Hyongryol Bak, Figure Project_Earth #53, 2015 © Hyongryol Bak

Hyongryol Bak reveals the sculptural qualities of the land that have long remained hidden deep within marginalized natural surroundings through human intervention. By uncovering what lies beneath the surface—overlooked or deliberately ignored—he brings to light aspects of the land that were previously unseen, while effectively visualizing, through the medium of photography, the structural and dominant forces exerted by humans upon nature. The exhibition title 《Unseen Land》 may be interpreted as referring to land that is invisible or newly encountered, yet it simultaneously suggests, in a double sense, our own attitude of having been unable to confront it precisely because we chose not to see it.

Since 2013, Hyongryol Bak’s ongoing series ‘Figure Project’ has involved temporarily transforming parts of the land or natural elements through various physical experiments and actions within seemingly ordinary natural spaces that tend to fall outside public attention, and documenting these interventions through photography and video from an aerial perspective.

Bak describes his project as “simultaneously revealing a geometrically abstract space realized through sculptural methods and the diverse textures inherent in the land, while experimenting with alternative possibilities for the urban landscapes shaped by humans through the traces of fractures exposed by the structuring of dominant landscapes and performative acts of healing.” Through the works presented in this exhibition, viewers are invited to encounter the diverse forms of the land and to reflect upon the traces of relationships formed between nature and humanity.

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