Jack Faber
Jack Faber is a filmmaker-researcher whose practice investigates the intersections of militarization, ecology, technology and anticipatory imaginaries. His work merges subversive storytelling with rigorous research, offering fresh perspectives on historical and emerging narratives, myth-making, and contemporary crises. Faber often explores interdisciplinary methodologies, combining cinema and animal studies, cultural analysis, and philosophical inquiry to create richly layered texts and participatory artworks.
His recent project, Accelerated Landscapes, exhibited at CCA Tashkent, reflects his commitment to making complex ideas accessible through compelling visual forms and public engagement. He has published three books, contributed to a range of publications, and exhibited award-winning films and installations internationally.
In recent years, Faber has focused on vulnerable climate frontiers, particularly in the High Arctic, where the entanglement of environmental change and militarization profoundly affects ecosystems, local communities, and more-than-human life. Through these contested landscapes, he examines the infrastructures that shape collective understandings of conflict, progress, and survival in increasingly fragile environments.