Para la Coca

2 channel installation on a curved wall
14 mins | 2023 | 2K | Stereo
Spanish| English, French, Arab Subtitles
Co-authored with Cristobal Gomez Abel

Para la Coca is an audiovisual installation around the coca plant (Erythroxylum coca), a plant stigmatized and criminalized since the colonization of the Americas. This work is co-authored with Cristobal Gomez Abel, who is part of the Bora and Murui Colombian First Nations, and is the result of a conversation between the two authors for the past ten years. At the initiative of Cristobal, this work revisits a Murui myth of origin, which equals an ancestral law that teaches us about the ethics that the coca plant use implies. In this myth, the plant is a person, a deity embodying the form of a girl who teaches her father and community the “right use” of the plant.

This work shares this message to advocate for the decriminalisation of the plant. This work has been accompanied by Nelly Kuiru, the founder and director of the Amazonia school Escuela de Comunicación Indígena Amazonía Ka+ Jana Uai (La voz de nuestra imagen). We acknowledge her influencial role in the production and writing of this film and acknowledge as well the permission granted by Cristobal Gomez Abel and his community to spread the teachings of the coca through the form of this myth.

Based on Jibina Marena Uay – Coca de la Buena Palabra, an ongoing script written by Cristobal Gomez Abel (Murui/Bora) and Laura Huertas Millan.

We acknowledge that the ancestral myth of origin of the coca plant belongs to the Murui nation. We thank them for allowing our interpretation with the purpose of de-stigmatizing the coca plant and psychotropics, as well as honoring and amplifying ancestral indigenous political, cultural and spiritual resistance in Colombia.

With
Cristobal Gomez Abel, Pedro Armando Sopin Morales, Harold Jeferson Gomez Florez, Gilber Olmedo Morales, Dewins Nicolas Gomez Florez, Didier Libardo Santana Gaspar, Carmen Sofia Gaspar Florez, Libardo Santana Florez, Diana Valentina Cuellar Gomez, Cristian Gomez Florez, Alina Santana Gaspar.

Recorded in
the Muiri Muina community,
Nimaira Náimeke ibike, Patio de Ciencia Dulce

Directed and produced by
Laura Huertas Millán

Creative and production consultant
Nelly Kuiru

DoP
Mauricio Reyes, Laura Huertas Millan

Sound recording
Laura Huertas Millan, Grégory Castéra, Angel Maria Fajardo

With the support of
PinchukArtCenter, Liverpool Biennial, CNAP (Centre National des arts plastiques), Institut Français (Résidence+), Mondes Nouveaux (Ministère de la culture).

Let My People Go

5 channel audio-visual installation, 6’00”.

Let My People Go is an expanded cinema piece presented as a five-channel installation. The main character of the narrative is the coca plant, which in the Colombian Amazon is the highest sacred entity for the Muina-Muruí indigenous community, and it is venerated as a feminine being source of power and wisdom.

Laura Huertas Millán new immersive work plunges us into the ritualistic elaboration of the mambe, the green powder used for its worship. By representing an emancipatory use of this psychotropic substance, far from the mainstream stereotypes of cocaïne and violence, Let my people go stages an embodied dialogue with a natural being.

Recorded in the Muina Murui, Nɨmaira Nàɨmeke ɨbɨke community (Colombian Amazon).

With: Cristobal Gomez Abel, Pedro Armando Sopín Morales, Harold Jeferson Gómez Florez, Gilber Olmedo Morales Special thanks: Cabildo indígena Comunidad km 11 Muina Murui, Aura Torres Farina Tofe, Carmen Sofía Gaspar Florez, Libardo Santana Florez, Marie Darel, Jerome Dopffer, Simón Velez, Juan Alvaro Echeverri, Hipólito Candre

Produced by Studio Arturo Lucia

Co-produced by PinchukArtCentre and Centre national des arts plastiques

Directed and produced by
Laura Huertas Millán

With the support of
PinchukArtCenter, Liverpool Biennial, CNAP (Centre National des arts plastiques), Institut Français (Résidence+), Mondes Nouveaux (Ministère de la culture).

jeny303

6 mins | 2018 | 16 mm | Stereo | DCP
Spanish | English and French Subtitles

Born out of an «objective hazard» (a 16mm roll where two different subjects were imprinted by mistake), jeny303 is a composite work intertwining two portraits. On the hand there is jeny, in recovery from heroine addiction. On the other hand there is the 303 building, an iconic modernist architecture in a public university in Bogota (Colombia). The chance and alchemical encounter between both builds a short form about altered states, an open narrative of transformation and grief.

