Marcos Serafim

Marcos Serafim Trailers

Red Masisi TrailerAutoimmune TrailerThe Frightened President Trailer

Marcos Serafim is a Brazilian artist and researcher; Assistant Professor of Photography, Video, and Imaging at the University of Arizona in Tucson. He works with video and sound across theatrical exhibition, installation, and performance. He has exhibited work at the 5th and 6th Ghetto Bienalle in Haiti; the Oscar Niemeyer Museum in Brazil; the Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center (EMPAC), the Queens Museum, and Flux Factory in New York. His work has been screened in film festivals in multiple countries, including the Cine Esquema Novo Film Festival in Brazil (Audience Choice Second Best Short), Israel`s Horn Festival for Experimental Films (Jury’s Second Prize), Northampton Film Festival in Massachusetts (Jury’s Honorable Mention for Short Experimental) and Faito Doc Festival in Italy (Young Jury’s Honorable Mention for Short Documentary). Serafim holds a BA in Film and Video from Parana State University in Brazil, an MA in Studio Art from Eastern Illinois University, and an MFA in Studio Art from Michigan State University.

Most Popular Marcos Serafim Trailers

Total trailers found: 5

The Frightened President Trailer (2020)

04 April 2020

In a fictitious country, the newly elected president and first lady are faced with supernatural powers that put their love to the test.

Hollywood Trailer (2009)

20 January 2009

Autoimmune Trailer (2020)

08 September 2020

A non-human entity complicates common understandings of HIV and queerness. With agencyover data, it distorts images from archives and makes them speak.

GEDE VIZYON Trailer (2018)

24 November 2018

"GEDE VIZYON" takes its viewer on an unusual tour of the Grand Cemetery of Port-au-Prince, Haiti. While exploring the material and immaterial intricacies of the cultural, spiritual and historical space that is the cemetery, the camera takes on a life of its own.

Red Masisi Trailer (2021)

06 September 2021

Haitian artist and activist Sanba Yonel creates a queer tribute to the Lwa, Vodou gods and goddesses who once inspired a revolution.