An Jungju, Drill, 2005, three-channel video, color, stereo sound, 3 min 30 sec © An Jungju

Jungju An has developed his works by disassembling images and sounds gathered from his daily life and reconstituting them into videos through process of repetitions and transformations.

From works like Drill (2005), depicting the images of Chinese soldiers’ close-order drill in segmented forms of images videos and sounds to The Bottles (2007), having reproduced the images and sounds of soju (Korean liquor) bottles clinking together in a soju factory production line into ‘Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da’ of The Beatles, An has been keen on the boundaries between individuals and groups and social phenomenon and presented them in rhythmical layouts.


An Jungju, Hand in Hand with Amigos para Siempre, 2016, Multichannel video, color, stereo sound, 8 min 30 sec, Dimensions variable © An Jungju

Two pieces of work presented in this exhibition shed light on the social, political and cultural issues as an extension of an experiment aiming to rearrange images and sounds that the artist has studied until now.

Hand in Hand with Amigos Para Siempre (2016) is a remix of the images and theme songs of the 1988 Seoul Olympics and 1992 Barcelona Olympics, presenting them in fragmented forms on 9 cathodic-ray tubes. The 1988 Seoul Olympics’ mascot Hodori, a symbol of Korea’s globalization and economic stride and the 1992 Barcelona Olympics’ mascot, Cobi are seen together in a photo frame.

Nostalgic memories of the childhood Olympics days coupled with their positive socio-economic impact are called upon to reveal the other sides to the historical and global events via segmented images and sounds.

Siren (2017), a 3-channel video installation placed amidst the red colors on the wall and white arrow sign, the construction materials installed in dangerous zones in night-time construction site…It embodies the movements of safety guidance robots that the artist had encountered on the highways, intersections and the end of tunnels.

Siren referring to a warning system producing a certain level of sound is inspired by a Greek myth that a spirited half-man half-bird wrecks a ship by seducing sailors with a beautiful song. The artist goes on to reveal the paranoiac and uncertain senses of cities, by putting up a real-time duo concert of an analog synthesizer creating sounds in line with the movements of the traffic guidance robot.

An recombines the fragmented images and sounds familiar to us to focus on the relationship between the past and present and the boundaries in between. The artist’s way of working allows us to reflect back upon what lies behind the collective memory possibly shared by us and to contemplate on the structure of memory arising from scenes of an image or sounds.

References