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Aline Baiana
At that time when everything was human

<p dir=”ltr”>Indigenous educator and curator Sandra Benites, of the Guarani-&Ntilde;andeva people, narrates the origin myth of the bird <em>Urutau</em> in her native language. This nightjar stands still on a branch all day long and, at dusk, cries a low hoot resembling a human weeping. In 2013, indigenous activist Jos&eacute; Urutau Guajajara remained on the top of a tree for 26 hours, deprived of food and water by state forces. As if following a fate brought by his name, Urutau Guajajara bravely defied his people’s third violent eviction attempt from an urban occupation called <em>Aldeia Maracan&atilde; </em>(the name refers to Est&aacute;dio do Maracan&atilde;, Rio de Janeiro&rsquo;s biggest football stadium). Since 2006, indigenous population and social movements squatted in the abandoned building of what used to be, ironically, the “Museum of the Indian”, placed next to the arena. The site was reclaimed by the city hall and real estate developers in the context of 2014&rsquo;s World Cup.&nbsp;</p><br /><em>At that time when everything was human</em> by Aline Baiana conveys an immersive flow of sounds and nature imagery as well as live documentation from the eviction cuts in, changing the film’s atmosphere entirely. With this twist, Baiana overlaps two narratives of neglect: the Guaran&iacute; Nhandeva myth – where a father abandons his first partner pregnant with twins &ndash; and the indigenous populations deliberately left in the State’s margins. The title refers to a mythological time before the species’ differentiation and, at the same time, ironizes the ‘inhuman’ treatment the activists get from the local authorities and Rio de Janeiro’s police.&nbsp;

Aline Baiana’s work is informed by extensive theoretical and field research on indigenous, feminist, ethnic, environmental, and social justice matters. Her films, sculptures, and installations often draw from personal and collective memories to unveil the entrenched effects of an extrativist colonial mentality ever-present in her native Brazil and most Latin America. Aline claims that "Being Latin American and, more specifically, black and Brazilian, makes any separation between art and politics impossible". From this standpoint, she often tackles pressing issues such as environmental crimes and social injustices, such as the Samarco mining waste dam collapse in 2015 , the impacts of hydroelectric power stations in riverine villages and  president Dilma Roussef's parliamentary coup in 2016. Baiana usually works closely with local communities and incorporates a plurality of visions into her practice, leading to multilayered and often poetic approaches to sociopolitical conflicts.