Written & directed by: Laura Huertas Millán

Image, sound, editing: Laura Huertas Millán

Sound edition & mix: Pierre-Yves Gauthier

Color correction: Julio César Gaviria

Production: Laura Huertas Millán

With the support of
Les Abattoirs, Musée-Frac Occitanie, Toulouse, Film Study Center and Sensory Ethnography Lab (Harvard University)

La Libertad

29 mins | 2017 | HD | Stereo | DCP
Spanish | English and French Subtitles

“Produced out of Harvard’s Sensory Ethnography Lab, Laura Huertas Millán’s masterful La Libertad follows a group of matriarchal weavers in Mexico, whose backstrap loom – a pre-Hispanic technique preserved for centuries by Indigenous women in Mesoamerica – provides the formal structure for the film’s exploration of handicrafts and their ties to freedom. With echoes of the influential ethnographic work of Chick Strand, La Libertad combines astute observation, testimony, subtle transfers in scale, space and texture, as it weaves its own singular study of labour, creativity, and the mysterious traces that circulate between them.” Andréa Picard 

“As if squaring the circle, Huertas Millán implicates her own filmmaking practice within this circuit of women’s creativity. When filming the weaving process, she takes care to describe crisp, minimalist lines and forms in her framing, organizing the thread in the image as if she, too, were “weaving” a piece of visual information. In this way, Millán’s formalism mimics the rigor of her subjects, combining the materialist precision of Liu Jiayin with the tactile, non-intrusive gaze of Bruce Baillie.” Michael Sicinski

Written & directed by: Laura Huertas Millán

Cast: Crispina Navarro, Gerardo Navarro, Inés Navarro, Margarita Navarro, Mariana de Navarro

Image, sound, editing: Laura Huertas Millán

Sound edition & mix: Sebastián Alzate

Color correction: Julio César Gaviria

Production: Laura Huertas Millán


With the support of
Arquetopia Foundation and International Artist Residency, Videobrasil, Museo de Arte Moderno de Medellín, PSL University, Film Study Center and Sensory Ethnography Lab (Harvard University)


Sol Negro

43 mins | 2016 | 16K | Stereo | DCP
Spanish | English and French Subtitles

The title (“Black Sun”) is as evocative of solar eclipse as it is of the “dark spleen” which doctors, all through Antiquity, used to attribute to melancholic and suicidal drives, especially as they affected artists. Here such drives end up striking the existence of Antonia, an opera singer whose dark beauty brings light to the film. Through discreet and elliptical staging, Laura Huertas Millán presents Antonia’s multi-faceted character.

Family bonds are delicately explored not so much for an origin of evil but as a kind of introspective polyphony: the voices of aunt, mother and daughter (the director herself) are heard as she struggles, through fiction, to escape from her family’s fate. Relationships between body and mind, as well as depression and artistic creation, are highlighted through snippets, ongoing questioning and infinite tact. The film gradually spreads some of the poison gnawing at one’s mind and causing stomach aches, slowly releasing melancholia and deep sadness as they flow away from the bodies so closely looked at through words, breath, singing or weeping, and at times even while eating. Breathing in, breathing out: a task much harder than it might seem at first. The quest for truth unfolds through Antonia’s lifetime, both at times of strength and vulnerability: the soprano is condemned to sing in an empty hall, much like a sun no-one can look at directly without having one’s eyes burned.

Céline Guénot, FIDMarseille catalogue, 2016

Written & directed by: Laura Huertas Millán

Produced by: Evidencia Films, Les Films du Worso

Cast: Nohemí Millán, Martha Millán, Laura Huertas Millán, Juan Pablo Barragán, José Ignacio Uribe

