At Narratives for Justice, our work emerges from collaboration, memory, and creative resistance.
We don’t document pain from a distance; we co-create with those who live it.
Through visual art, sound, performance, and film, we build spaces where silenced stories find form and where the act of remembering becomes a collective refusal to forget.

Films & Documentaries

Stories in Motion. Memory on Screen.
Our film work centers on storytelling from the margins, personal, political, and unflinching.
We produce short documentaries, video testimonies, and experimental films that explore themes of disappearance, survival, exile, and resistance.
We collaborate with storytellers, researchers, and community members to craft visual narratives that honor the complexity of lived experience, blending fact and feeling, archive and imagination.

Visual & Participatory Exhibitions

Images that Remember. Frames that Resist.
This space brings together photography, illustration, and visual installations shaped through participatory methods.
We work with survivors, displaced communities, and artists to co-create exhibitions that don’t simply portray what they witness.
Here, art is not decoration; it is a site of memory, layered with testimony, absence, and the will to return.
These exhibitions may take the form of photo essays, memory walls, or interactive installations where communities reclaim their narratives through image-making.

Sound, Story, and Performance

Voices Unheard. Echoes We Carry.
Memory lives in sound in a whisper, a scream, a silence.
Our sound-based work includes oral history archives, audio storytelling, and experimental compositions created with and by survivors.
In addition, we facilitate participatory theater labs and community-led performances that transform everyday stories into collective rituals of truth-telling.
Through voice, body, and presence, performance becomes a space where memory is not only remembered but also felt, shared, and witnessed.

Echoes, Voices, and Experiments