They Also Serve: Scottish Women Documentary Makers 1935 – Present

Beykoz Kundura has been designing special programmes since 2020 that focus on remembering the pioneering women of cinema history and making their creative contributions visible once again, every March. This year, with the support of the British Council, we turn our focus to pioneering women documentary filmmakers from Scotland.


Having taken part in the Momentum programme in 2024—a delegate initiative that brings cultural practitioners from around the world into Edinburgh’s festival scene, Scotland’s wider cultural sector, and its international creative community—in collaboration with the British Council and Creative Scotland, Beykoz Kundura has designed this special programme with the aim of developing sustainable creative collaborations with Scotland.


Co-curated in collaboration with the Invisible Women collective and the Scottish Documentary Institute, this programme approaches cinema history through a feminist perspective, building strong connections between past and present. The films presented in the programme will meet documentary film audiences in Turkey, in Istanbul, for the first time.


Prior to the screenings, we will host a conversation with the curators focusing on the visibility of women in cinema history, opening a collective discussion on women’s presence in creative production from past to present. Following the screenings, we will come together in the cinema foyer to celebrate International Women’s Day with a live DJ performance by Ladies On Records, a collective that researches, archives, and brings visibility to women musicians active during the 1960s, 70s, and 80s.

We believe in ensuring that creative women are not forgotten, that their labour becomes more visible, and that these stories are multiplied through solidarity. We come together to tell more stories, to remember what has been told, and to collectively expand our shared memory.


#WomenPowerInCulture

Daha Fazla Daha Az

Scottish filmmaker John Grierson is often described as “the father of documentary,” in deference to his important role in the development of non-fiction cinema across the first half of the 20th century. Grierson’s work brought him worldwide fame – ask any documentary film student, and they’ll likely know his name.

Less widely recognised however, is the contribution made by John Grierson’s sisters, Marion and Ruby, who were also documentary makers of great ability and vision. After starting out as their brother’s assistants, both Marion and Ruby made boundary pushing documentaries across the 1930s and early 1940s. Until recently however, their work was overshadowed by their brother’s legacy, their story left out of histories of cinema, and their films rarely screened.

This programme, co-curated by Invisible Women and the Scottish Documentary Institute, brings together work spanning almost a century made by Scottish women documentarians. Taking the story of the Griersons as a starting point, these films demonstrate how the sisters’ legacy resonates through time. Experimental aesthetics, hybrid forms and themes around invisible labour, lost histories and untold women’s stories, echo throughout this selection, drawing unexpected connections between past and present.

Northern Outpost (Jenny Brown and CJ Cayley, 1940, 15 min)

A charming introduction to the landscape and traditions of the Shetland Isles, beautifully shot by Jenny Brown (later Gilbertson).

Beside the Seaside (Marion Grierson, 1935, 23 min)

In this beguiling postcard, Marion Grierson experiments with innovative cinematic techniques to capture a woozy, sun-soaked day at the British seaside.

Water to the Wall (Becky Manson, 2025, 13 min)

An Orkney-set portrait of an island community through time, where the sea has always defined life.

Portrait of Ga (Margaret Tait, 1952, 4 min).

Although often underestimated in her lifetime, Orcadian artist Margaret Tait is now celebrated as one of Scotland’s foremost experimental filmmakers.

They Also Serve (Ruby Grierson, 1940, 8 min)

In this dramatized documentary, Ruby Grierson offers an empathetic and touching story centring the plight of a wartime housewife.

The Sound of the Wind (Maria Pankova, 2023, 17 min)

A Ukrainian refugee living in Scotland struggles to reconcile her new life with the experiences of her husband, serving thousands of miles away on the frontline.

Friday, 6 March

18:00–18:45

Pre-Screening Conversation

A pre-screening conversation on the visibility of women in documentary cinema history, with the participation of the Invisible Women collective and the Scottish Documentary Institute from Scotland.

(Simultaneous Turkish–English interpretation available.)

 18:45–20:10

Short Film Programme

They Also Serve: Scottish Women Documentary Makers 1935 – Present

20:10–21:45

Post-Screening Gathering

We gather in the cinema foyer with a DJ set by Ladies on Records.

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Saturday, 7 March

17:00–18:15

Short Film Programme

They Also Serve: Scottish Women Documentary Makers 1935 – Present