Production: Franco Lolli, Capucine Mahé, Christophe Barral, Toufik Ayadi

Production direction: Adriana Agudelo Moreno

Director of Photography: Jordane Chouzenoux, Laura Huertas Millán

Editor: Isabelle Manquillet, Hernán Barón, Laura Huertas Millán

First direction assistant: Florence Ortiz

Second direction assistant: Santiago Porras

Assistants second shoot: Paula Rendón, Angélica Hoyos

Sound: Juan Felipe Rayo, Jocelyn Robert

Sound Mix: Samuel Aïchoun

Art direction: Marcela Gómez

Poster designed by: Bertrand Gruchy, Eva Revox

Associate producer: Laura Huertas Millán


With the support of
Proimágenes FDC, Aide au film court cinéma 93, PSL University, Film Study Center and Sensory Ethnography Lab (Harvard University)

Aequador

19 mins | 2012 | HD | Stereo | DCP
Spanish | English and French Subtitles

Interested in the hidden corners of exoticism and a reinterpretation of history as an aesthetic challenge, Colombian resident in France, Laura Huertas Millán (Bogotá, 1983), presents in Aequador—in her own words—“a parallel present modified by virtual reality, an oneiric allegory, an uchronic dystopia.” With foundations on science fiction—uchronia as a source for an alternative history can actually be seen as a subgenre—, Aequador establishes parallelisms—in a complex and deliberately fragmented way—between the (virtual) relics and ruins of an ideal 3-D architecture embedded somewhere in the middle of the Colombian Amazonas and the everyday life of people inhabiting that area. This equatorial semi-paradise, this dystopia evoking the excesses of a progressive and modernist dream, takes us back to a time (“a history without a chronology”) when foreigners established settlements in Latin America (a “non-place”) based on conquering ideologies and impulses.

Laura Huertas Millán continues delving into themes already present in her earlier work: nature as a place where the otherness

arises, the issue of what is foreign and strange, and the hybridization of myths from diverse origins. Mixing different documentary registers with science fiction and fantasy while appropriating stock footage, Huertas Millán manages her craft from an in-between position to visual arts and cinema.

Human presence—and its associated rituals—is put in contrast with thephantasmagoric presence of virtual architectures. The sound tends to deconstruct ethnographic and anthropologic landscapes while showing instead a presence of parallelisms. And so, we evoke the Amazonian “Civilization” questioning the relation between architecture (real or virtual) and humans in a place where nature should reign. Coexistence among diverse human and non-human elements — as well as an atmosphere of extreme political and natural violence— is beautifully suggested by Huertas Millán, touching with the tip of the fingers that ultimate utopia: the possibility of living together, the ideal of a community."

Maximiliano Cruz, Ficunam catalogue, 2013

Written and directed by: Laura Huertas Millán

Sound Design: Edwin van der Heide, François Bianco, Christian Cartier, Sound Mixing, Christian Cartier

3D modeling: Jean Michel Albert

Compositing: Karim Touzène

Graphic design: Damien Dedreux

Executive production: Bertrand Scalabre

Produced by: Le Fresnoy, Studio national des arts contemporains

Artistic accompaniment: Edwin van der Heide

Cast: Cristóbal Gómez, San Sebastián de los Lagos community

Director of Photography: Alexandra Sabathé

Editor: Gustavo Vasco, Laura Huertas Millán

Sound editing: Geoffray Durcak, Laura Huertas Millán

Journey to a land otherwise known

23 mins | 2011 | 2K | Stereo | DCP
French | English and Spanish Subtitles

A documentary fiction inspired on the colonial accounts of the natural and ethnographic explorations in America by conquistadors, missionaries, and scientists. Shot in the Tropical Greenhouse of Lille, France, the film uses both the architecture and the plants of this enclosed botanic garden as narrative supports. Led by the voice-over of an explorer, the film explores the notion of exoticism, evokes the violent origins of the so-called «New World» and the endurance of the imagery they engendered.

Written & directed by: Laura Huertas Millán

Produced by Le Fresnoy, Studio national des arts contemporains

Artistic accompaniment: Patrick Corillon

Cast: Dominique Thomas, Audrey Cottin, Julie Coulon, Sandy Lesauvage

Director of Photography: Pukyo Ruiz de Socomurcio

Camera assistant: Prisca Bourgoin

Assistant director: Thomas Dumont

Editor: Laura Huertas Millán

Sound: Nicolas Verhaeghe

Simon Lebel: Laura Huertas Millán

Sound Mixing: Christian Cartier

Color correction: Baptiste Evrard

Executive production: Lucie Bercez

Graphic Design: Damien Dedreux

Make-up: Arielle Lebrun

Mask: Association Arteïde