Proyectos de investigación /
Second hand
Reuse and deviations of Ibero-American cinema
The project Second Hand aims to research and recover films that reuse third-party materials and experiment with re-cutting, collage, and sabotage to articulate a critical discourse. Second Hand encompasses early works created in the Ibero-American context.
The project’s areas of research link audio-visual preservation with curation, which seeks to locate, identify, digitise, and restore difficult-to-access audio-visual works or those which must be preserved, while at the same time studying them from a historical, technical, and aesthetic perspective. The goal is to ensure the accessibility and circulation of the materials, and to provide the appropriate context in order to stimulate critical discussions in the present.
2021-2022: José Ernesto Díaz-Noriega
From 2021-2022 the project focused on the collection of films by the Galician amateur filmmaker José Ernesto Díaz-Noriega. This corpus enabled a broadening of the concept of “re-used cinema”, traditionally limited to compilation cinema and avant-garde, militant cinema. Díaz-Noriega’s amateur filmmaking practice, carried out at a gradual pace during the long period between 1936 and the late 1970s, is characterised by his satirical use of image and sound from the media and the history of cinema, all during the Franco regime. The Díaz-Noriega Villalba family and the Spanish Filmoteca collaborated on this work.
2022-2023: Cinemateca of Cuba
From 2022-2023, the project shifted focus to Latin America, through a collaboration agreement with the Cinemateca of Cuba, home to the prolific and avant-garde productions of the Cuban Institute of Cinematographic Art and Industry (ICAIC). The cradle of recycling practices, the films made at the ICAIC were heavily influenced by a lack of resources and the circulation of foreign films and impacted by the anti-imperialist revolutionary struggle in the aftermath of the 1959 revolution. In addition to Santiago Álvarez, a key reference figure in Cuban collage film, other filmmakers, including Eduardo Manet, Marisol Trujillo, Miriam Talavera and Pepín Rodriguez, used a wide repertoire of materials such as newspapers, magazines, photographs, graphic material, North American and Soviet films, newsreels, scientific films and folk music, combined with an excellent mastery of editing techniques and visual effects.
Four short films have been selected for research and digitisation during this second phase of the project: El negro (Eduardo Manet, 1960), L.B.J. (Santiago Álvarez, 1968), 79 primaveras (Santiago Álvarez, 1969) and Oración (Marisol Trujillo, Miriam Talavera, Pepín Rodríguez, 1984).
2023-2024: Arsenal - Institute for Film and Video Art
From 2023-2024, the project established a collaboration with Arsenal – Institute for Film and Video Art - Berlin, an institution devoted to film and cultural heritage that operates as a cinema, a festival, a distribution company, and an archive. Following 60 years of cinema and festival work, Arsenal has a film collection encompassing 10,000 titles linked to avant-garde and political cinema from all over the world. Among these, the project chose three films made in the late 1960s by two groups of militant filmmakers from Latin America: Cine Liberación from Argentina, and Cine Urgente from Venezuela. These films not only allow us to research the use of third-party materials in the militant action in the 1960s but also to digitize films that were not preserved anywhere else but in the Arsenal archive.
Technical data sheet
Lead investigator:
Carolina Cappa
Students 2023-2024:
Camila Aboitiz Bellet, Isabela Mouradian Amatucci, Leonardo Suárez, Lucía Feuillet, Luíza Rosado, Manuel Mateo Gómez Ortega
Students 2022-2023:
Catalina Giordano, Julio César Gonzales Oviedo, Muriel Holguín, Verónica Boggio
Students 2021-2022:
Camila Reyes, Camila Vale, Catalina Altuna, Eloísa Suárez, Rocío Ortega, Rodrigo Sousa
Associated institutions:
Spanish Film Archive (2021-2022), Cuban Film Archive (2022-2023), Galician Film Archive (2023), Arsenal - Institute for Film and Video Art (2024)
Collaborating institutions:
British Film Institute (2024)
Timeframe:
2021 - ongoing