Inhwan Oh, My Names_Sachiko ©Inhwan Oh

From September 4 to 28, 2018, Space Willing N Dealing presented Inhwan Oh’s solo exhibition 《I am Not One》. Defining his artistic practice as a search for cultural blind spots excluded by dominant culture, Oh has consistently engaged with conceptual works that challenge the seemingly self-evident social and cultural norms of our society.

This exhibition extends his cultural critique by reinterpreting and dismantling codes of identity within patriarchal society from a queer perspective.

The title “I am Not One” does not suggest that identity is simply “plural” but instead highlights its unfixed, fluid condition. It encapsulates the artist’s intention to unsettle standardized norms of everyday life by foregrounding diverse experiences of others beyond universalized models of existence.

One of the key works, My Names (2012/2018), originated at a residency at the Kyoto Art Center. It consists of interviews with Japanese women who had to change their surnames multiple times, along with a performance in which Oh writes and erases these names using the act of ironing. In patriarchal society, Japanese women often change their surnames through their parents’ marriage and divorce, and again through their own. If a name signifies personal identity, such frequent changes highlight the fluid and ever-shifting nature of selfhood.

Another work, Flower Arrangement for Men, subverts everyday practices that reinforce normative identity in Korean society, proposing instead a new cultural interpretation.

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