Joon Moon’s work ECHO SCRIBBLE-MORSE CODE, installed at the entrance of Imjingak’s Bridge of Freedom. When visitors leave a message or drawing wishing for reunification on the touch screen, the same message appears on screens in all directions, allowing everyone in the space to view it together. © Joon Moon

A media art work by Joon Moon(35), the son of President Moon Jae-in, who declared that he would “lay the foundation for peaceful reunification,” has been on display for several years at Imjingak’s “Bridge of Freedom,” the northernmost area in South Korea accessible to civilians and a symbolic site of the division between North and South Korea.

According to Paju City, Gyeonggi Province, and others on the 5th, Moon’s work ECHO SCRIBBLE-MORSE CODE, submitted four years ago, is on display at “Art Space BEAT 131,” an exhibition hall created by remodeling a military underground bunker at the entrance of the Bridge of Freedom.

This site had been used as a military bunker since the Korean War, and in March 2013, through cooperation among Gyeonggi Province, Paju City, the Gyeonggi Tourism Organization, and the ROK Army 1st Infantry Division, it was reborn as an exhibition hall themed around media art.

Maintaining the original form of the underground bunker, which has a total area of about 120㎡, the space exhibits materials and videos on the themes of war and the Demilitarized Zone(DMZ), as well as media art works. Moon’s work has been installed and operated there since the opening.

Recently, after it became known that Mao Anying, the eldest son of Mao Zedong(1893–1976), known as the “founding father of China,” died near the Bridge of Freedom during the Korean War, many Chinese tourists have also visited the exhibition hall. In peacetime, it is used as an art space, but in wartime, it is returned to use as a military facility.

ECHO SCRIBBLE-MORSE CODE is designed so that when visitors leave a message or drawing wishing for reunification on the touch screen, the same message appears on screens in all directions, allowing everyone in the space to view it together. It is considered the most popular work in the exhibition hall.

An official from Paju City explained, “As far as I know, the work was selected through a transparent open-call process at the time the exhibition space was established,” adding, “I only recently learned that the artist Joonyong was ‘that Joonyong,’ the son of President Moon Jae-in.”

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