If the black zone conceals images, and the grey zone suspends meaning, the white zone is the unexplored territory where forms are free to emerge. These letters share fragments from that territory: films in development, visual research, teaching, and reflections on Organic Motion - no more than 4 Letters Yearly.
Letters From The WHITE ZONE
A territory of emergence
Enter the unexplored territory where cinematic forms begin to emerge.
More than a newsletter, Letters from the White Zone is a seasonal correspondence sent from the threshold where perception, research, memory, and future film forms are still becoming.This is not a stream of updates. It is a territory of emergence. A place where images are not yet fixed, where thought remains mobile, and where cinema can still hesitate between sensation, rhythm, concept, and world.
Why this territory exists
On myfilmstravel.com, finished works, talks, films, and research pathways reveal forms that have already reached visibility. Letters from the White Zone begins earlier. It inhabits the moment before stabilisation:
when a visual motif starts to insist
when a familiar place transforms into a mental threshold
when a narrative structure appears in writing before being understood
when a camera movement becomes a theoretical proposition
when a future work is still only a trace
This is the territory where those signals can be shared.
What you will receive
No more than 4 letters per year. Each seasonal edition may include:
notes on Organic Motion
reflections on perception, rhythm, memory, and cinematic time
visual and conceptual fragments
traces of works still becoming
echoes from talks, universities, festivals, and artistic research contexts
rare motifs that may later crystallise into films
Occasionally, a rare White Signal may appear when a form reaches the threshold of visibility.
For whom?
This territory is for:
readers who see cinema as a transformation of perception
filmmakers and students
universities and research-creation environments
festival programmers and curators
collaborators, early allies, and future partners
those interested in how forms begin
Languages: In English and French