Installation view of 《Cloud to Ground》 (Replace Hannam, 2025) Sojin Kwak

Lightning is often remembered as a single vertical strike from the sky to the ground—a symbol of divine warning or punishment since ancient times. Scientifically, however, lightning is far more complex and multilayered.

It is not a unilateral descent but a relational event formed by invisible charges between the earth, atmosphere, and sky that search for each other and momentarily converge through microscopic, erratic signals. The path of lightning unfolds simultaneously between sky and land, air and cloud, electron and particle. In this fleeting light within a world of infinite potential, what can we witness?

Installation view of 《Cloud to Ground》 (Replace Hannam, 2025) Sojin Kwak

This exhibition begins with the artist’s ongoing inquiry into invisible interactions within networks of objects, ecology, history, and media. Reaching the phenomenon of lightning while exploring the materials and structures of images was no coincidence. According to the artist, electric currents flow everywhere, yet lightning emerges only when these dispersed currents intertwine in a specific configuration, forming a fleeting shape of relation.

The unique map drawn in the air disappears the moment it is created. Each connection occurs in a singular form but vanishes instantly—unrepeatable and irreproducible. To witness lightning from afar, therefore, is to follow the simultaneity of connection and disconnection, response and silence, generation and dissolution.

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