
Sustika Limbu
Sustika Limbu works as a BA Media Technician: Equipment and Resource Management at University College London. In this role, she manages the distribution of technical resources and oversees the equipment storage and loan systems.
Limbu is a London-based filmmaker and editor who has explored the subject of Nepalese horror in her early work, experimenting with colour, folklore, and myths. She recently served as the editor for the documentary Shepherd of Naar (2022), which highlights the last community of Yak shepherds in the Nar region of Nepal. She has also worked as a freelance support edit assistant for Noah Media Group on a documentary The Snow Leopard Sisters (2024), which shares the story of two women from nomadic families in the remote Dolpa region of Nepal form a special bond as they stand up to end rampant killings of threatened snow leopard.
Limbu has collaborated with artists as an editor since 2013. Her work includes Conversation between Eta Carinae and Vulcan (2015) for The Castle Gallery and Museum in Nottingham, New Ruin (2016), an artistic film documenting the process of constructing a 10-feet-tall concrete monolith in rural Nepal, and Vendors (2020), which explores the lives of vegetable vendors during the covid-19 lockdown in Nepal.
Limbu's professional experience includes working as a post-production edit assistant at Uplands TV for the documentary The Forgotten Empire (BBC TWO and PBS). She also worked as a Data Wrangler/Archived assistant for documentary projects such as One Thousand Years of Slavery (Channel 5/Smithsonian), Ashley Banjo: Britain in Black and White (ITV), and Tony Robinson's Museum of Us (More4). Additionally, she was a Documentary Video Editor for Shepherds of Naar, commissioned by Aga Khan University, and is currently a freelance video editor for The SITE for Contemporary Psychoanalysis, editing their lectures and seminars.
Link (Shepherds of Naar)





