Rafael Hastings
Directing
Known For

No description available.
The Unconditioned Unconcealment

Rafael Hastings superimposes several versions of the face of his friend, the musician and percussionist Manongo Mujica, showing the multiplicity of images that can derive from the recording of a movement from the same point towards the four cardinal points (East to West and North to South, respectively) and the musician's face becomes a kind of "fifth cardinal point".
Peruvian
Rafael Hastings was invited to participate in the Painted Bodies Experimental Workshop in Santiago, Chile, where painters from across Latin America were invited to replace painting on inert canvases with interventions on living bodies, almost as if they were canvases. In Hastings' case, he transformed his intervention into an original performance recorded on video.
Cuerpo Pintado

Consisted of a stop-motion trek through the different spaces and objects of Rafael Hastings' house in Lima, prior to it being devastated in the October 3rd earthquake of 1974.
We Are Not A Family

This is a personal and family film that documents the early years of the author's daughter, Aiñari Indacochea von Mollendorff. Filming began in 1972, when his wife, the choreographer Yvonne von Mollendorff, was still pregnant, and was completed in 1978 when his daughter was four years old. Aiñari's early life is recorded on video and superimposed to create a dialogue between different time periods. The expressions of wonder, emotion, and joy on the four-year-old girl's face, reflecting on her own growth, are juxtaposed with images of her as a younger child with her mother.
Peruvian Born

This is a choreography performed by the actor Ricardo Santa Cruz of the Cuatrotablas theater company where, through the effect of 'chroma', parts of the actor's body limbs, such as the arm and fist, are superimposed.
Canto de la Tierra
A “scientific dissemination” film that narrated the fertilization process based on a detailed filming of a Paracas culture cloth that symbolically and subtly depicted said process.
En el Árbol del Mundo

Produced by “ediciones tercermundo” of the Center for Art and Communication of Buenos Aires, this film is a “behind the scenes” look at situations that go unnoticed during a modeling session (in this case, the session of the Argentine photographer Juan Carlos Franceschini).
What Do You Really Know About Fashion?

This work, created in collaboration with Manongo Mujica, seeks to recapture the sound of Paracas, not only as a landscape and atmosphere, but also by rescuing the music of its inhabitants. The use of the gong, an ancient Eastern percussion instrument, blends with the sounds of the waves on the Paracas shore, generating a ritualistic act of connection with the forces of nature—seen as deities by the ancient Peruvians.
Ceremony
Echoes is a work that seeks to transform the idea of a sound echo into a visual one.