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Nov 10, 2024

(Upcoming) Simultaneity, Related Talk of SeMA Omnibus: At the End of the World Split Endlessly, Seoul Museum of Art, Seosomun Main Branch, 1F, Sunday, November 10th, 2:00 PM – 3:30 PM

Nov 8, 2024

(Upcoming) Simultaneity will be published on November 8th (Published by Workroom Specter)

Nov 9, 2024

(Work in progress) Film shoot of Simultaneity, Portrait

Aug–Nov 2024

Jinan Kang, Yeonwha Kong, Minjung Kim, Sungwan Kim, Kitae Bae, Yeasul Shin, Jinyoung Shin, Sulki & Min, Woosup Sim, Min Oh, Sinsil Lee, Yanghee Lee, Youngwoo Lee, Taehun Lee, Kwangjun Jung, Joseph Fungsang, June Moon Kyung Hahn, Yunkyung Hur, Chosun Hong, 57studio,

live performance

2018

exploration on the notion of “sats as performance composition material”
approx. 60 min

Photo Documentation
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Photo by Sanghoon Ok
Writing Excerpt 1

“Sats is a term coined by Eugenio Barba of the Danish theater company Odin Company. It refers to the state of readiness to move in any direction. The term is sometimes translated as “pre-expression” in Korean. A more tangible illustration of Sats would include something like crouching before taking a leap, breathing prior to speaking, and flexing the fingers prior to pressing a key. It is a concept that should be studied in all types of performance arts that uses human movement, including dance, theater, and music performance.

Sats occurs with every bodily movement of the performance, and must therefore be considered with each activity. However, thespians therefore hope that the audience does not catch on to their Sats, which proves more natural, streamlined expression. In dance by Yang-hee Lee, a choreographer, Sats is often easier to hide, as it is naturally absorbed as a part of the dance movement. However in music, performers do not shy away from exposing Sats in its rawest form if it is necessary to do so in order to create the ideal sound. When playing in an ensemble without a conductor, performers may find Sats beneficial in ensuring the rhythmic integrity of the performance, and thereby even intentionally accentuate Sats. The more difficult a piece is to play in an ensemble, the clearer and more urgent the Sats will become. Perhaps the reason why one may prefer live performance to recordings is because they enjoy seeing the performers’ Sats while listening to the music."

    Writing Excerpt 2

    “I imagined a pair of socks, rolled half-way inside-out while they were taken off. I also assume a movement that remains in place by coordinates despite its incessant motion. I thought of a garden tree, trimmed to a state that makes it difficult to ascertain which branches have and have not been cut. I pictured a status in which two disparate branches are entangled in such a complex, precise, yet neat fashion, making it almost meaningless to distinguish between the clearly contrasting branches: the in and out, before and after, and natural and artificial.”

    Presentations
    • 2021

      (screening) Focus On #3 Min Oh
      Total Museum, Seoul, KR

    • 2019

      Perform 2019 Linkin-Out. "Score: Jinan Kang, Yeonwha Kong, Minjung Kim, Sungwan Kim, Kitae Bae, Yeasul Shin, Jinyoung Shin, Sulki & Min, Woosup Sim, Min Oh, Sinsil Lee, Yanghee Lee, Youngwoo Lee, Taehun Lee, Kwangjun Jung, Joseph Fungsang, June Moon Kyung Hahn, Yunkyung Hur, Chosun Hong, 57studio,"
      Ilmin Museum of Art, Seoul, KR

    • 2018

      Jinan Kang, Yeonwha Kong, Minjung Kim, Sungwan Kim, Kitae Bae, Yeasul Shin, Jinyoung Shin, Sulki & Min, Woosup Sim, Min Oh, Sinsil Lee, Yanghee Lee, Youngwoo Lee, Taehun Lee, Kwangjun Jung, Joseph Fungsang, June Moon Kyung Hahn, Yunkyung Hur, Chosun Hong, 57studio,
      Art Sonje Center, Seoul, KR

    Credits
    • Concept, Direction

      Min Oh

    • Conceptualization

      Min Oh,
      Yanghee Lee

    • Light

      Design

      Younwha Kong

      Operation

      Minjung Kim

    • Musical Analysis Consultant

      Sungwan Kim,
      Yeasul Shin

    • Choreography

      Direction of Choreography

      Yanghee Lee

      Choreography of Pitch, Part C

      Jinan Kang

    • Performance

      Part A

      Julia Wolfe: Lick (1994)
      (c) G. Schirmer, New York, supplied by Albersen Verhuur BV, The Hague

      Cello

      Kwangjun Jung

      Contrabass

      Kitae Bae

      Soprano Saxophone

      Sungwan Kim

      Electric Guitar

      Taehun Lee

      Percussion

      June Moon Kyung Hahn

      Piano

      Youngwoo Lee

      Part B

      Stage Management

      Sinsil Lee

      Stage Staff

      Woosup Sim

      Light Operation

      Minjung Kim

      Part C

      Chosun Hong,
      Jinan Kang,
      Min Oh,
      Minjung Kim,
      Yanghee Lee,
      Yunkyung Hur

    • Poster & Publication

      English Copyediting

      Joseph Fungsang

      Graphic Design

      Sulki & Min

    • Production

      Production Management

      Jinyoung Shin

      Production Assistant

      Minsung Lee

    • Promotion

      Jinyoung Shin
      in collaboration with Art Sonje Center, Seoul

    • Sound

      Sound Design

      Chosun Hong

      Sound System Engineering

      JU14

      Sound Installation

      Hyewon Lee

    • Stage

      Stage Management

      Sinsil Lee

      Staff

      Woosup Sim

    • Organized by Art Sonje Center, Seoul, KR

      Supported by Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, Seoul Metropolitan Government, Seoul Foundation for Arts and Culture, Seoul, KR