Poster image of 《Black Veil; This Tale Is Mine As Well》 © Soohoh Gallery

Boyun Jang creates works that reconstruct the memory and history of existence through photographic images in a variety of ways. While her early practice was driven by a fascination with the photographic medium and its capacity for representation, her later work has shifted its focus to the sense of loss inherent in photographic images.

The artificial leather covers of two old photo albums, once belonging to an unknown individual, bear the unmistakable traces of time. Each time the albums are opened, fragments of the deteriorating leather crumble onto the table like dust.

The surface continues to peel, crack, and decay. Once serving to protect the albums and the photographs they contained, the covers have lost their original function and remain as remnants that materially reveal the fragments of time and the erosion of memory.

We live in an age of loss. We have lost God, lost our center, lost our sense of being, and lost our homeland. Nature is no exception. Environmental destruction signifies the loss of nature itself. Material abundance has, paradoxically, brought about spiritual emptiness and meaninglessness—a condition that echoes Émile Durkheim's concept of anomie.

Art has the power to awaken the archetypes we have lost. It possesses the ability to restore meaning to lives whose foundations have been eroded.

Suho Gallery warmly invites you to Boyun Jang’s solo exhibition 《Black Veil; This Tale Is Mine As Well》. Through this exhibition—which is also the story of all of us living in an age of loss—we hope visitors will take time to reflect on loss and on life itself.

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