Inhwa Yeam, Innerveauty Spa, 2023, 3D Performative Apparatus-Environment (PC-based VR, Mobile AR, Installation), Installation view of 《Planetary Pulse》 (Aisa Culture Center, 2023) ©ACC

The yearning of Earthlings to find an alternative Earth—through uncharted space or space colonies—began long ago. The 1928 serialized sci-fi novel Skylark of Space depicted humanity venturing beyond the solar system. After endlessly consuming the Earth and even wishing to discard it, humankind, beginning around the COVID era, has restored the authority of this planet. At the same time, the non-human beings who have lived alongside us are only now receiving recognition for their existence.

《Planetary Pulse》 seeks to convey, through sound, stories of coexistence and the future on this planet. Unlike other artistic genres, in sound art the very acts of voicing and listening constitute the content of the work. The act of making sound—an active will to communicate with others—is cast into the air and reaches someone else. In this way we listen to one another and become connected. Traditional Asian concepts such as “resonance” (共鳴) and “echo” have long recognized that sound can bind us together and have cherished the solidarities it creates.

The projects presented here as outcomes of the 2023 ACC Residency look at our fearful, nebulous present and future through art. Anxious rumors about what is to come, worlds where all beings vanish and only machines remain—these sometimes turn into curiosities about new dimensions. Erasing the yardsticks of normal/abnormal, returning together to the friendly shade of a persimmon tree to talk about the labor we do today, we will find we can communicate by any means. Every being has its own melody, and if we listen to one another, these individual sounds may become an orchestra that makes the Earth resound.

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