PARAKUPÁ VENÁ (FALL FROM THE HIGHEST POINT)

Share

Share on twitter
Share on facebook
Share on google
Share on pinterest
DIRECTOR: Mariana Parisca
COUNTRY: Venezuela
LANGUAGE: English and Spanish, with the Title in Pemón
DURATION: 13′
YEAR: 2020
Genre: Experimental Non-Fiction
Sun
Jun 27
2021
4:00 pm

Venue

Third Horizon Virtual Cinema
TYPE: Short Films

Synopsis

The Venezuelan currency, the Bolivar, has exceeded a 10,000,000% inflation rate, the highest recorded such rate in the world. Parakupá Vená (Fall From the Highest Point) is an experimental film completely composed of microscopic footage of the hyperinflated currency bills. In the film, a narrator alludes to national and personal histories represented on the bills, while Parakupá Vená, the tallest waterfall in the world, also known as Angel Falls, becomes a metaphor for the extreme capital collapse. The images of landscapes on the bills reveal the persistence of image-making as a colonial tool for the incorporation of land into accumulated value.

Parakupá Vená precedes Celaje.

Please note: this film can be viewed only once during a three-hour window beginning at the scheduled time. For more information on viewing your film, please visit our FAQ and How to Watch pages.

About the Director

Mariana Parisca is an interdisciplinary artist and art educator. They received an MFA from the Sculpture + Extended Media department at Virginia Commonwealth University and a BFA in Studio Art and Anthropology from Washington University in St. Louis in 2015. In 2000, Parisca immigrated to the USA from Venezuela. Through a decolonial feminist approach, she creates performances, sculptural artifacts, videos, and printed matter that question and redefine the social abstractions that shape value, resource distribution, and consumption in the Americas. Parisca’s work has shown at art institutions across the USA.