Exhibition image of 《Loveland》 © dianalab

The exhibition 《Loveland》 introduces the works of artists Kim Donghyun and Han Younghyun, who have been creating their works at Brightworkroom* for many years.

As part of Kim Donghyun's work, he unveils the country of Labguk, which appears as a parallel universe to Korea, featuring three amusement parks: Arabland, Eoullimland, and Loveland. Loveland opened in 2003. It was created by Na Hoon-ah, who has been singing a lot of love songs. If Korea has Im Chae-mu’s Duriland, Labguk has Loveland. Kim Donghyun considers Loveland to be a must-visit destination in Labguk, and here's why. "Because I love it, because I have to love it." Illustrated on a map of winding paths, the railway and bus routes, new tunnels, broken roads, and abandoned tunnels lead from real Korean places to the imaginary country of Labguk. These places harbor countless memories, stories, and emotions.


Kim Donghyun, Going Home, 2017, pencil and color pencil on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm © dianalab

Han Younghyun writes letters addressed to both fictional characters and real-life acquaintances including Cesare and Prince Caesar, and sometimes the teachers around her. The words she presses in, scribbles, erases, corrects with correction tapes, and chooses to rewrite are confessions of love, trust, gladness, happiness, unwavering wait, and joy. "I will follow love." "Have hope. Love is what is called a good person and happiness." A pink heart blooms from the vase drawn on the notebook. It is a heart of hospitality, infinitely open to the recipient of the letter.

Love is something important to both artists. When they vocalize the word “love” aloud, or when they write and draw things on paper that are connected to that word, they are communicating something deep and unique about themselves to the outside world. “Loveland” is an exhibition about a specific direction: it starts from the inner worlds of these two artists and extends towards everything and everyone in the outer world. While it is easy to assume that viewers from outside come and look at the unique worlds of the artists expressed in their work, the moment the words "I love you" embody a resonance, the direction shifts.

The expressions that originate from the inner worlds of the artists expand outward into the unknown, instantly connecting with something deep in the viewers’ innermost being. It happens the moment the viewers receive expressions that emanate from love; the moment they become the object of affection. The expressions that extend in all directions like rays of sunlight, and the endless imaginary maps and stories, are directed toward the viewers. Minds that are actively turned outward, instead of gazing into the fixed inner worlds of the artists, are flung into and arrive in the mailbox out of the blue. When we receive it suddenly, we don't feel lonely, we don't feel that we are alone in the world. The possibilities of a certain moment of love, where we can giggle together, explode like vibrant fireworks.

In this exhibition, the two artists, as their artistic practice, demonstrate how expressions that actively reveal an individual's inner world can illuminate the world around them.

References