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Now booking Tate Modern Film

Christopher Harris

28 May 2025 at 18.30–20.30
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Christopher Harris, still/here 2001, film still. Courtesy the artist

Catch the UK release of two new films by Christopher Harris and the premiere of a newly restored print

Christopher Harris’s films are haunting. For over 25 years, he has worked with 16mm film and video installations to explore African American history. In a text about his film Speaking in Tongues, Harris explained: “In the making of my work, I begin from the proposition that descendants of enslaved people, in particular, African Americans, have a fundamentally different relationship to time and space than members of the dominant culture.”

From his 2001 MFA thesis film, still/here, to his recent Speaking in Tongues: Take One, Harris has remained one of the most inventive artists working in analog film. His slow, deliberate gestures of editing, slicing, and re-jigging question the practice and pace of image production.

For years, Harris has been developing a 16mm film inspired by Ishmael Reed’s 1972 novel Mumbo Jumbo. In his Speaking in Tongues: Take One, premiering in the UK at Tate Modern, Harris expands on Reed’s plot using found footage from Hollywood films, cartoons and documentaries. Mumbo Jumbo tells a story of resistance against the suppression of Black dance culture. Referred to as a “virus”, the book introduces the character of “Jes Grew”, a personification of ragtime, jazz, polytheism, and freedom. In Speaking in Tongues: Take One, Harris borrows from the tradition of free jazz and avant-garde musical forms and suggests that other ‘takes’, or interpretations, could emerge in years to come. The film, which cites Reed, addresses the American carceral system, and Black resistance through states of ecstasy.

Two other black-and-white works by the artist follow: b/w is a short meditation on colourism, and Harris’ first feature, still/here, presents the urban landscape of St. Louis, Missouri, where he is from.

This programme features the UK release of two new films, b/w and Speaking in Tongues: Take One, as well as the premiere of a newly restored print of still/here. The screening is co-presented with Barbican, where Harris’s lecture God Bless the Child will be held on 27 May.

  • Introduction by Tate curators
  • Speaking in Tongues: Take One 2024, 16mm film transferred to video, black-and-white, sound, 15 min
  • b/w 2023, 16mm film, black-and-white, silent, 3 min
  • still/here 2001, 16mm film, black-and-white, sound, 60 min
  • Conversation with the artist and Q&A

Christopher Harris

Christopher Harris makes films and video installations that read African American historiography through the aesthetics of experimental cinema. Often drawing on archival material, his work features re-enactments, hand-cranked cameras, rear-projection, close-focus cinematography, re-photography, photochemical manipulations, and screen captured video, among other strategies. His influences are eclectic, among them Black literature, various strains of North American avant-garde film, and most significantly, all forms of Black music.

Working through incongruity and slippages, between sound and image, between past, present and future, and between absence and presence, his films, like the music from which they take inspiration, embody the existential complexities of racialized identity in the U.S.

This event will be BSL interpreted.

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.

  • 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

Bankside
London SE1 9TG
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Date & Time

28 May 2025 at 18.30–20.30

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£10 / £7 for Members

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