The real story is what's in that room, Mercer Union 2021
Film

Onyeka Igwe: I Would Have Needed to Know Her Films

Thu 13 Feb 2025
18.45 -20.45
£5
Screening Room
South Wing

Moving image artist and researcher Onyeka Igwe spotlights a series of Black women filmmakers.

I Would Have Needed to Know Her Films emerges from Studios artist Onyeka Igwe’s ongoing book project, exploring the June Givanni Pan African Cinema Archive. Whilst researching some of the key film festivals that formed the basis of this collection, Igwe came across the works of Maureen Blackwood (b. 1960), Julie Dash (b. 1952) and Sarah Maldoror (1929-2020). The screening highlights the vital roles these women played in collective filmmaking projects from the 1960s onwards and the Pan-African cinematic community they supported.  

The event begins with Maldoror’s 1968 short Monangambeee. Set in colonial Angola under Portuguese rule, the story explores cultural difference and how a linguistic misunderstanding leads to the unjust torture of a prisoner. Continuing from this, Igwe screens Dash’s 1982 Illusions. The film follows a light-skin African American studio executive as she navigates colourism and artistic freedom in a male-dominated, 1940s Hollywood. Finally, Blackwood’s 1988 short Perfect Image? will be shown. Grappling with issues around skin lightening, scarification and hair, the film problematises notions of Black beauty through a series of musical and comedic sketches. 

Material from the June Givanni Pan African Cinema Archive will be on display throughout the evening for audience members to engage with.  

Header image: Mercer Union