Ahn Kwanghwee, Desk Concert, 2024, Single-channel video (color), sound (stereo), 24min 16sec. Installatio view of 《Breathing Breaks, Breaking Breaths》 (Artspace Boan, 2024) © Ahn Kwanghwee

Boan1942(Tongui-dong Boan Inn)’s special exhibition 《Breathing Breaks, Breaking Breaths》 examines relationships among humans who survive by accumulating time of care, and the subject at the center of those relationships.

Care, once understood as an individual ethic, has developed into a universal and collective political agenda, and this transformation deepened as hope was witnessed in private relationships and local communities under the restricted conditions caused by the spread of infectious disease. Now that the period of interdependence, in which we looked after one another’s well-being, has passed, we seek ways to continuously realize universal care.

The English word Care derives from the Old English Caru, which carries multiple meanings including worry, trouble, concern, and sorrow. Human beings who have grown while physically sensing such emotional meanings must also acknowledge the same vulnerability and incompleteness shared with other living beings and face the fragility of life.

Therefore, this exhibition does not regard only subaltern subjects as objects of care, but seeks to recognize all of us as beings who must both provide and receive care. In modern society, however, we often dismiss the act of caring as a private matter between close relatives. As with the Old English Caru mentioned above, the Indigenous concept of kinship refers not only to humans and nonhumans but also to our relationship with the land on which we are situated.

The relational care they speak of, that is, the act of looking after one another, extends from everyday and close familial relations to cosmic relationships. In other words, universal care expands from our homes and kin to include community, nation, and the entire Earth, and care broadens its meaning into both a natural act that protects our rights and qualifications and an emotional and sensorial communion that is human nature itself.


Ahn Kwanghwee, Desk Concert, 2024, Single-channel video (color), sound (stereo), 24min 16sec © Ahn Kwanghwee

This exhibition 《Breathing Breaks, Breaking Breaths》 focuses on practices of becoming entangled with and caring for one another, centered on inclusive relationships that recognize human interdependence. Through works of installation, video, and painting by the four participating artists, the exhibition shares reflections on the meaning of care.

It tells viewers multifaceted stories that arise between the others with whom the participating artists are in relationship and the artists at the center of those relationships. By visualizing concerns and practices around care, a personal capacity that everyone possesses, the exhibition seeks to examine the conditions for survival in this world.

Boris Groys says that for care to exist, one must first practice self-care. Care for others is carried out through my decision, and therefore it is important to know who the “I” is as the subject of that decision and to establish my subject and subjectivity. Although humans are beings formed through care, in order to continue practicing it, one must not lose the center called “I.”

Within the background created by countless beings, humans sustain life by composing relationships. In the shared world in which we all live together, only when I am perceived through another being do I also come to recognize myself as part of this world’s community. And by looking after and caring for myself, I can expand the scope of care not only to my own world but also to the common sphere in which all live.

“Seup-seup-ha-ha” is one of the basic breathing methods for running, a way to keep the body and mind healthy and to minimize disruption while running toward an aim or goal. By effectively regulating this basic and essential breathing during running, one can protect oneself.

Setting this breathing method as “care” in this exhibition, it examines the human being who is running, or surviving, while maintaining relationships and changes with others encountered throughout life—that is, the self. Through this breathing method 《Breathing Breaks, Breaking Breaths》 that we have maintained throughout our lives, we hope it can become a driving force for the path already traveled as well as the journey ahead.

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