Josèfa Ntjam © FRIEZE

The third edition of Frieze Film Seoul, in collaboration with Ewha Media Art Presentation(EMAP), will be screened from September 2 to 6 on the Ewha Womans University campus and online(frieze.com).

Curated by Park Juwon(curator, National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea) and Valentine Umansky(curator, Tate Modern, London), this year’s program, “All That Weaves the Universe: On Their Quantum Relations,” consists of a total of eight chapters and presents a diverse range of time-based media works by 37 global artists.


Curatorial Preface

With the exponential development of digital technology, the essential relationship between the natural world and humans is becoming blurred and distant. The spaces and boundaries between humans and nonhumans are being fundamentally reconfigured. In this time of absolute climate emergency, it has become more urgent than ever to care for the beings and things that share the same ecosystem as we do.

“All That Weaves the Universe: On Their Quantum Relations” addresses this subject through time-based media artworks. These recurring moving image works provide multiple perspectives, steadily challenge colonialist notions, and emphasize how the interaction between capitalism and colonialism has caused economic inequality, cultural loss, environmental pollution, and exploitative dependency, deeply affecting our society.


Kimsooja, Thread Routes - Chapter IV, 2014. Image still from 16mm film transferred to HD format, 27:48 loop  © Kimsooja studio

Within the exhibition, weaving functions as a metaphor for understanding the connectedness of all things across time and space. As an inter-species activity, weaving reminds us of the larger community to which we belong, and of our shared ability to form bonds with and thrive alongside that community. This leads to an embrace of both mycelial and digital networks.

Thinking about the connectivity between humans and nonhumans, this exhibition connects ancient and contemporary knowledge. For hundreds of years, despite the forced erasure of cultures and traditions, Indigenous elders have preserved traditions through which the balance connecting all things in the world can be recognized. Their understanding of the world coincides with quantum physics. According to the theory of quantum physics, not only atoms but also the subatomic universe as a whole is connected to one another and made of matter that cannot be separated even if one attempts to separate it, suggesting that it is composed of matter that is both continuous and discontinuous at the same time.

By reflecting on, and at times embracing, technology, the invited artists and works propose physical, technological, and spiritual insights, which bridge the gap believed to exist between contemporary and ancient technologies or wisdom. Through this, they help us navigate the challenges of the present and the future, and foster innovative coexistence with the Earth’s multifaceted intelligence.

References