Installation view of 《Technically Speaking》 © Space DDF

Today, as various image technologies are busily developing, what are we saying with those technologies? Beginning from this question, the exhibition 《Technically Speaking》(Space DDF, Gwangju, 2025) presents the stories of five artists who make diverse use of photography and digital image-processing technologies.

Lee Hyunwoo, who reflects on the essence and properties of photography, experiments with the fundamental concept of photography by projecting generative AI images with artificial light sources to create photographic images. Yun Taejun has attempted to connect the materiality of photographic and digital images with the bodily senses of human beings, presenting this through clear and repetitive photography and digital graphics.

Noh Yuseung carries out a practice of seeking none other than himself, using technological tools that move across computer graphics, drawing, and video. Some works speak of everyday life or society close to us. Reconsidering beings who have been placed at the margins of society, Jung Hangyeol collages the words or photographic records they left behind, and also physically moves up and down the spaces that remain, visualizing their memories and his own.

Lastly, Jung Youngdon captures the trajectory of the sun, which rises and sets each day, on his father’s film containing everyday life, metaphorizing days that continue infinitely, each slightly different from the last.


Installation view of 《Technically Speaking》 © Space DDF

Works born from various reasons have been expressed as black-and-white photographs, digital graphics that look like photographs, drawings that look like digital graphics, fabrics printed with collages, and videos that murmur unknown information values. It would be difficult to bind them together under a single keyword. Yet there is a point at which they are loosely gathered.

First, the technical properties of each medium and the artists’ thoughts are very densely connected within the screen. At times, they are so thoroughly absorbed into one another that distinguishing what is meaning and what is technology becomes meaningless. In this process, meaning becomes form, and form gives shape to meaning. In addition, their works are images that move away from the typicality of photography or painting.

Yet in the conversations with the artists during the curatorial process, familiar topics were found. If the keywords forming the outer layer of the works are medium, technology, and experiment, what lies at their foundation is reflection on humans, life, and sensation. In the process of delving into essence, they appear to have consciously or unconsciously traversed the existing territories of media.

The title of the exhibition, Technically Speaking, literally means “speaking technically.” However, it can also be used to mean “in fact” or “strictly speaking.” The medium-experimental works introduced here may stand out for their technical skill or spectacle.

Yet beyond the spectacle of the moment, there must be a long story. With what kind of mind did the artists choose technology, and what questions and answers did they find within it? Let us listen with a calm mind.

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