Installation view of 《Diluvial》 (Seoul Art Space Mullae, 2022) ©Hayne Park

The exhibition 《Diluvial》 begins with a mythical premise: that a god, enraged by the sins of humanity, punished them with a great flood and then created a new world. The artist seeks to connect life and death, the present and the past, by expressing underground fossils—evidence and outcome of this story—through glass.

The exhibition space becomes both a repository for the traces of deceased life forms and a natural history museum submerged in water, where life is reborn. Borrowing the mindset of those in the past who crafted glass fossils—objects once used as tools to prove myths, and once believed to be minerals grown from the earth in harmony with organic life—the artist reimagines the space through their eyes.

Installation view of 《Diluvial》 (Seoul Art Space Mullae, 2022) ©Hayne Park

Hayne Park, an artist who primarily works with light and glass, explores the relationship between glass, life, and technology. Her practice investigates how glass can serve as a medium that connects the biological and the digital. She is particularly interested in environments that prompt new perceptions of materiality through the use of both physical and digital glass.

Viewing glass as a screen, Park explores how its surface functions as a point of connection in the contemporary moment—and what kinds of promises it might contain. Her work attempts to trace back the presence and motion of matter that, though currently still, was once in flux and alive.

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