar Al-Beik Wikipedia