The 25th Seoul International ALT Cinema & Media Festival(www.nemaf.net) successfully concluded its seven-day journey as a moving image festival by announcing the winners of the Alternative Moving Image Art Award. © NeMaf

The 25th Seoul International ALT Cinema & Media Festival(www.nemaf.net) successfully concluded its seven-day journey as a moving image festival by announcing the winners of the Alternative Moving Image Art Award.

The 25th Seoul International ALT Cinema & Media Festival, Korea’s only de-genre alternative film festival encompassing both film and exhibition, hereafter NeMaf2025, received an enthusiastic response by presenting screenings and multiscreen exhibitions of 93 works from more than 30 countries, including alternative cinema, experimental film, and video art, at KT&G Sangsangmadang Hongdae Cinema and KT&G Sangsangmadang Hongdae Gallery from August 7 to 13.

This year, among a total of 1,025 submitted works for the Alternative Moving Image Art Selection Program, the competition section, 45 works, 39 screenings and 6 exhibitions, were selected as finalists and screened/exhibited during NeMaf2025.

The NeMaf competition section consists of the screening section, comprising genres such as alternative cinema, digital moving image art, and documentary, including the Korean Competition, Glocal New Works Competition, and Feature Film section, and the New Media Exhibition section, which presents all forms of media art without genre distinction, including media performance and multichannel video. It also drew the greatest attention from audiences. Each year, works are selected and awarded in order to encourage and support boundary-crossing alternative moving image art by directors and artists from Korea and abroad.

The winners of this year’s NeMaf2025 Alternative Moving Image Art Award are as follows.

▶ Glocal Section Best Work Award: Happiness | Firat Yücel
▶ Korean Section Best Work Award: Monstro Obscura | Hong Seunggi
▶ Korean Section Artist Award: One Room Triptych | Yang Seokyoung
▶ Feature Film Best Work Award: Milch ins Feuer | Justine Bauer
▶ Feature Film Artist Award: Every Single Dot | Lee Sojung
▶ New Media Artist Award: No is canceling | Woohak Studio(Woo Hyunju, Park Jiyoon)
▶ Special Mention by the Selection Committee: I found my shadow after a long time | Heejung Choi

Happiness, which won the Glocal Section Best Work Award, is a desktop cinema work by Firat Yücel, an artist who continues his practice between Türkiye and the Netherlands. The work weaves the psychology and media experiences of contemporary people, as well as globally overlapping landscapes of violence and anxiety, through an ethical gaze.

The narrator, who observes protests in Amsterdam, police violence, and conflicts in the Middle East through real-time social media feeds, and the sleep disorder he experiences, vividly reflect the stress of an age of information overload. The work was evaluated as resonating with this year’s NeMaf slogan, “Ethics of Digital Moving Images,” in that it actively draws in the cyclical relationship that directors and audiences form with smartphone or laptop displays.

Monstro Obscura, which won the Korean Best Work Award, is a work by Hong Seunggi that expands the death of film, by comparing it to reality, into an apocalyptic future. Within the atmosphere of classic Hollywood horror films, it evokes the aesthetics of experimental film through the physical manipulation of film, while incarnating film, which holds the memory of the world, in the form of a monster. In doing so, it performatively traverses contemporary political reality and records new memories in a documentary manner. It also drew attention for its intermedial practice, including the addition of AI-generated narration.

One Room Triptych by Yang Seokyoung, who received the Korean Artist Award, was praised for her directorial ability to skillfully weave together various forms, including moving image, text, 3D animation, and performance, in relation to the death of someone close, which she had long contemplated. In particular, the condensed montages that reveal the thematic consciousness of the work left a strong impression.

Milch ins Feuer by director Justine Bauer, which won the Feature Film Best Work Award, was praised for delicately portraying various themes and concerns through the everyday lives of four women and their mother, set in a disappearing farming village, while demonstrating bold and new moving image aesthetics.


The winners are taking a group photograph. © NeMaf

Every Single Dot by director Lee Sojung, which received the Feature Film Artist Award, captured the attention of audiences through an intriguing phenomenological exploration that microscopically approaches, while infinitely expanding, the camera as a tool, film, the light captured by image sensors, its mode of existence and space, and the ways in which it is transmitted.

The New Media Artist Award was given to WooHak Studio(Woo Hyunju, Park Jiyoon) for No is canceling.

Using an AI segmentation model and real-time body recognition, the work erases the audience’s body from the screen and reconstructs the residual signals, or noise, left in that empty space as an entity called “Mx.NO” within a CRT multichannel screen. Audiences switch channels with a remote control and experientially explore “who is seen and who is erased.” The interaction, which combines the classical medium of the CRT with the operation of a remote control, translates a critical perspective on today’s technological systems into the bodily experience of the audience within the exhibition space, receiving strong responses from a wide range of viewers.

I found my shadow after a long time by Heejung Choi, which received a Special Mention, is a five-channel essay film that interweaves scenes connecting sentences excerpted from the novel Peter Schlemihl with five important contemporary keywords, structuring them through loss–confusion–forgetting–concealment–removal. Through the rhythm of voice-over, editing, and sound, the work translates a classic fable into a contemporary ethical question, offering a broad audience an immersion that goes beyond a minimal sense of empathy.

The NeMaf2025 Selection Committee stated, “The works of this year’s NeMaf2025 offered moments in which diversity could be seen in both form and subject, ranging from the very familiar to powerful themes such as women, consideration of history, and wounds left on the legacy for future generations.” They added, “It was a meaningful festival that was able to present newness to a broader public through alternative moving image art, including complex and multilayered experiences that encompass and cross the boundaries of nearly every category of moving image media art, fresh formal beauty, and engaging storytelling.”

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