Installation view of 《Will We Live on Stones in the Future?》 © Ilhyun Museum

Among objects in the natural world, stone is an object whose form does not follow its function. The form or shape of a stone, and the purpose of its existence, do not coincide with its form and function. No single specific form or function can sufficiently explain its form. Rather, it is very easily substituted according to the purpose and intention of the user. The function of stone is like that of a single object that cannot be specified.

As it is placed into an unnamed container and named, its function and form are easily changed. At times, stone is substituted and used in various forms according to its superficial properties, such as tool, weapon, or material. This property can be said to make it a unique object among natural things.

Digital photography substitutes a subject that exists in three-dimensional space into a digital signal or image from which time has been removed, upon a specific materiality. Contemporary photography easily substitutes something into something manageable, light, small, and valueless. It is transformed into something that can attach anywhere, and that can be easily adhered to and projected.

These properties of digital photography and the function of stone create a point of contact with one another, and in the work 《Will We Live on Stones in the Future?》(Ilhyun Museum Eulji Space, 2018), they are named according to the purpose, form, and function intended by the artist.

The data of stones recorded through the medium of digital photography are substituted into digital signals or images from which time has been removed, upon a specific materiality.

In addition, the work and the exhibition set the space as a virtual interface, a web environment, that can be accessed as a single space, and substitute the act of exhibiting there with the act of uploading images. This act can be understood as a physical process of uploading and displaying files in the space of the Web.

While removing the weight of an object that possesses weight, it simultaneously shows it again in real space as an object that has weight. I think this is not unrelated to the contemporary situation in which the distinction between virtual reality and reality has become meaningless. Contemporary humans access a virtual web environment, upload their entire individual lives, and continue communicating with reality again by passing through virtual space.

Through this series of processes, the contemporary era is gradually entering an age that cannot be specified. This means that new concepts, clearly possessing a different system of perception from previous generations, will be born, and the beginning of this will lie in differences in the way images are seen and perceived.

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