UCCA Beijing

UCCA x LEAP Film Screening: Epiphanizer

2014.7.13
13:00-16:00

Cinema Arts
Location:  UCCA Art Cinema
Language:  In Chinese with English and Chinese subtitles

Epiphanizer was shot between July 2013 and February 2014 in Ya’an, Sichuan province, a region devastated by a powerful earthquake in spring 2013. The documentary depicts a housing relief program jointly initiated by One Foundation and Hsieh Architect & Associates, headed by architect Hsieh Ying-Chun. The first phase of the project chose fifteen rural households experiencing exceptional hardships in the villages of Qilao and Baishu.

Director Li Peifeng depicts the region’s struggles through the story of elderly resident Chen Hongze, who benefited from the construction aid. Chen’s hardships are exacerbated by his aphasia, which severely limits his ability to communicate with outsiders. As with most Chinese villages, natural disasters often act as merely catalysts for more deeply rooted problems, problems that shape rural life and the difficult realities of construction efforts there.

As a continuation of LEAP magazine’s 2013 cover feature “Ghosts in the Spectacle,” UCCA and LEAP LABS present the mainland China debut of Epiphanizer, followed by a discussion with director Li Peifeng and featured architect Hsieh Ying-Chun.

Ticketing & Participation:

20 RMB/Adult;

10 RMB/2014 UCCA Member;

Free/2013 UCCA Member

You can buy tickets at the front desk on the day of the screening.

*Doors close 30 minutes after event begins.

*No late entry.

* Become a UCCA Member and receive RMB 10 off tickets to UCCA Art Cinema screenings.

Speakers

Li Peifeng is an independent film director and artist working in video, sound, theater, and text. Born in Gansu in 1972, he currently lives in Beijing. Like his first work, Silver, Li’s second feature film Epiphanizer focuses on rural China as it undergoes modernization.

Hsieh Ying-Chun

Ever since the devastating earthquake in Taiwan in 1999, Hsieh Ying-Chun has been helping people rebuild their homes after natural disasters. His reconstruction project for the Thao people received international acclaim. In recent years, Hsieh has also helped residents of remote Chinese villages and those who suffered from the tsunami in Southeast Asia rebuild their homes. He was short-listed for the UN-Habitat Best Practices award in 2004 and won the Curry Stone Design Prize in 2011.

Partner

LEAP LABS act as a laboratory, a generator, and a catalyst for artistic endeavor. LEAP LABS contextualize the discourse of LEAP magazine through lectures, forums, workshops, film screenings, and even curatorial strategy, producing a series of experiential bodies open to external participation, communication, and evolution.