I write songs, I sing and I create
Hello! I'm Sakina :)
âSinger-songwriterâ
That title might be something that helps me believe in my own
voice.
It might be what speaks for the feelings I canât fully put into
words.
There was a time when I hesitated to call myself that.
But now, I borrow that nameâ
and Iâm beginning to sing again.
Where should I sing?
How can I share it?
Just being able to ask myself those questionsâ
Iâm deeply grateful for that.
Even if I canât bloom,
maybe itâs enough just to keep putting down roots.
Because now, I can say with pride:
This is how I live.
A picture book animation created from 500 hand-drawn illustrations, imagining a beloved one spreading their wings in heaven â a heartfelt tribute to someone I lost.
A picture book animation created from 500 hand-drawn illustrations, imagining a beloved one spreading their wings in heaven â a heartfelt tribute to someone I lost.
As I slowly began to reclaim the part of me that could sing
again,
the feeling of âwanting to reach someone,â
âwanting to connectâ
started to grow stronger and burn
brighter within meâ
even if I wasnât fully healed yet.
During
that time,
I found myself creating a picture book
animation together with friends who resonated with what I had
done,
what I was trying to do,
and who chose to
coexist and stay closeâby watching, by listening.
One
of the people who helped with the project was a sound engineer
from overseas, who reached out after watching my two earlier
short films.
Based on illustrations I drew during a painful time,
I
created a picture book animation as a way to support grief
careâfor myself and for those close to me.
The
music turned out beautifully,
and Emily, who did the
voice acting, gave a wonderful performance.
I truly hope
youâll take a moment to watch itâ
itâs something I
especially recommend before going to sleep.
A work that explores both the power and the limitations of
words.
How far can we go in expressing true emotions?
My body wouldnât move.
My voice wouldnât come out.
So I made 2 short films to capture that time of silence.â
â1.Full Moonâ and â2.Words & Iâ â Rated PG-12
(â ïž This text contains elements that touch on the storyâs
development. If you wish to experience the work with a
completely fresh mind, we recommend reading the following
after watching.)â Rated PG-12
A work that explores both the power and the limitations of
words.
How far can we go in expressing true emotions?
Written, performed (piano), and directed entirely by the
artist herself.
â Rated PG-12 â
The film includes a poem that reads:
âWhen we want to die, we are actually wishing to live.â
It also features a restrained scene where a man and a woman
embrace, alongside a line that reads:
âWhen sex feels good.â
These are not intended as sexual depictions,
but rather as a quiet expression of the longing to reclaim the
feeling of being alive.
Back then, I survived by simply writing and drawing what I
felt.
Around that time, the way I listened to music and watched
films changed completely.
I truly felt that just being alive was something beautiful.
I saw the ugliness of the world, and the foolishness of
peopleâ
but just as much, no, even more than that,
I received so much warmth and kindness.
And I came to realize this deeply:
Even if the form is different,
expressing the things that moved inside meâthrough words,
sound, or imagesâ
was always the same.
The act of âleaving something behindâ became my way of showing
that I lived.
A short film that captures the feeling of spiritual connection with someone who has passed on, during the night of a full moon.
A short film that captures the feeling of spiritual connection
with someone who has passed on, during the night of a full
moon.
It expresses âemotions that cannot be put into wordsâ through
music and imagination.
â Rated PG-12 â
The story follows an artist who, after becoming deeply
immersed in creation, finds herself unable to sleep and
gradually sinks into the depths of her own mind.
Scenes of falling sleeping pills and underwater imagery are
not depictions of drug abuse, but rather symbolic expressions
of insomnia, depression, and emotional instability.
Back then, I survived by simply writing and drawing what I
felt.
Around that time, the way I listened to music and watched
films changed completely.
I truly felt that just being alive was something beautiful.
I saw the ugliness of the world, and the foolishness of
peopleâ
but just as much, no, even more than that,
I received so much warmth and kindness.
And I came to realize this deeply:
Even if the form is different,
expressing the things that moved inside meâthrough words,
sound, or imagesâ
was always the same.
The act of âleaving something behindâ became my way of showing
that I lived.
Together with friends, I created my first music video.
I was so grateful for the support around me.
Together with friends, I created my first music video.
It was full of passion and quality, even though it was
independently produced.
I was so grateful for the support around me.
This work became my calling card, my identity.
I was ready to move forward.
...But in the fall of that year,
someone very important to me passed awayâsuddenly.
The momentum I had built⊠vanished.
I could barely breathe.
I was simply existing.
I still remember how emotional I got during my very first live show.
I still remember how emotional I got during my very first live
showâ
tears welled up, and my heart overflowed with the joy of
expressing myself through song in front of people.
When I started classical piano at the age of five,
I was simply playing for competitions.
Back then, I had no sense of âwanting to convey emotionâ.
But singingâusing words to expressâ
has a different kind of vulnerability than playing piano.
It comes with fear, with embarrassment.
Words carry meaning.
And at first, I had no space in my heart to think about how
others might receive them.
But even so, I felt something undeniable:
âIâm aliveâ.
Thatâs what live performance is to me.
Want to see what I'm up to now? Follow me on social media!