Exhibitions
《TRAnS》, 2009.05.15 – 2009.07.19, Art Sonje Center
May 15, 2009
Art Sonje Center

Exhibition view of《TRAnS》© Art Sonje Center
Inhwan Oh’s solo exhibition, 《TRAnS》, is composed of diverse experimental
and conceptual works in video, sound, text, participatory projects, etc.,
reflecting the artist’s interest in social and cultural
issues—starting with his own identity. The title of the
exhibition, “TRAnS,” is derived
from the prefix, “trans-,” used
in diverse terms such as translate, transform, transport, and transverse.
This term reflects the artist’s commitment to bringing
into question everyday social and cultural phenomena, as well as enabling
diverse interpretations and transformations in perception. In this sense,
through engaging with diverse people including viewers, passers-by, and people
around him, Inhwan Oh’s work tries to deconstruct the
norms of contemporary Korean society and challenge conventional ways of
thinking about art, culture and society.

Exhibition view of《TRAnS》© Art Sonje Center
The Real Man (2009)
inverts the norms of male supremacy by transforming a famous military song into
an entirely new genre of trance music. The Flag and I (2009)
shows videotaped images of a giant Korean flag and flagpole. While this
national flag represents authority, the moaning sound accompanying the shaky
image reminds the viewer of the pain caused by holding the heavy camera and
retains traces of individuality excluded in creating this collective image.
In
the Name Project: Looking for You in Seoul (2009), an
advertising truck with a signboard calling for 10 people with the most common
names in South Korea travels throughout Seoul during the period of the
exhibition. The Name Project not only expands the boundaries
of the exhibition to those of the entire city, but it also intervenes into the
city by attempting to become a moving art work that actively searches out
viewers rather than waiting for them to visit the gallery.