Exhibitions
《Reclamation, New Rocks, Stray Dogs, Birds, and Acoustics of the Garden》, 2021.05.21 – 2021.07.25, Incheon Art Platform
May 20, 2021
Incheon Art Platform
Chang Hanna, New Ecosystem, 2021, Installation with collected plastic
pieces, fish tanks, bubble generator, lights, sand, dimensions variable,
Installation view of Reclamation, New Rocks, Stray
Dogs, Birds, and Acoustics of the Garden (Incheon Art Platform, 2021)
©Chang Hanna
Staying with the trouble does not
require such a relationship to times called the future. In fact, staying with
the trouble requires learning to be truly present, not as a vanishing pivot
between awful or edenic pasts and apocalyptic or salvific futures, but as
mortal critters entwined in myriad unfinished configurations of places, times,
matters, meanings.”1) - D. J.
Haraway, Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene
The exhibition 《Reclamation, New Rocks, Stray Dogs, Birds, and Acoustics of the
Garden》 is titled based on examinations of development
and the ecological condition surrounding Incheon, stray dogs and birds that
have emerged amidst human-induced changes, and issues regarding coexistence
with such nonhuman animals and on words collected from the city’s current environment.
Though Incheon is a large port city with
dynamic industrial productivity as well as a vital modern history of the first
Korean open port, it is also a city of massive reclaimed lands that encroach on
mud flat ecology and a place that holds a variety of environmental issues
including plastic “rocks” that
are becoming a part of new marine ecology, animal rights issues surrounding the
recent capture of increasing stray dogs and dog farms, and issues of urban
ecology and green spaces.
Indeed, such points are not only limited to this city
today, and contexts entangled with the words in the title of this exhibition
universally and deeply affect the lives of all humans at present as well.
Chang Hanna, New Ecosystem, 2021,
Installation with collected plastic pieces, fish tanks, bubble generator,
lights, sand, dimensions variable ©Chang Hanna
The figures and narratives
involving the works featured in this exhibition—new rock objets; the life and survival of nonhuman animals like
dogs, poultry, and migratory birds; relentless capitalism, ranging from
landfills, reclamation, and urban redevelopment to bitcoin mining; the
complicated truth of hope glimpsed from the Agricultural Revolution and seed
vaults; the wisdom reflected in field recordings of ethnic minorities and
indigenous peoples’ dreaming; and the movements and
acoustics of life forms—not only are related to the
present, when nature’s counterattacks have begun, but
also bear the aesthetic and ethical observations and thoughts of artists who
raise questions about inseparable symbiosis with nonhuman spheres.
From all of
this, we can surely proceed to stories about the critical point of the
environmental catastrophe universally witnessed today, but this exhibition is
not oriented toward such a pessimistic and dead-end truth. Rather, it pursues
to compound the heterogeneity of the painterly and the sculptural, movements
and sounds, wondrous objects and flora/fauna, or all such disparate types and
seeks to depart from dystopian melancholy, entering another planetary time.
The
works in this exhibition pursue new time that links particular seeing and
hearing and realizes an ecological cosmology of polyphonic state and
coexistence. In other words, what we come to encounter in this exhibition are
none other than various inevitable artistic imaginations as well as serious
modes that practice “staying with the trouble.”