Rhea Storr

Most Popular Rhea Storr Trailers

Total trailers found: 9

MASS Trailer (2020)

19 May 2020

As we follow The Seeker, who moves between the city and the sanctuary, "MASS" carves out the intimate communal spaces and intangible signals that characterise the contemporary Black experience.

Through a Shimmering Prism, We Made a Way Trailer (2022)

29 March 2022

A critical reflection on the black diaspora, the architectural history of colonialism and black bodies in a performative walk through London and Nassau along alternative routes.

A Protest, A Celebration, A Mixed Message Trailer (2019)

25 March 2019

Celebration is protest at Leeds West Indian Carnival. Following Mama Dread's, a troupe whose carnival theme is Windrush immigration to the UK, we are asked to consider the visibility of black bodies in rural spaces.

Junkanoo Talk Trailer (2018)

09 June 2018

Junkanoo Talk investigates the language of celebration through carnival. It employs the techniques of costume crafting particular to Junkanoo - a carnival of the Bahamas.

Madness Remixed Trailer (2021)

09 June 2021

Madness Remixed explores the image of exoticism portrayed by Josephine Baker in a 1926 performance entitled The Madness of the Day in which Baker wore the infamous skirt, made of only bananas, that played into stereotypes of Black women as hyper-sexualised.

Okay Keskidee! Let Me See Inside Trailer (2025)

11 May 2025

A love letter to the UK Caribbean diaspora, exploring black histories, physical spaces and notions of community.

Here Is the Imagination of the Black Radical Trailer (2020)

07 October 2020

Afrofuturism and carnival as resistance at the Junkanoo festival in the Bahamas, from Aesthetica Art Prize winner Rhea Storr.

The Image that Spits, the Eye that Accumulates Trailer (2017)

01 January 2017

‘The Image that Spits, the Eye that Accumulates’ is a 11 minute digital and Kodachrome Super 16mm film converted to HD by artist filmmaker Rhea Storr.

New Territories (Spectacle is King) Trailer (2025)

16 October 2025

Drawing inspiration from Isaac Julien’s 1984 work Territories, this incisive film traverses six carnivals across England, critically examining the politics of image-making and spectatorship.