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Now booking Tate Modern Film

Sojung Jun: Overtone

10 July 2024 at 18.30–21.00
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Sojung Jun, Syncope 2023, video still

Jun blends reality and fiction in sonic and filmic works that transcend time and space

Sojung Jun’s newest work, Syncope, premiering in the UK, opens up a three-chapter programme. Presented alongside two mid-length video works, Treasure Island and Ghost Forest Flower, Syncope furthers Sojung Jun’s enquiry into the realm of sound. In the filmmaker’s words, “sound becomes a (metaphorical) element that illuminates unseen existences in society”. Grouped together, the three films embrace the concept of overtone. When a note is played, we at times get the sensation of hearing other frequencies (overtones) above the lowest.

Syncope traces the journey of performers who have travelled to distant places in search of sound. It follows the trajectory of sonic waves: the rattling of a wagon, the words written outside of one’s mother tongue, the plosive sounds of musical instruments beyond the score. The film operates like a travelogue where a number of different paths intersect—the pace of trains which used to cross Asia and Europe, the physical speed of bodies crossing borders, the speed of voices mumbling, of data, and the ecological speed of migrating plants. Throughout, it offers a reflection on acceleration, and the practices that may rupture it, through the movement of sound. Central to the film are nomadic identities and indigenous musical traditions. Its title metaphorically refers to the loss of one or more sounds from the middle of a word, as well as a state of fainting. In music, it is used to change the flow of rhythm, which perfectly emulates the dynamic pace of the film’s editing.

Syncoping time, the programme then jumps back a decade. Treasure Island tells the story of a Haenyeo (Korean female diver), whose work mediates between man and nature. As Korean traditional singer Kim Yulhee sings the story of Jeju grandmothers and mothers, on the background, Sojung Jun overlays footage of Haenyeos gathering seaweed and abalone.

The final work in the programme was filmed not too far from the seaweed fields in which the divers fish. Crafted on Gapado, a small island at the southern edge of South Korea, Ghost Forest Flower blends together ideas that surface in the two previous works. Developed during the pandemic, while Jun researched Korean fir, it is inspired by her practice of tending a small garden around her studio. Like the garden itself, the plantings –a mix of native plants adapted to the environment, as well as naturalized, exotic, and endangered ones– reveal traces of the historical and geopolitical tensions of Jeju Island. Citing the concept of ‘물때([mulddæ] water time’ dear to women divers following the tides caused by the moon, the work explores both the movement of energy in nature and the movement of energy created by humans through sound. Like a tapestry, its soundtrack weaves together radio frequencies, electrical noise from the island's generators, wind, waves, and blades of grass.

The screening is organised with support from Barakat Contemporary.

Introduction by the artist

Syncope 2023, 4K video, colour, sound, 32 min

Treasure Island 2014, HD video, colour, sound, 11 min

Ghost Forest Flower 2022, 4K video, colour, sound, 30 min

Conversation between the artist and Valentine Umansky, Curator, International Art, Tate

Sojung Jun is an artist based in Seoul, South Korea. Using the language of video and writing, she is interested in creating a nonlinear space-time to awake a new awareness of history and the present. Her works explore how the changes made in physical boundaries penetrate daily sensorial experiences. In particular, she has produced works that weave and crisscross with her personal experiences by paying attention to invisible voices and people standing on the verge, amid the ruins of modernity.

You can enter via the Cinema entrance, left of the Turbine Hall main entrance, and into the Natalie Bell Building on Holland Street, or into the Blavatnik Building on Sumner street. The Starr Cinema is on Level 1 of the Natalie Bell Building. There are lifts to every floor of the Blavatnik and Natalie Bell buildings. Alternatively, you can take the stairs. There is space for wheelchairs and a hearing loop is available. All works screened in the Starr Cinema have English captions.

  • Fully accessible toilets are located on every floor on the concourses.
  • A quiet room is available to use in the Natalie Bell Building on Level 4.
  • Ear defenders can be borrowed from the Ticket desks.

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Tate Modern

Starr Cinema

Please use the cinema entrance

Bankside
London SE1 9TG
Plan your visit

Date & Time

10 July 2024 at 18.30–21.00

Pricing

£10

£7 Concessions

£5 for Tate Collective. 16–25? Sign up and log in to book

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This event is BSL interpreted.

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