“To see” is an act of receiving and analyzing an enormous amount of information at tremendous speed every second. The process of responding to and interpreting that information differs according to many factors, including one’s personal experiences, current circumstances, motivations and purposes of action, and degree of concentration.

As a result, even the same phenomenon is perceived differently by each individual, selectively or habitually filtered according to one’s own position. Perhaps we only see what we wish to see. For that reason, to perceive things as they truly are — to look from a distance with objectivity — may not be an easy task. Amid the countless moments that pass numbly by in the routines of everyday life, perhaps what we need in order to preserve a proper sense of values is precisely “looking again.”

To look again is to overturn perspectives, to see anew, and sometimes even to see correctly. Ultimately, one’s perspective and worldview become the person themselves. Through the exhibition 《Re-viewing》, we invite viewers to consider how artists “re-view” the everyday realities and events of contemporary life that so often pass unnoticed.

Je Baak’s Gong (2009) depicts players struggling for victory alongside spectators watching the match unfold. In addition to the players on both teams, the remaining team members, and the massive crowd in the stadium, countless viewers around the world are all focused on a single soccer ball. Yet with closer attention, one realizes that the ball itself does not exist within the work.

The scene, in which the ultimate object pursued by players, spectators, and viewers alike is absent, raises questions about what exactly we are chasing after. The artist replaces the soccer ball blindly pursued throughout the game with the Buddhist concept of “emptiness” (空), pronounced similarly in Korean as gong.

Might we too have become accustomed to busily pursuing something without remembering the true purpose or direction toward which we strive?


Je Baak, Gong 1, 2009, Single channel DVD projection, 4 min 3 sec (looped) © Je Baak

“By erasing the ball from a World Cup soccer match, the work raises questions about the things we blindly pursue. The title Gong simultaneously refers to the Buddhist concept of emptiness and to a soccer ball. By removing the central element from a given situation, the artist communicates through what remains, forming part of his ongoing practice of questioning true value and meaning. The work underwent an almost ascetic process in which the ball was erased frame by frame across more than ten thousand images.” (Artist’s note)

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