Installation view 《Beyond – the Human -Centric Perspectives》 ©KCC Washington, D.C.

The Korean Cultural Center Washington, D.C.(Director Kim Jung-hoon, hereafter KCC) will present the exhibition 《Nature’s Echo: Beyond Human-Centric Perspectives》, featuring three Korean artists, Kim Boram, Shin Hyewoo, and Hana Yoo, from Thursday, February 29 to Friday, April 5 in the exhibition hall on the second floor of the KCC.

This exhibition presents approximately 60 paintings and video works by three artists who newly explore the relationship between humans and nature. Through the works of these three artists, who move away from a human-centered view of nature and propose new perspectives on animals and plants, the exhibition will offer an opportunity to consider ways for humans and nature to coexist amid the crisis of climate change.

Artist Kim Boram challenges the institutional frameworks through which humans categorize nature. Taking archival materials such as animal specimens in museums and research reports as subjects of her work, she boldly moves away from traditional aesthetic conventions and norms of display, incorporating discomfort and visually grotesque elements that evoke raw nature into her works.

Through this, her work presents a deeper and more intimate personal perspective on nature as its subject.

Artist Shin Hyewoo creates unique botanical illustrations by combining scientific expertise and artistic inspiration. Working as a botanist at the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, she draws inspiration for her artistic practice from her everyday interactions with plants. Shin’s illustrations regard the plants she depicts as living beings, sincerely portraying the essence of nature and revealing deep empathy and affection.

Artist Hana Yoo seeks, through her work, an ecosystem in which humans, animals, and machines can coexist. Using video and installation, she creates works in which the boundary between subject and object is formally ambiguous, and proposes a perspective that looks anew at animals and natural environments that have long been objectified from a human point of view.

References