《Gestures of Cultivation》 Installation view ©Kim Bokyung

On January 6, Yoo Hwasoo was selected as the winner of the 23rd SongEun Art Award. His work was highly praised for its originality and effectiveness in addressing a timely and relevant theme. Yoo has long explored the impact of technology on human labor, the relationship between technology and disability, and the social phenomena that emerge from their intersection.

For this exhibition, Yoo presented an installation using trees that had been cut down from residential areas for obstructing scenic views. In Gesture of Cultivation (2023), severed branches take on a nurturing role within a high-tech smart farm, cultivating mushrooms. This work extends the artist’s ongoing exploration of human-defined standards of usefulness. He previously employed a similar approach in his solo exhibition 《The Last Pavilion》(2021, Oil Culture Tank T1), where he placed so-called "useless" plants inside a smart farm. By doing so, Yoo critically examines the paradox of technological advancements that grow increasingly sophisticated while human sensitivity toward environmental concerns dulls.

Beyond the grand prize-winning work, the exhibition also features 20 other finalists’ pieces. Among them, Shin Jehyun's Sound of Water (2023) presents a multidisciplinary installation incorporating discarded objects found on an island, while Park Hyungjin’s two paintings, Walnut Tree (2023), document the transformation of walnut trees planted in redevelopment areas. These works collectively engage with contemporary ecological concerns. The finalists of this year’s SongEun Art Award represent a new generation of Korean artists exploring not only pressing societal issues but also personal emotions and conceptual inquiries into the nature of art itself. Their works, spanning painting, sculpture, installation, and video, showcase the diversity and dynamism of contemporary Korean art.

The exhibition runs at SongEun until February 24.

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