Poster image of 《Admiration for things that disappear in vain I》 © Art Space Gallery Jungmiso

As technology advances, speed increasingly becomes a dominant pursuit. At the same time, the emergence and development of various visual technologies further intensify the power of vision. The power of vision transcends space; vision is no longer constrained by spatial limitations.

Diverse media-based modes of seeing that seek the deterritorialization of space simultaneously generate new forms of spatiality through this very process of deterritorialization. As the physical repository of vision has shifted to networks and computer hard drives, the archive of images has already undergone a transition beyond the traditional notion of storage.

Consequently, the actual site of visual imagery has disappeared, and in its place has emerged a seemingly eternal technological repository capable of endlessly preserving the same image. Through the acceleration of speed, the occupation of space is gradually transforming into an invisible form of immaterialization.

This acceleration in the age of the information revolution may be understood in a manner similar to how advances in transportation once compressed the problems of space and distance.


Shin Kiwoun, Approach the Truth_Astro Boy, 2006 © Shin Kiwoun

The exhibition invites viewers to reflect upon the question posed through the works of five artists:

“If none of a deceased artist’s original works remain, and only the manuals for those works survive, does this not suggest that while the materials used to contain or present the work may change alongside the development of time and technology, the essential concept and spirit of the work itself can continue to endure unchanged? Could there be a more eternal form of art than this?”

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