Installation view of 《In Search of Nessie》 © Amado Art Space

In 《In Search of Nessie》, Kim Shinwook, whose photography is characterized by a deep involvement in the situation in which he finds himself while collecting and observing the images around him, expands his world to the story surrounding the Loch Ness monster, Nessie.

While the exhibition takes on the formal structure of an archival exhibition, it diverges from the typical attributes associated with such displays and does not reconstruct events from an authorial perspective. The images presented in the exhibition, including photographic works and research materials, serve as both a medium to stimulate the imagination and a reference to the historical context of belief, blurring the line between fiction and reality.

By distorting the meaning of familiar stories and myths, the exhibition raises questions about the process by which ‘belief’ is manifested in specific places and objects, and what sustains and operates such beliefs.

Additionally, it delves into how stories transform into legends, myths, and ‘beliefs.’ Furthermore, the exhibition explores how invisible myths permeate tangible locations and examines the devices designed and derived to envision them, thereby illuminating the very nature of belief in certain objects and why people believe in them.

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