
Rodrigo Ribeiro-Andrade
Directing
Biography
Rodrigo Ribeiro-Andrade is an Afro-Brazilian artist that makes experimental documentaries. His works have been invited for screenings at numerous film festivals and exhibitions, including the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), Berlin Critics Week, DocLisboa, Festival do Rio, Barcelona, Sheffield Doc/Fest, IndieLisboa, among others.
Known For

When the flowers of the Mari tree bloom, dreams arise. The words of a great shaman lead to an oneiric experience through the synergy between cinema and the Yanomami dream, presenting poetics and teachings of the peoples of the forest.
Mãri Hi: The Tree of Dream

With a constellation of black voices and presences, the short film takes a dizzying journey between ancestral and contemporary territories. On this mystical journey, sound and image devours celebrate the black poetry that anchors memories and discovers futures.
Solmatalua

An eye-opening he said/she said perspective on timbó fishing, a traditional practice of the Indigenous Yanomami people that involves the entire community and a vine used to stun fish, seamlessly blends preservation documentary, origin myth, magic realism and the reality of mining and economic threats to Yanomami culture in this formally inventive reclamation.
Fishing with Timbó

One of the greatest pests on the planet, the evil ants destroy the forest to protect their family. Memories of the covid-19 pandemic, eroded by ignorance and negationism. What's left in this great country of worms and viruses?
Republic of Evil Ants

A Yanomami woman watches a shaman prepare the Yãkoana, food for the spirits. Based on the narrative of a young indigenous woman, the Yãkoana that feeds the Xapiri and allows shamans to enter the world of spirits also proposes a meeting of perspectives and imaginations.
A Woman Thinking

Memories of the Brazilian slavery past overflow into ethereal landscapes and harrowing noises. Through a visual poetic essay, an intimate and sensory journey reflects on the silencing and invisibility of black people in diaspora.
The White Death of the Black Wizard

No description available.
Ratoeira

No description available.