Satellite, As Long As It Is Aiming At The Sky

2010
Nasrin Tabatabai & Babak Afrassiabi, Satellite, As Long As It Is Aiming At The Sky, 2010. single-channel video, 28 min 50 sec. Courtesy of the artist. The 6th Seoul International Media Art Biennale Media City Seoul 2010 Trust. Seoul Museum of Art, 2010. Photo courtesy of Sumitomo Fumihiko

Nasrin Tabatabai and Babak Afrassiabi have collaborated on a long-term project called Pages since 2004. The Pages project is defined through various activities, such as the publication of a bilingual Farsi/English magazine, video and installation works and architectural proposals. With Pages, they examine possibilities of interaction and reflection between various local discourses and conditions that may generate spaces of critique and critical practice.

Satellite, As Long As It is Aiming At The Sky takes its inspiration from Los Angeles-based Iranian satellite television stations. The video is a mediation on geography, community and politics in a critical state. Initially considered exile networks, these TV stations generate a tele-visual micro-universe that compensates for their (cultural, geographical and political) deficiencies by constantly referring to and commenting on their own production and reception. This “self-mediation” results in a sense of immediacy and locality across the medium of television, which increases at times of political and economic tension. The video captures these TV stations during the time of the 2009 elections in Iran. The political crisis at home inevitably enters these broadcasts, and in turn articulates the television stations’ own crisis.

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The screen is worth protecting. Or create the value of protecting the screen.