Philosophy

Dogma 23: from disposable scroll to deliberate viewing.

The framework argues for slower cinematic attention and a return to physical, curated, shared viewing conditions.

When content becomes disposable, presence becomes the medium.

In the source corpus, Dogma 23 appears as a response to digital attention fragmentation: restoring value to moving images through context, duration, and collective encounter.

Execution principles

  • Film as event and dialogue space, not only as a streamable file
  • Curated display and process trace (text, frames, production context)
  • Linking artistic form with local and social utility
  • Long-form attention as a condition for cultural sustainability

Dogma 23 context

Dogma 23 is framed as a response to fragmented attention conditions in which film is often consumed too quickly to generate shared meaning. This page presents the philosophy as a working framework that links production, exhibition, and dialogue with audiences. Instead of assuming distribution alone is enough, the focus is on context, duration, and space for interpretation. The goal is to restore cinema as a collective encounter where viewers can engage critically and socially with the work.

Principles

The principles of Dogma 23 prioritize slower reception, clear curatorial intention, and transparent process trace. That includes choosing screening settings deliberately, shaping post-screening conversations, and documenting decisions that influenced the work. When audiences can see how and why content was produced and presented, trust and participation deepen. In this way, philosophy becomes operational practice rather than abstract positioning, helping teams align artistic direction with public-facing responsibility.

Practice

In practice, the framework means adapting each program to local conditions and available resources without reducing artistic ambition. Screenings and workshops are planned as connected events that leave educational and social traces within the host community. Film is treated as a starting point for collaboration, learning, and future production cycles rather than as an isolated output. The archive therefore records methods and process choices alongside outcomes, so teams can reuse and improve what already works.

Public function

The public function of Dogma 23 treats culture as long-term infrastructure that helps communities articulate priorities and needs. When film is used as a meeting space, discussions can extend beyond the screening to include education, ecology, and social cohesion. That function depends less on spectacle and more on continuity and trust between organizers, collaborators, and returning audiences. The philosophy therefore supports durable public relevance through repeated, carefully structured encounters.