9. The Colli Crew / Chhouk Loeurn & Pring Proel / IraQueer / The Colli Crew / Lean Mang and Vunneng Leng

THE COLLI CREW
Formed 2010
Live and work in Collarenebri, New South Wales

Talk of the Town 2011
single-channel digital video, colour, sound
2:45 mins
Courtesy the artists

CHHOUK LOEURN AND PRING PROEL
Chhouk Loeurn born 1998 in Banteay Meanchey, Cambodia
Pring Proel born 1990 in Banteay Meanchey, Cambodia
Live and work in Banteay Meanchey

Worry 2019
single-channel digital video, colour, sound
15:48 mins
Courtesy the artists and Bophana Audiovisual Resource Center, Phnom Penh

IRAQUEER
Founded March 2015

Feelings and struggles of a young man like me 2017–18
single-channel digital video, colour, sound
1:34 mins
Courtesy IraQueer Organization; LGBT+ Iraqis, between myths, violence, and personal struggle

THE COLLI CREW
Formed 2010
Live and work in Collarenebri, New South Wales

For My People 2013
single-channel digital video, colour, sound
2:57 mins
Courtesy the artists

LEAN MANG AND VUNNENG LENG
Lean Mang born 1995 in Ratanakiri, Cambodia
Vunneng Leng born 2001 in Ratanakiri, Cambodia
Live and work in Ratanakiri

Endure 2019
single-channel digital video, colour, sound
11:40 mins
Courtesy the artists and Bophana Audiovisual Resource Center, Phnom Penh


15 Screens Reel 3

15 Screens was initiated as a platform to exhibit artists in juxtaposition to interconnected themes. Broken into separate reels for the purposes of NIRIN NAARM’s online delivery, the series hosts a variety of moving image material, from artistic video work, documentary and archival footage, to infomercials, music video clips and short film. Though varied in style, these stand-alone works are united in their expression of critical issues, humour, beauty, calls to action, and at times marginalised histories that demand our attention.

The diverse range of artists, creatives and filmmakers participating in 15 Screens present us with unique and compelling stories. The Colli Crew, a group of school kids from Collarenebri Central School in remote New South Wales, have produced and performed in music videos, commenting on the struggle for rights and equality, and reflecting on social, political and economic opportunities for First Nation Australians. As they say, ‘Change comes from you, from me, from us, and that’s fact.’ Works by Chhouk Loeurn and Pring Proel, and Lean Mang and Vunneng Leng, commissioned and acquired by the Bophana Audiovisual Resource Center in Cambodia offers fresh perspectives of humanity, perseverance and family from which to relate our own lives, while IraQueer’s work is part of an animated series, produced in local dialects, to educate about misconceptions and prejudices effecting LGBT+ people in Iraq, labelling them as mentally ill, sinners, and outsiders.