Catalogue > At random

Uriel Orlow

Forest Futures

Experimental film | 4k | color | 28:0 | Switzerland, Italy | 2024

Forest Futures is a poetic and thought-provoking film that visits ancient forest ecosystems from the earth’s past, imagines future forests in the face of changing climate and shows the forest as a multi- species school, where children practice more-than-human co-existence. Forest Futures explores the forest as a site of deep time, ecological transformation, and interspecies learning. Set in the mountainous region of South Tyrol, the film traces a journey from ancient fossilized forests that thrived over 280 million years ago through to speculative visions of future forests in a rapidly warming world. Combining scientific research with imaginative storytelling, the film reimagine the forest as both a teacher and a protagonist.

Uriel Orlow is a Swiss-born artist who lives and works between Lisbon, London and Zurich. In 2023 he was the recipient of the prestigious Prix Meret Oppenheim/ Swiss Grand Prix of Art. Orlow’s work is presented widely in international survey shows including at Dunkerque Triennale, Kochi Biennale, 12th Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art, Kathmandu Triennale, Manifesta 12, Palermo, 2nd Yinchuan Biennial, 13th Sharjah Biennial, 7th Moscow Biennial , EVA International, Limerick, 2nd Aichi Triennale, Nagoya , Bergen Assembly, Manifesta 9, 54th Venice Biennale and elsewhere. Recent solo exhibitions include Galeria Avenida da Índia, Lisbon (2025); MCBA, Lausanne (2024); Casa da Cerca, Alamada (2022); Kunsthalle Nairs, Scuol (2021); La Loge, Brussels (2020); Kunsthalle Mainz, Germany (2020); Privas Art Centre, France (2019); Les Laboratoires d’Aubervilliers, Paris (2018); Market Photo Workshop & Pool, Johannesburg (2018); Kunsthalle St Gallen (2018) and many others. Orlow’s films been screened at Tate Modern, London; the International Short Film Festival, Oberhausen; Tank.tv; Whitechapel Gallery, London; Locarno Film Festival; Videonale Kunstmuseum Bonn; BFI London; The BBC Big Screen, Manchester; Arnolfini Bristol; Espace Croisé CAC Roubaix; and at the Biennale of the Moving Image, Geneva, and others.