
Give as a gift
A collection of films by women filmmakers examining identity, family, migration, and personal transformation through intimate and powerful storytelling.
The routines of two women fuse together as their similar gestures get repeated over time. Their hands intersect through their shared memory one movement at a time. The daily routine of Hayat in her absolute loneliness builds as she tries to recollect memories of her grandmother. We observe both their lives separately, the gestures of both women seem to be in an ongoing, subtle dialogue. The rhythm of the events slowly forms itself as their days go by. Eventually, the bond between them unravels the motherly love that unites them.
Director Biography - Dhiaa Biya
Dhiaa is a Moroccan photographer and filmmaker based in Brussels. After obtaining her bachelor's in image techniques at L’Institut supérieur des métiers de l’audiovisuel et du Cinema in Rabat, she pursued her master's in filmmaking at LUCA school of Arts.
In her work, Dhiaa is inspired by the normality of day-to-day life and the underlying beauty of human (inter)actions. These simple stories are what make the subject of her works. She enjoys telling stories within a precise lens and concise framing and composition.
To make anything at all, Dhiaa relays on visual materials, poetry, and a lot of observation.
Director's Statement:
I find repetition to be very comforting. I am constantly looking for the
smallest gestures that get repeated enough to be familiar to the eye and
mind. I believe that if one looks long enough, those little acts get more
interesting, more complex and therefore more valuable on many levels.
In my remembrance, the gestures of my grandmother shaped a lot of my
own reflexes. Through my childhood until now, she kept the same rituals that
I observed time and time again. I never knew how sensitive I was to it until
recently. Now that I’m away, I can see her in what I do: in the hands that she
gave me and in the manners I unintentionally follow. When I look back, the
images engraved in my head are those of her hands by my side, above my
head or holding my own.
It is fascinating how transmissible and tangible something as delicate as
gestures is. Through generations, hands can keep track of actions and
reactions, hold meanings and symbolises the continuity of a family history.
By pointing my camera at these little details, I want to emphasize on the
poetry that I see in this simple theme.
In this film, I will work on the parallelism of two women and their daily
gestures. The ongoing similarities lead to the link that bonds them and the
love that they have for each other as grandmother and granddaughter.
While their hands are the main character and idea of my film, I want to also
implement elements of loneliness, repetitive routines and longing for the
past. Through the characters and within the chosen spaces, I will keep a
certain void-both within and around them, to feel the solitude and pair it with the ongoing
nostalgia. Those simple universal feelings will remain in the background and not overtake the film. I want to keep the focus on the hands in function of what they do,
how they feel and the things they touch, and the smallest details of their normal, usual movement.
Through this film I desire to archive the patterns of the hands I grew up
seeing. It’s a way to gather the memories I have and reshape them in the
most honest way possible. In a personal yet “made-up” environment, I want
to give the images I have of these moments a concrete medium to be
potentially understood. To do so, I intend to work with a strong visual
trajectory. The images will unfold little by little in a steady rhythm. The
actions, sewed together by their parallelism, will be tightly framed and
constructed in an almost metaphorical way. And yet, the movements will be
natural enough to not be a choreography. I want to put together the
uncertainty of the moment-memory, and the structure of my visual style. It is
also important to me as a maker of this work to explore the emotion behind it
and implement the nostalgia- and every other feeling I have in me for that
matter- in every step of my decision making.
The idea of this film lives in me for a while now. It is a an emotional state I
experience daily while longing for times and spaces that I’ve lived in and
through. Holding onto it all means a lot to me and to my work. And as a
person who enjoys telling stories, I want to share those unexplainable
feelings through this film, hoping it’d resonate with the receiver at
the other end.
A collection of films by women filmmakers examining identity, family, migration, and personal transformation through intimate and powerful storytelling.
The routines of two women fuse together as their similar gestures get repeated over time. Their hands intersect through their shared memory one movement at a time. The daily routine of Hayat in her absolute loneliness builds as she tries to recollect memories of her grandmother. We observe both their lives separately, the gestures of both women seem to be in an ongoing, subtle dialogue. The rhythm of the events slowly forms itself as their days go by. Eventually, the bond between them unravels the motherly love that unites them.
Director Biography - Dhiaa Biya
Dhiaa is a Moroccan photographer and filmmaker based in Brussels. After obtaining her bachelor's in image techniques at L’Institut supérieur des métiers de l’audiovisuel et du Cinema in Rabat, she pursued her master's in filmmaking at LUCA school of Arts.
In her work, Dhiaa is inspired by the normality of day-to-day life and the underlying beauty of human (inter)actions. These simple stories are what make the subject of her works. She enjoys telling stories within a precise lens and concise framing and composition.
To make anything at all, Dhiaa relays on visual materials, poetry, and a lot of observation.
Director's Statement:
I find repetition to be very comforting. I am constantly looking for the
smallest gestures that get repeated enough to be familiar to the eye and
mind. I believe that if one looks long enough, those little acts get more
interesting, more complex and therefore more valuable on many levels.
In my remembrance, the gestures of my grandmother shaped a lot of my
own reflexes. Through my childhood until now, she kept the same rituals that
I observed time and time again. I never knew how sensitive I was to it until
recently. Now that I’m away, I can see her in what I do: in the hands that she
gave me and in the manners I unintentionally follow. When I look back, the
images engraved in my head are those of her hands by my side, above my
head or holding my own.
It is fascinating how transmissible and tangible something as delicate as
gestures is. Through generations, hands can keep track of actions and
reactions, hold meanings and symbolises the continuity of a family history.
By pointing my camera at these little details, I want to emphasize on the
poetry that I see in this simple theme.
In this film, I will work on the parallelism of two women and their daily
gestures. The ongoing similarities lead to the link that bonds them and the
love that they have for each other as grandmother and granddaughter.
While their hands are the main character and idea of my film, I want to also
implement elements of loneliness, repetitive routines and longing for the
past. Through the characters and within the chosen spaces, I will keep a
certain void-both within and around them, to feel the solitude and pair it with the ongoing
nostalgia. Those simple universal feelings will remain in the background and not overtake the film. I want to keep the focus on the hands in function of what they do,
how they feel and the things they touch, and the smallest details of their normal, usual movement.
Through this film I desire to archive the patterns of the hands I grew up
seeing. It’s a way to gather the memories I have and reshape them in the
most honest way possible. In a personal yet “made-up” environment, I want
to give the images I have of these moments a concrete medium to be
potentially understood. To do so, I intend to work with a strong visual
trajectory. The images will unfold little by little in a steady rhythm. The
actions, sewed together by their parallelism, will be tightly framed and
constructed in an almost metaphorical way. And yet, the movements will be
natural enough to not be a choreography. I want to put together the
uncertainty of the moment-memory, and the structure of my visual style. It is
also important to me as a maker of this work to explore the emotion behind it
and implement the nostalgia- and every other feeling I have in me for that
matter- in every step of my decision making.
The idea of this film lives in me for a while now. It is a an emotional state I
experience daily while longing for times and spaces that I’ve lived in and
through. Holding onto it all means a lot to me and to my work. And as a
person who enjoys telling stories, I want to share those unexplainable
feelings through this film, hoping it’d resonate with the receiver at
the other end.