SECTIONS
[01] 

March to July, 2026
LAB
Post-Extractivist
Assemblies


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The Post‑Extractive Assemblies Lab functions as a collaborative space for image‑based research and creation. Participants co‑develop visual methods and address the shared problem of ecologies of violence, extraction, and post‑extractivist thought.  


[02]

16 April to June, 2026
FILM SERIES
Projecting
Post-extractivism

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The Projecting Post‑Extractivism film series presents a curated selection of documentary‑led works—essay films, collaborative documentaries, and artist films—that explore the connections between extractivist violence, colonial histories, authoritarian regimes, and military infrastructures.


[03]

8-9 October, 2026
WORKSHOP
Post-extractivist
Propositions

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The workshop brings together scholars, artist-researchers, and filmmakers to explore how moving images reveal and challenge extractivism while experimenting with post-extractivist propositions. We focus on non-fiction practices -including collaborative, observational, investigative, and experimental documentaries and essay films- and how they render the logics, infrastructures, temporalities, and affective dimensions of extraction visible while tracing resistance and imagining forms of life and organisation beyond extractivism.










MOVING [IMAGES] POST-EXTRACTIVISM
Moving [Images] Post‑Extractivism is a year‑long programme centred on moving images to think with and against contemporary regimes of extraction. Across a lab, a film series, and a workshop, we ask: How can moving images reveal the ecologies of extractive violence while reconfiguring what we see, feel, and do? How can cinema help imagine post‑extractive world configurations?

Post-extractivism, as both a framework and a horizon, points toward forms of life and organisation that move beyond the ongoing devastation of territories and communities in the name of so-called necessary resources, progress, and development.
















A year-long programme led by Salomé Lopes Coelho, as part of the ERC project Ecologies of Violence and the Network for Environmental Humanities, Utrecht University.