Don’t Look at the Finger (2017) follows the rituals of a West-African wedding ceremony taking place inside a church. The title references a quote by Bruce Lee from the 1973 Kung-Fu film Enter the Dragon.
The film is paried here with Ang Lee’s classic wuxia tale, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2001). Winner of 4 Academy Awards, Lee revels in the balletic acrobatics that exemplify this genre of films, while luxuriating in the magnificent vistas of 19th century China.
Don't Look at the Finger (PG), 2017, 17 minutes, dir. Hetain Patel followed by
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (12), 2001, 120 hours, dir. Ang Lee
Shot in slow motion with an orchestral soundtrack taking it into the realms of epic cinema, The Jump (2015) simultaneously imitates the production values of big budget action movies, while revealing the artist’s hopes and dreams as, dressed in a homemade Spiderman outfit leaping off his grandmother’s living room sofa, his extended family look on.
The film is paired with Spiderman (2002), the first of three collaborations between Tobey Maguire and director Sam Raimi that breathed new life into the Marvel comic strip.
The Jump (Part 2) (U), 2015, 6 minutes 30 seconds, dir. Hetain Patel followed by
Spiderman (12A), 2002, 121 minutes, dir. Sam Raimi
Landing (2022) responds to the history of the Mayflower and to the events of 2020 around the world. Produced in collaboration with the people of Nottinghamshire, the film draws on ideas about our relationship to place, belonging, and community, wherever we land.
The film is paired with Coming to America (1988) in which director Jon Landis reunited with Eddie Murphy.
Landing (U), 2022, 10 minutes, dir. Hetain Patel followed by
Coming to America (15), 1988, 116 minutes, dir. John Landis
His films, sculptures, live performances, paintings and photographs have been shown worldwide in galleries, theatres and on iconic public screens at sites including Piccadilly Circus, London, and Times Square, New York. His works have been presented at the Venice Biennale, Ullens Centre for Contemporary Art, Beijing, and in London at Tate Modern and Sadler’s Wells.
Patel's work uses choreography, text and popular culture to explore identity and freedom, appearing in multiple formats and media to reach the widest possible audience. His online video and performance work, which includes his 2013 TED talk of titled, ‘Who Am I? Think Again’, has been watched over 50 million times.
Patel is represented by Chatterjee & Lal, Mumbai, and is a supported artist at Copperfield, London, a Patron of QUAD, Derby, and a trustee of the Liverpool Biennial. He is the winner of the Film London Jarman Award, 2019, and Kino Der Kunst Festival’s Best International Film 2020, and was selected for British Art Show 9, 2021/22. In 2021 Patel received a Paul Hamlyn Foundation Artist Award, a Henry Moore Foundation Award, declined a British Empire Medal and was a judge on the Sky Arts television series, Landmark.
Patel's works are in public and private collections in the UK and internationally, including Tate, British Council, Arts Council England, Government Art Collection, Manchester Art Gallery, M+ Museum Hong Kong, KNMA New Delhi, and Fondazione In Between Art Film, Rome.