Soomin Shon, A Good Knight, 2023, Single-channel video, color, sound, Installation view of 《A Good Knight》 (Hapjungjigu, 2023) ©Hapjungjigu

Chess has long been regarded as a metaphor for human affairs. The earliest records of the game date back to the seventh century, though legend traces its origins a century earlier to India. It is said that when the youngest prince of the Gupta dynasty was killed in battle, his brother invented chess as a way to express war differently for their grieving mother.

Traveling along the Silk Road, the game spread across continents, evolving into distinct regional forms. Throughout history, chess has served as both a vehicle of satire and a reflection of social hierarchies and structures. At times, it has functioned as a survival tool for strategic thinking on the battlefield, and at others, as a subject of poetic imagination. It has also been a stage for the brilliance of great minds throughout the ages.

Soomin Shon, A Good Knight, 2023, Single-channel video, color, sound ©Soomin Shon

The exhibition centers on two video works—A Good Knight(2023) and In God We Trust(2023). Shon is an artist who examines the ways we relate to one another within a technology-based capitalist society. Her works originate from reflections on experiences or words shared by others, exploring the boundaries and ruptures inherent in this seemingly stable system.

Through video installations, performances, and publications, she visualizes emotional states such as desire, vitality, addiction, emptiness, and isolation—feelings that emerge from the contradictions of contemporary social structures.

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