Exhibition poster © CHAMBER

Two people who had climbed a mountain early in the morning sat by the entrance upon returning home. While organizing his shoes, Yu Bu-ja decided to keep a leaf stuck to the sole—wanting to hear, just a little longer, the faint rustling sound it made as they descended the packed-earth steps. Meanwhile, Greem Kim once again recalled the moment a sharp stone pressed firmly against her foot, when she turned her head in surprise at the sudden cry of a bird from a nest above.

In 《The Mountain’s Abode》, the artists do not transform the exhibition space into part of a mountain, nor do they display the actual shoes they wore on their ascent. Instead, each holds their sensory memory “within the body,” allowing this space to become their “interior.” Even without seeing a mountain—and despite the space not being one—the gallery becomes a place where the mountain resides.

To climb a mountain is an act in which nothing can be perfectly possessed, yet it is also an experience of containing one’s entire body within a world where nothing can be hidden. The time “on the other side,” which can be revisited but not reversed, unravels thread by thread inside the two artists, extending outward to gently pierce every corner of the exhibition space.


(From the exhibition preface)

References