Directed by Aideen Barry, “Folds/Pleats”, presenting the modernist architecture of Kaunas, Lithuania and dedicated to the year of European Capital of Culture Year of Culture, is starting its festival journey. On April 10, the film will be screened for the first time in Canada at The Architecture + Design Film Festival (A+DFF) in Winnipeg.

The annual film event showcases critically acclaimed films focusing on the importance of architecture and design in everyday life. The festival presents a wide range of design-oriented topics from architecture and the city to graphic and product design.

It was the year 2019 when the Kaunas 2022 team decided to make sense of the modernist architecture awaiting UNESCO recognition in a unique film. The renowned Irish artist Aideen Barry, the winner of the prestigious Golden Fleece Award, whose work is exhibited in museums, contemporary art centres and private galleries worldwide, was invited to implement the idea.

The film was made through an unusual process. The artist’s creative practice is based on community involvement: the plot is based on the stories told by the citizens, and the residents of Kaunas become characters in the film. The surrealistic “Folds/Pleats” combines the city’s heritage, history, and its people’s fictional novels.

The title of the architectural film is a metaphor for the recurring elements in interwar architecture and the creative process itself: the plot is folded from thousands of photographs. Stories fold between stories, buildings between buildings. The viewers, together with the characters, peek into the interiors of the buildings, marvel at the typical rounded windows of Kaunas and the elegant staircase doors, and gaze at the ceiling as if lying on a carpet with a cigar smouldering in between his fingers.

“With the whole creative team, we waited long and anxiously to see which international festival would host the first screening. It is incredible that the magical story of Kaunas Modernism is travelling so far away, to another continent, to Winnipeg in Canada. We are thrilled,” says Viltė Migonytė-Petrulienė, the Modernism for the Future programme curator.

Link to the trailer

Lithuanian audiences will be able to see the architecture film in cinemas later this year. The first screening is scheduled for 21 September 2022 in the place where the film was born, Kaunas, at the newly renovated historical Romuva Cinema. It will then travel to cinemas across Lithuania.

The film was initiated and supported by the Kaunas – European Capital of Culture 2022 programme Modernism for the Future.

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JGgDVpe00vk

Photo author Martynas Plepys