TALK/FILM:
On Memorialising the City
With deep admiration for their practices, Brixton Community Cinema invites audiovisual artists Daniel Oduntun and Daniel Owusu for an evening reflecting on their evolving bodies of work. Together, through sharing music and extracts from their films, we’ll explore navigating and memorialising the city amidst its regeneration, cross-disciplinary and participatory artistic approaches, and the technical intricacies behind their ways of working.
Tuesday 23 September 6.30–8pm
Spanners, Arch 504 Ridgway Rd, London SW9 7EX








Daniel Owusu’s [he/him] work engages with investigations on the evolution and manipulation of material culture over time through writings, architecture, installation and film. He works to observe the relationships embedded in rituals and actions and how they may lead to forms of memorialization or forgetting. Owusu is a studio technician at the Artist Worker’s Co-Operative not-nowhere, that supports analogue film practices with equipment hire, workshops, screenings and solidarity economics.
© Bediah A
Abiba Couilbay is a geographer whose practice focuses on democratising access to cinema as both a space and medium, exploring how moving image intersects with and furthers claims for civic and spatial equity. She is the founder of Brixton Community Cinema, Atlas Cinema and Magnum Photos Film Festival. Currently, she is an Associate Lecturer at the Royal College of Art's School of Architecture and Associate Programmer for Open City Documentary Festival.
© Bamidele Awoyemi
Daniel Oduntan [he/him] is an interdisciplinary media artist whose work spans sound, image, and installation — constructing subtle inquiries into how we witness place, time, and the everyday. Informed by media theory, the lived realities of working-class displacement, and the study and myth of spatial forms, he uses storytelling as a method to examine the structures we inhabit — and how we interpret them.
TALK/FILM:
On Memorialising the City
With deep admiration for their practices, Brixton Community Cinema invites audiovisual artists Daniel Oduntun and Daniel Owusu for an evening reflecting on their evolving bodies of work. Together, through sharing music and extracts from their films, we’ll explore navigating and memorialising the city amidst its regeneration, cross-disciplinary and participatory artistic approaches, and the technical intricacies behind their ways of working.
Tuesday 23 September 6.30–8pm
Spanners, Arch 504 Ridgway Rd, London SW9 7EX




Daniel Owusu’s [he/him] work engages with investigations on the evolution and manipulation of material culture over time through writings, architecture, installation and film. He works to observe the relationships embedded in rituals and actions and how they may lead to forms of memorialization or forgetting. Owusu is a studio technician at the Artist Worker’s Co-Operative not-nowhere, that supports analogue film practices with equipment hire, workshops, screenings and solidarity economics.
© Bediah A




Abiba Couilbay is a geographer whose practice focuses on democratising access to cinema as both a space and medium, exploring how moving image intersects with and furthers claims for civic and spatial equity. She is the founder of Brixton Community Cinema, Atlas Cinema and Magnum Photos Film Festival. Currently, she is an Associate Lecturer at the Royal College of Art's School of Architecture and Associate Programmer for Open City Documentary Festival.
© Bamidele Awoyemi




Daniel Oduntan [he/him] is an interdisciplinary media artist whose work spans sound, image, and installation — constructing subtle inquiries into how we witness place, time, and the everyday. Informed by media theory, the lived realities of working-class displacement, and the study and myth of spatial forms, he uses storytelling as a method to examine the structures we inhabit — and how we interpret them.



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