WE START WITH THE THINGS WE FIND / THE LOT-EK MOVIE BY THOMAS PIPER
If we pay enough attention to the ordinary, we see the extraordinary. The shipping container is an accidental icon of our modern age: the eight-foot-by-forty-foot corrugated steel box that brings the world to our doorstep. It brings all our hearts’ desires’, available for purchase. And it brings us complicity in the global supply chains, and all the economic, ecological, technological, and political systems that forge those chains, as those great container ships link maker and user, buyer and seller, China and America together across the vast distances of the lawless sea. The design studio LOT-EK is a visionary practice at the intersection of art and architecture, that specializes in upcycling, which is the art and science of repurposing, remaking, rethinking, reimagining. Of using old things in new ways. The shipping container is the thing that has captured their imagination for over a quarter-century: they have remade containers into homes, schools, galleries, libraries, and more. With hundreds of millions of obsolete and unused containers around the world, this is a new and necessary architecture of the future, that repairs and regenerates the unnatural environment that we have inherited from the past. WE START WITH THE THINGS WE FIND is a feature-length documentary of this vision, and of the soulful lifelong partnership of the people, designers Ada Tolla and Giuseppe Lignano, behind it.
WE START WITH THE THINGS WE FIND shows us a way to be radically optimistic, creative, and constructive during times that can feel the opposite of all that. Director Thomas Piper’s acclaimed documentary feature Five Seasons: The Gardens of Piet Oudolf showed how the wild and unfavored plants could encourage audiences to live more responsibly with nature, and now he looks at living more smartly and sweetly with the effects of industry, infrastructure, and technology. Taking us from spark-filled workshops to a container ship sea voyage over a shimmering sea; and explaining all the prosaic and poetic design thinking behind how LOT-EK brings the container to life, the film shows how all we have can become all we need, how resourceful subsistence can feel like beautiful abundance, and how to keep going when we now know there is no such thing as a fresh start. The film is a humanist essay not only about a new kind of design thinking, but about a new design for life.
UPCOMING SCREENINGS
Los Angeles, CA: Architecture + Design Film Festival
Nov 23, 2024 The Culver Theater - AUD 4
PAST SCREENINGS
Cooperstown, NY: Glimmerglass Film Days
Nov 9, 2024 Cooperstown, NYBoston, MA: MIT Museum
Nov 7, 2024 MIT MuseumJackson, MS: Mississippi Museum of Art
Oct 15, 2024 The Westin JacksonRotterdam, Netherlands: Architecture Film Festival
Oct 12, 2024 AFFRMarzocca di Senigallia, Italy: Demanio Marittimo
Jul 19, 2024San Diego, CA: San Diego Architectural Foundation
Jul 18, 2024Berlin, Germany: The Nature of Cities Festival
Jun 5, 2024 Atelier GardensNYC, NY: Ford Foundation
April 24, 2024 New York City, NYNew York: Columbia GSAPP Screening + Q&A
Mar 28, 2024 Columbia Wood Auditorium
DC Film Festival
Mar 27, 2024 Washington, DCWinnipeg, Manitoba, Canada: Winnipeg Architecture & Design Film Festival
Mar 23, 2024 Dave Barber CinemathequeDetroit, MI: Mercy University + Cranbrook
Mar 20, 2024 University of Detroit Mercy, Loranger Architecture BuildingAnn Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan/Taubman College
Mar 19, 2024Art & Architecture Building, Lecture Hall 2104Architecture and Design Film Festival
Jan 31, 2024 Chicago Architecture Center
Oct 13, 2023 Teatro Agusteo