Sejin Kim, Mosaic Transition, 2019, 2-channel HD video, 4-channel sound © Sejin Kim

From October 23 to November 30, SONGEUN presents Walk in the Sun, a solo exhibition by Sejin Kim, the Grand Prize winner of the 16th SONGEUN Art Award. Kim has focused her practice on the lives of individuals embedded within broader and smaller scales of history, rendering these narratives in a synesthetic manner through cinematic and documentary techniques, layered sound, and distinctive video installations that cross formal boundaries.

The exhibition title, Walk in the Sun, is borrowed from a short science fiction story by Geoffrey A. Landis (b. 1955), which recounts the solitary journey of an astronaut who crash-lands on the moon and must walk around its surface, endlessly chasing the sun in order to survive.

At the 16th SONGEUN Art Award Exhibition, Kim presented works such as Urban Hermit (2016), which portrayed invisible forms of labor in contemporary society, and Proximity of Longing (2016), which framed human migration and immigration as a reflection of humanity’s pursuit of a better life and utopia—an enduring chapter in human history. The emotional undertones of solitude and loss, conveyed through stories of marginalized outsiders—isolated laborers and immigrants who remain disconnected from society—are more globally expanded in this exhibition.

Narratives and records collected during the artist’s journey from Antarctica to Lapland in the Arctic Circle are translated into diverse video languages, revealing the socio-political imbalances underlying our multifaceted lives and the resulting phenomena of human alienation.

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