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

The Disney and Pixar animated film “Inside Out,” which has recently gained immense popularity, wittily expresses the operations of memory and oblivion through five characters who live inside the human mind and control five emotions.

In particular, the scene in which a tender memory disappears brought many viewers to tears and made them look back on days gone by. Yet just as the film reaches a happy ending thanks to oblivion, the tense tug-of-war between memory and oblivion can also become an indispensable driving force in human life.

Yun Taejun’s 'Weight of Remorse' series captures precisely that moment of tension. In his artist’s note, the artist once said, “Memory is not one specific time or moment, but moves together within the flow of time. Very small memories are alive around me and exist together with me. It was not only special objects or specific times that were meaningful. Forgotten things and things around me were also a part of me.”

After his companion dog died, while looking at the stone mound where its body was buried, he came to feel subtle emotions at the moment when certain memories of the past resurfaced before sadness or a sense of loss. In order to express the human desire to preserve precious memories, he immersed in water objects containing extremely personal recollections—such as diaries, photographs, letters, military boots, name tags, flowerpots, and clocks—froze them, and photographed them.

While emphasizing the subjects enclosed in ice, the artist also made great efforts to find spaces that best suited them. He also deliberately photographed the ice in a slightly melted state.

In his works, moments of oblivion appear as they inevitably crumble little by little, just as ice returns to water at room temperature. They also reveal a desperate longing for memories that one wants to hold onto all the more because they cannot last forever. Beginning with photographs of the stone mound of his companion dog buried and entangled in ice, and ending with A Piece of Letter, for which he froze a letter received from his girlfriend, this series shows “the process itself of naturally looking into personal memories and confirming how they are composed and distorted.”

Going beyond photography’s innate task of “recording” a fleeting moment, Yun Taejun’s photographic work delves into “personal memory,” into which the artist’s gaze intervenes. Meanwhile, in the past, the artist presented food preserved in test tubes together with specific photographs; during the time he stayed in Germany as part of an exchange student program, he collected foods containing his body and energy because he wished to preserve that time intact.

After the 'Weight of Remorse' series, the artist has been carrying out work in which he extracts ink from the photographs of this series themselves and prints another photograph on paper with that ink.

References