Yun Taejun, Weight of Remorse #03, 2014, Print on paper, Dimensions variable © Yun Taejun

Artist’s Note

Objects connected to my memories play an important role in recalling those memories. The act of freezing such objects inside ice shows my desire to preserve memory. At the same time, their slowly melting state tells me that they cannot be kept forever.

The reason I first began this work was the death of the dog I had been raising. For the first time, the death of the object closest to me came to me as a strange emotion.

After not facing that death for several years, the feeling I experienced when I encountered it as the object called a grave was new. It was neither a sense of loss nor sadness. When I faced it after it had been transformed into another object, it felt as though I were recalling a memory again.

Yun Taejun, Weight of Remorse #11, 2014, Print on paper, Dimensions variable © Yun Taejun

For me, memory does not exist at a specific point in time. I think that memories of the past do not remain at a specific time, but move together within the flow of time. Memory is not one specific time or moment, but moves together within flowing time. Very small memories are alive around me and exist together with me. It is not only special objects or specific times that are meaningful.

Forgotten things and things around me are also a part of me. They are always connected to me and are like individual entities that make me who I am. The moment they are photographed, they become my new recollections and memories. They also hold my history and confirm me.

References