The Garden Sees Fire
Synopsis
A mystical tale of cloaked identities, systemic traumas, and insatiable consumption: The ecology burns, reclaiming its environs.
This visionary, artist driven stop-motion animation synchronously incorporates buried and hand painted 16mm film frame-by-frame with drawing and armatured puppet animations. A devotion to time, craft, and materiality creates a surreal disorienting world-within-a-world of carefully composed and orchestrated animations infused with unpredictability and chaos.
The original sound design conceptually conjoins the worlds of the 16mm natural imagery and the constructed mise en scène of the characters through an intermediary space where auditory reality mingles with visual fantasy in a magically emotive transitory experience.
THE GARDEN SEES FIRE (2024), 15:00, stereo sound, 4K
The second film in the Shadow Selves trilogy.
Best Animated Short, Special Mention, Atlanta Film Festival 2025
Best Experimental Animation Nominee, Portland Festival of Cinema, Animation & Technology, 2025
Film Screening & Ticket Information
When & Where to See this Film!
…COMING SOON…
Film Information
From the Director
Director Statement
The Garden Sees Fire interlaces real world imagery with fanciful animations through labor intensive analogue processes which took five years to complete. The essence of stop-motion animation is questioning and transfiguring reality. By infusing elements of the human world with the fantastical, unusual beings can exist amongst us, lurking around the periphery of our awareness, amidst the unseen.
Armatured puppets and two-dimensional hinged drawn characters interact with sentient
scenery in richly textured and lushly hued sets of dense forests and dried prairies. The puppets, drawn characters, and armatured trees and plants are created from a sundry of organic and inorganic materials; bringing elements of sensual touch, curiosity, and materiality to their physical beings. The visual tactility conceptually references the handmade processes inherent in every aspect of my stop-motion animations.
16mm footage of rural croplands, forests, prairies, wetlands, and lakes is buried, degrading and transforming the landscapes. Flashes of color and blinding blankness disintegrates the peaceful imagery, infusing it with visual chaos. The sets utilize a rear-projection screen as their backdrop where the altered 16mm is advanced frame-by-frame synchronously with stop-motion animations of the armatured puppets, trees, and crafted plants in the foreground. This unique analogue filmmaking technique conjoins the external natural world in the 16mm with the internal constructed world of the characters, creating a surreal, disorienting concoction of plausibility and impossibility, confounding what is real and imagined; the essence of a mystical tale. Shadowed animated silhouettes dwell in this intermediary space, evoking fleeting nightmares, just on the brink of our consciousness and grasp. Additionally, meticulous two-dimensional animations of characters are hand drawn movement-by-movement in their entirety while silk dyes are painted frame-by-frame directly onto the 16mm film’s emulsion, combining to create intimate investigations into psychological manifestations of dreams and visions.
The entire soundscape for The Garden Sees Fire is crafted independently from the animations. The sound design incorporates found and bent environmental sounds and foley work that adds psychological complexity to the characters, scenes, and implied narrative structures. Original melodies played on a shruti box and select Psalms sung, hummed, and chanted, infuse a sense of mystery and timelessness. The aural landscape conceptually intertwines auditory reality, employing recorded sounds from the human world, with visual fantasy; merging our worlds.
Note: The Garden Sees Fire has no dialogue and thus no subtitles. The Psalms are layered, in chorus, and in rounds with one another; evoking a dream-like consciousness, as if heard from the ethos, beyond awareness.
Director Biography
Kiera Faber (Luxembourger/American) is a stop-frame animator and experimental filmmaker. She has made art by hand since childhood; inspired by her love of materiality and early memories of autonomy and possibility experienced in her mother’s ceramic studio. Faber has received significant artistic recognition through a Fellowship in Media Arts from the McKnight Foundation, two film production grants from the Jerome Foundation, and numerous regional grants supporting her filmmaking. Her award winning work is internationally screened and exhibited at film festivals, galleries, and museums, most notably at the Atlanta Film Festival (Best Animated Short, Special Mention, 2025), the Seattle International Film Festival, and the South Bend Museum of Art, DeVos Art Museum, Museum of Contemporary Photography, George Eastman Museum, and the Walker Art Center. Faber creates the entire world and experience of her films; from concept and design to image and sound. Her visionary creations have screened in fifteen countries and in a retrospective screening at the Cinematheque at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and an upcoming animation retrospective at MinnAnimate. She received her MFA from the Visual Studies Workshop after completing a BA in Psychology from the University of Rochester. Faber currently lives and works in Philadelphia.
Credits
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Kiera FaberDirector & Writer
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Kiera FaberAnimator
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Benjamin FaberAnimator
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Kiera FaberSound Design
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Benjamin FaberSound Design
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Benjamin FaberEditor
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Noah Dor LindVoice
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