Cristina Perincioli


Cristina Perincioli is a Swiss film director, writer, multimedia producer and webauthor. She has lived in Berlin, Germany since 1968.

Life and career

Cristina Perincioli was born in Bern, Switzerland, as third child of the renowned sculptor Marcel Perincioli and his wife Hélène Perincioli-Jörns, a Handweaving Artist. She is the granddaughter of the bernese Sculptor Etienne Perincioli. In 1968, Cristina Perincioli moved to Berlin to study at the Deutsche Film- und Fernsehakademie Berlin. This motivated her to documentary films and feature films. Her docufiction about a women's strike, For Women: Chapter 1, from 1971 is one of the first contributions to Women's cinema in West Germany; the film won the "Award of the Film Journalists" at the International Short Film Festival Oberhausen 1972. Harun Farocki writes: "You can see how much fun liberating knowledge can be."
In 1969 she was active in the anarchist journal agit 883, co-founder of both the Lesbian movement in 1972 and 1973 of the first "Women's Center", and 1977 of the "Rape Crisis Center”, all in Berlin. In 1975 she wrote with her partner Cäcilia Rentmeister the screenplay for the first feature film about a lesbian relationship produced for German television.
In 1977 Perincioli founded the Sphinx Filmproduktion GmbH, with Marianne Gassner as a production manager. The documentary fiction The Power of Men is the Patience of Women is also shown internationally. From an interview with Perincioli:
Michael Althen described 2008 in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung functions and effects of the film as a "... documentary fiction in which residents of Berlin's first women's shelter replay and comment their experiences with domestic violence. It's not about an individual fate, but about recurring patterns of violence and regret on men's side, about guilt and shame on women's side, about humiliating experiences in offices and the whole vicious circles of social and emotional dependencies. The film is strongest when articulating the silence of the social environment and lack of moral courage."
Perincioli published as radio- and book author. Inspired by research in London and Harrisburg, USA, she contributed to the public debate and awareness about domestic violence and about the risks of nuclear energy.
From 1990 she developed interactive storytelling, and on this basis, a first adventure game with interactive video, and created seven computer serious games for the public space
She has taught film production at KIMC Kenya Institute of Mass Communication in Nairobi and the Universität der Künste Berlin, Computer Animation at the Deutsche Film- und Fernsehakademie Berlin, the Film School in Potsdam-Babelsberg and the Merz Academy of Art and Design Stuttgart, and Multimedia Design at the School of Design in Bern and Basel until 1997.
From the late 1990s on, Perincioli ventured to use interactive media for "sensitive issues" such as sexual and domestic violence; she created – employing user-friendly methods such as Discovery learning – award-winning web platforms for understanding, counselling and preventing violence, funded by the German Federal Environmental Foundation, the Foundation Deutsche Jugendmarke, the Daphne Programme of the European Commission and the German Federal Ministry for Family Affairs, Senior Citizens, Women and Youth.
In 2015, Cristina Perincioli's new book Berlin wird feministisch. Das Beste, was von der 68er Bewegung blieb was published in Germany.
She describes the beginnings of the German second women ́s movement in the revolutionary years 1968–1974 in West Berlin.
Through a wealth of documents, 80 photographs, reflections and interviews with 28 feminist activists, she shows where she and her fellow campaigners drew their ideas from, as well as the fury and strength they needed to put these ideas into practice. Perincioli also considers the beginnings of the women ́s movement as an example of how the modernization of society was initiated by "direct democratic" actions.
According to Sonya Winterberg the book shows that the second German women's movement has "many mothers":

Claire Horst also emphasizes the new "look behind the scenes":

An English version of the complete book, translated by Pamela Selwyn, is published online: see "Websites" below.

Awards

1972 Perincioli received the "Award of the Film Journalists" at the International Short Film Festival Oberhausen for her thesis film at the Deutsche Film- und Fernsehakademie Berlin "For Women: Chapter 1". Gwendolyn Audrey Foster writes about her directorial work: "Cristina Perincioli is an important figure in the tradition of Straub, Huillet an Fassbinder...". Best rating for the CD-ROM "Save Selma" in Feibel's “Software For Children”-Ratings 1999 and 2000. For her web platform "www.4uman.info" to prevent violence in relationships, Perincioli received at the 6th Berlin Crime Prevention Day 2005 the Securitas Award for the "innovative character of the site in violence prevention." Her website www.spass-oder-gewalt.de about prevention of sexual violence among young people in 2007 received the Thuringian Women Media Award.

Works

Film