Exhibitions
《Double Feature》, 2023.09.14 – 2023.12.17, Julia Stoschek Foundation Berlin (Berlin, Düsseldorf)
September 10, 2023
Julia Stoschek Foundation Berlin (Berlin, Düsseldorf)

Exhibition
brochure © Julia Stoschek Foundation
Beginning
from September 2023, the Julia Stoschek Foundation introduces a new series of
solo presentations by emerging artists called DOUBLE FEATURE, which will take
place across JSF Berlin and Düsseldorf simultaneously.
For
its inaugural edition, Berlin-based artist Young-jun Tak presents two recent
films, Wish You a Lovely Sunday (2021)
and Wohin? (2022), which will play in a
loop in the galleries. Both shot in Berlin, these works consider how place, architecture,
movement, and belief inform community and queerness.
Wish
You a Lovely Sunday (2021) juxtaposes two locations in
Berlin: the church Kirche am Südstern and the queer club SchwuZ. Invited by the
artist, two choreographers and two dancers were paired to create a new
choreography for each space and assigned a different Bach piano piece for four
hands. After days of rehearsals and once the choreography was complete, their
originally designated venues were swapped for the filming. The participants
therefore had to adapt their choreographies spontaneously according to the
architectural features and atmosphere of the other space. By setting these two
sites in dialogue, Tak proposes an improbable coexistence of religious practice
and club culture.
Tak
is intrigued by the similarities between churches and clubs because they both
involve specific rituals, behavioral norms, and attitudes closely linked to the
space and its role. Over the course of Wish You a Lovely
Sunday, the combination of the characters’ bodily presence
and their navigation of their respective surroundings starts to shift the
meaning of each location, eventually revealing tensions that were not apparent
on the surface. In the church, the pair’s game of looking or not looking at one
another while roaming around the columns and altar expresses unmistakable
sensations of longing and desire, denial and prohibition.
In
the film Wohin? (2022)—“Where to?”
in German—the camera focuses on the rearview mirrors of cars that are driving
on the Autobahn near Berlin. Throughout the film, various objects hung from the
mirrors of each car become visible in the frame, from Christian rosaries and Buddhist
prayer beads to a typical German air freshener, Wunderbaum. The rearview
mirrors also reflect situations taking place on the back seat: a man gazes out
of the window, checks his phone, or dozes off; two men kiss romantically.
Prior
to filming, Tak spoke with the actors about the many facets of the German
Autobahn—an ideological project of the Third Reich and a feat of national
infrastructure, as well as a playground for the projections of
hypermasculinity, and a significant site for gay cruising. These mixed aspects
are reinforced by the soundtrack, which pairs organist Andreas Sieling from the
Berlin Cathedral with British countertenor Tim Morgan, who together reinterpret
Kraftwerk’s legendary song “Autobahn” from 1974. While Sieling is
peddling away at his huge organ with over 7,000 pipes, some of which are
thirteen meters long, Morgan repeats the simple lyric “autobahn” in his fluid,
high-pitched song, in contrast to the organ’s mechanical and militaristic
rhythm.