Installation view of 《The Birth of New Nature》 © Mudaeruk

Humans define nature as follows: “All beings or states that exist in the world or arise spontaneously in the universe without the addition of human force.” (Standard Korean Language Dictionary)
 
But today, does nature without human intervention truly exist?

As human activity expands, excessive carbon emissions alter the climate. Enormous quantities of plastic are used momentarily and discarded just as quickly, undergoing weathering in nature. Plastic that has taken on the form of stone gradually fragments into micro-particles, becoming part of the soil and permeating air, water, and the cells of living beings—including humans. Radioactive substances and various chemicals create new directions of evolution. Humans may have created the artificial, but nature treats these creations as natural.

Installation view of 《The Birth of New Nature》 © Mudaeruk

This exhibition reveals that we are confronting the “co-evolution of the artificial and the natural” that we ourselves have produced, through the video work The Birth of New Nature and the New Rock Project.

Chang Hanna focuses on what comes after efficient production carried out to satisfy diverse human desires. Contrary to the expectation that everything produced by humans will be processed under control, human-made objects return to us as parts of nature in ways we did not anticipate. Through photographs, drawings, installations, and video works, the artist presents the materials she has collected, observed, and investigated in response to this condition.

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