Poster image of 《Arko Media Project 2012 : The Unbound Archive》 © Arko Art Center

The exhibition 《Arko Media Project 2012 : The Unbound Archive》 aims to examine the current trajectory of contemporary Korean video art, centering on newly acquired single-channel video works from the Arko Art Center’s core collection, while also exploring new modes of engagement between video art archives and audiences. This project, which carries out artistic practices through archive-linked initiatives, consists of video screenings, archive exhibitions, seminars, and lectures.


Im Sunny, Landscape in My Room, 2011 © Im Sunny

A total of fifteen artists—including Kim Do Hee, Kim Tae Eun, Kim Hea-ji, Gihun Noh, Lee Geumhong, Moojin Brothers, Park Minha, Park Sungyeon, Shin Jungkyun, Im Sunny, Jang Gyujeong, Jang Jongwan, as well as Noh Jaewoon, Ahn Jeongju, and Jeong Eunyoung, who participated in the production of the Arko Media Criticism Series—present single-channel video works alongside archival materials generated during their creative processes or related to their artistic concerns.

The participating artists represent a wide spectrum, ranging from established figures in Korean video art to emerging artists making their debut as media artists through this exhibition. Through approximately twenty works that demonstrate the diversity and hybridity of moving image practices—including animation, documentary, drama, and graphic imagery—Arko Art Center seeks to illuminate the landscape of Korean video art from a critical perspective and to provide a platform for multifaceted interpretations of video art as a reflection of the zeitgeist.
 
The subtitle of the project, “unbound archive,” refers to a state of being free from binding, as in books or papers that are not bound. Accordingly, the “unbound archive” forms a contingent field in which fragmented and unstable individual events—scattered across cultural, social, and political contexts—collide and interact, generating hidden histories, memories, ideas, and points of contention through their engagement with art.

The archival materials presented in this exhibition—such as sketches, project plans, notes, interviews, and site photographs—do not function as autonomous artworks, but rather serve as critical clues for reinterpreting the works. Viewers are invited to act as active interpreters within an expanded archive, collecting, preserving, sharing, and assigning meaning to fragments of narratives that might otherwise be overlooked or lost, thereby participating in the creation of new discourse.
 
This project seeks to move beyond the conventional exhibition format of passive screening and one-directional perception, instead actively exploring processes of communication with audiences. In addition, various programs are organized, including the publication of the Artist e-Portfolio—which compiles participating artists’ archives in the form of an e-book—an opening seminar commemorating the Arko Media Criticism Series, a lecture by Laurence Alary, curator at ARGOS Centre for Art and Media, one of Europe’s leading media centers, and special screenings recommended by Arko and ARGOS. Through these programs, the exhibition aims to present the diverse developments and experimental practices surrounding contemporary media art.

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