Installation view of 《Breathe in, Breathe out》 © Wooran Foundation

Seongsu-dong is a neighborhood with limited land yet an abundance of people—a place marked by disorder and excitement. It is a district that simultaneously fuels the desire to keep pace with rapidly emerging trends while provoking a commitment to maintaining one’s own rhythm, leaving one to wonder which tempo to follow.

Although the neighborhood appears to offer choice, operating like a massive algorithm, it ultimately resembles a condensed version of a world without choice. Situated at the heart of Seongsu-dong, Wooran Foundation presents its first exhibition of 2024, 《Breathe in, Breathe out》, conveying a message about living in rhythm with others while maintaining one’s own pace.

Installation view of 《Breathe in, Breathe out》 © Wooran Foundation

In traditional Korean music, ‘jangdan’—a foundational rhythmic structure performed primarily on percussion instruments such as the janggu or buk—refers not only to a rhythmic pattern but also encompasses cycles of emphasis and inherent tempos. While complex at first glance, jangdan allows for improvisational variation without disrupting its fundamental tempo, enabling performers and audiences to synchronize their breath and experience moments of collective immersion.

Installation view of 《Breathe in, Breathe out》 © Wooran Foundation

Aligning one’s breath with shifting rhythms, flexibly recognizing the pace of the present, and sensing connection through interaction—these experiences define the exhibition. The works of seven artists—Kim Jingon, Meup, Park Jiwon, Seo Minwoo, Lee Donghoon, Lim Sunbin, and Tacit Group—are dispersed throughout the space, each revealing their own rhythm, intensity, and tempo, waiting to synchronize with the viewer’s movement.

Amid the fast and forceful rhythms of Seongsu-dong, the exhibition invites visitors to align their own tempo with the surrounding performance—making eye contact with others, listening closely to sound, and becoming aware of their own footsteps.

(Breathe in, Breathe out—sometimes round, sometimes straight.)

 
* The exhibition title is derived from rhythmic symbols used in jangdan. Just as small beats form a single pulse and pulses form a rhythm, the exhibition encourages sensing others’ breaths and discovering one’s own pace through works articulated by each artist’s individual tempo.

References