Exhibition poster of 《The Tongue Before Words》 ©K-Arts

The works of eight resident artists from the 9th K-Arts School of Visual Arts Creative Studio are presented in the outcome exhibition 《The Tongue Before Words》. The title of this exhibition, “The Tongue Before Words,” reminds us that before language was spoken, and before the object—an artwork agreed upon by all of us—came into being, there existed the artist’s tongue and flesh.

The “tongue” before “words” encompasses instinct and the unconscious before being confined within the system, hierarchy, and rules of language. If “words” signify the beginning of language and conversation, that is, incorporation into a system, then the “tongue” we had before that refers to an attempt to find a sensory, primal, essential, and physical origin before reaching thought and system.

For an artist to make a work is to gaze at a primal and instinctive state before language is formed, and at the same time, it is a struggle to capture what cannot be recorded or preserved.

The exhibition begins with Lauren Lee’s sculpture SKIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIID MARKS, made from rambutan shells. Lee’s sculpture evokes a tactile synesthesia of cracking and crumbling the hard, hairy shell of rambutan, while also recalling the artist’s confession that she wanted to make a cage that confines shame.

Park Hyungjin records the landscapes he encounters every day through painting. Along with Walnut Tree August to September, which records and depicts time spent under a walnut tree, he gathers together the ginkgo tree at the entrance of the Creative Studio, the dense greenery outside the window, and time in Seokgwan-dong. Serin Oh’s A Certain Festival creates a space that mourns dead plants.

Lee Eunsol’s Voice Phishing maintains and repairs another self that exists in the digital world, while posing questions about existence and the value of being. Dew Kim’s sculptures, including Let the Church Say Amen, become an altar and compare the ecstasy felt in BDSM play to religious ecstasy, overturning reason, hierarchy, and normality as represented by religion.

Juxtaposed with Dew Kim, Choi Jaehyung’s Potalaka Mountain contains the artist’s desire to seek Buddhist salvation while also guiding the viewer toward Buddhahood. The symmetrical works of the two artists reveal the different attitudes each artist takes toward religion and the taut tension between them.

Positioned opposite them, Inside the Fire completes this triangle, evoking the burning body that Son Hyunsun was fascinated by and the primal, powerful purification of fire. Gulsha Ayla Bayrak’s Behind Mountains explores what lies beyond my existence, what is me and what is not me, expanding that boundary.

We hope that the K-Arts School of Visual Arts Creative Studio has been of help in the arduous process of pain and exploration in which artists’ “tongues” and “words” coexist, and that it will continue to be a program that accompanies artists on their journey to find “words” and “tongues.”

The exhibition 《The Tongue Before Words》 will be held at the New Gallery of the Arts Library, Korea National University of Arts Seokgwan Campus, from March 4 to March 15, 2025.

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