Art Sonje Center presents Sung Hwan Kim’s solo exhibition from
August 30th to November 30th. This exhibition introduces Kim’s art as a systematic integration of video, drawing, installation,
architecture, and performance into a single exhibition space. The title of the
exhibition, 《Life of Always a Mirror》, is a play on words in Korean on a Korean elementary school
textbook’s title, “Joyful Life.” This method of education merges music, art, and physical education
into a single subject as a didactic gesture in public education that teaches
the youth not only knowledge but also the way they should lead a joyful life.
The exhibition space of 《Life of Always a Mirror》
is divided into two parts. The two, suggestive of one another
because of the identical layout of the two floors, form a mirror structure by
shifting, repeating, and cutting the original architectural plan. The threshold
of the first gallery is shifted toward the end of a long passageway, beyond
which architectural structures of different heights are repeated, as if
proliferating to construct a labyrinthine path. Among the various works of
sound, lighting, and drawing that constitute this space of the first gallery,
are the videos A-DA-DA (2002) and Manahatas
Dance (2009).
With two Asian-Americans of a similar age acting
as Korean father and son, A-DA-DA is conceived as
a stuttering film, while Manahatas Dance appropriates
its title from the Lenape Native Americans’ word for
the New York region before Dutch colonization. The film glides through many
historical occurrences related to regeneration in New York, including the
tragic Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire of 1911. The second gallery hosts Temper
Clay, a video that reads Shakespeare’s King
Lear as a disciplinary issue around property distribution and
places it in the context of Korean modern history. These three videos convey
not only the artist’s interest in anachronism as the
transposition of time and space, but also stories that are distributed,
modified or rubbed out by migration, immigration, translation, and
regeneration.