Installation view of 《Hybrid Baton: Atypical Feast》 © Gallery Baton

Gallery Baton presents the group exhibition 《Hybrid Baton: Atypical Feast》 at its Hannam-dong exhibition space from February 24 to March 26, 2022, featuring 11 Korean artists: Jungmo Kwon, Kim Beom, Kim Jieun, Hyese Park, Yookyung Oh, Sekyun Ju, Choi Sun, Ham Jin, Woojung Hoh, Changoh Hong, and Hwang Haksam.

Harald Szeemann(1933–2005), praised as a pioneer of modern curating, presented 《When Attitudes Become Form》(1969), an exhibition that is still discussed more than half a century later for both its revolutionary curatorial vision and the participating artists. Its subtitle, “Works-Concepts-Processes-Situations-Information,” faithfully represents the nature of the exhibition.

The pioneering exhibition, which embraced art existing in unconventional material and immaterial forms, or possibilities that could be called new forms of art, placed emphasis not on “Art” as a refined final product, but on the process through which something comes to be named an artwork and on the artist’s attitude toward that process.


Installation view of 《Hybrid Baton: Atypical Feast》 © Gallery Baton

In the proposal Szeemann wrote as director of Kunsthalle Bern, where the 1969 exhibition was held, clear traces remain of his deliberation over the title of an exhibition encompassing experimental and pluralistic new tendencies led by young artists from the West Coast of the United States.

Works that challenged standardized forms and were also total expressions of personal and emotional manifestation were, for that reason, given a name suited to them not as a single art movement, but as an “observed phenomenon” — a title that has since become legendary.

An obsession with grouping is also the greatest enemy of a group exhibition. The temptation toward similar images or atmospheres that visually appear across all works and encompass the entire exhibition is further amplified before the mood of the social media era, which seeks “the understanding and favor of the greatest number.”

At the same time, however, this also stands in contradiction to the premise of “contemporaneity,” which is indispensable when defining contemporary art. This is because, among uniform exhibition structures and works of similar contexts, it is rarely easy for the subtle and original attempts of artists to speak in their own voices.

In this respect, Szeemann’s statement must be a reliable declaration for later curators who are considering how to negotiate between the desire for diverse attempts and convention.


Installation view of 《Hybrid Baton: Atypical Feast》 © Gallery Baton

As the subtitle “Hybrid Baton” suggests, this exhibition presents selected works by artists who have participated in various projects with Baton, which has jointly participated in Chapter II’s curatorial projects. “Atypical Feast” faithfully represents the intentions of the artists toward each work.

The results of processes in which they actively explored “form” and “material” that correspond to their own formative will do not demand immediate impression or agreement from us. At the same time, within the current trend led by figuration and flat painting, the exhibition provides a valuable opportunity to reflect on the historical journey of contemporary art and its processes of differentiation across different periods.

“Atypical works,” taking the optimal formats imagined by the artists precisely because they are impressions that cannot be expressed in limited language or explained to others, refuse simple and clear messages, making us approach, linger with, and look back at the works more closely ourselves.

Ultimately, the attitude of viewing best suited to this exhibition faithfully follows the meaningful invitation Szeemann offered half a century ago.
“LIVE IN YOUR HEAD!”

References