Poster image of 《Vista Point》 © BMW Photo Space

From June 10 to August 24, 2019, BMW Photo Space presents Boyun Jang’s solo exhibition 《Vista Point》.

Throughout our lives, we continuously record the present. We write diaries, take photographs, and collect souvenirs to prove that we were once here. The moments preserved through photographs and writing soon become the past, and as time passes, those memories no longer retain their original form; they are altered or gradually forgotten.

Interested in the inevitable disappearance that accompanies human existence, Boyun Jang intervenes in the private records of others, transforming them into works that generate new meanings.

Boyun Jang, Memory 3, 2007, Pigment print, 71 x 88 cm © Boyun Jang

In Un-Vanished Memory, Boyun Jang observes objects that have lost their original function from the perspective of an outsider. In an abandoned house, emptied of the warmth of human life, only objects remain as evidence that someone once lived there. By photographing these objects, Jang reveals their objecthood—their existence as things in themselves—despite the fact that they have lost their original purpose.

Preface of Memory: K's Slides began with a collection of slide photographs that the artist happened upon in a redevelopment area in 2008. The slides document the travels of an unknown man in Japan between 1968 and 1979. Naming him “K,” Jang traces his footsteps and constructs an imagined memory from the archival photographs.

Moving beyond the detached position of an observer, she inserts her own experiences from visiting K’s destinations into the narrative. She fabricates a fax that appears to have been sent by K across time, and erases the figure from the slide images so that K’s photographs form an entirely new narrative. The past, reconstructed through the artist’s intervention, infiltrates our own memories and prompts us to reflect upon our personal past.

Installation view of 《Vista Point》 © BMW Photo Space

Before the liberalization of overseas travel in South Korea in 1989, Gyeongju was one of the country's most popular travel destinations, remembered by generations through honeymoons, family vacations, and school excursions. Photographs of Gyeongju also appear repeatedly among the films collected by Jang.

The ancient capital, with its historic sites and cultural landmarks, has undergone continuous transformation over successive generations. The Gyeongju captured in these photographs is no longer the Gyeongju of today.

The artist likens the city to René Daumal’s novel Mount Analogue. Like the mountain in the novel—real yet ultimately unreachable—she imagines Gyeongju as an “invisible mountain,” capturing a space where a once-familiar place comes to feel strange and unknowable.

《Vista Point》 brings together Boyun Jang’s perspective on the absence of presence and her efforts to visualize it anew. Through these three series, viewers confront the human condition, inevitably shaped by the passage of time and destined to change and disappear. By filling the traces left by the artist with our own stories, we are invited to create new memories and new meanings.

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