The Artist © Gimhongsok

“Sometimes the garbage bags left in back alleys look more striking than sculptures. Cardboard boxes and trash bags scattered around the city appear and disappear as they pile up—almost like temporary forms of public art. The work I presented in Yokohama attempts to revive the aesthetic qualities of plastic bags, which are usually considered merely auxiliary materials.”

The bronze work Bear-like Structure–629 by Gimhongsok (51), which resembles a black plastic garbage bag, became an iconic piece of the Yokohama Triennale in 2014. The bear image appeared widely in promotional materials for the exhibition across Japan, including posters, flags flying throughout Yokohama, and even the official shuttle buses of the triennale.

Recreating the rustling texture of a plastic bag using rigid bronze, Gimhongsok explained that the installation sites—subway stations and underground shopping passages—are places easily passed by without notice. “In that sense, the work embodies the theme of the triennale through the notions of ‘the forgetting of place’ and ‘the forgetting of institutions.’”

“Plastic bags, cardboard boxes, and Styrofoam are auxiliary materials that support primary structures. In any organization, if the work of the leader is important, there are also countless people supporting that work with their own positions and responsibilities. Painting and sculpture likewise contain materials that function in supporting roles.” He added, “I deliberately staged non-artistic situations and auxiliary materials in order to create conditions in which the supporting elements become the protagonists.”

Another bronze sculpture, resembling seven stacked blue balloons, was installed both inside and outside the exhibition venues. During the triennale period, he also presented a new collaborative video work with Japanese and Chinese artists at Koganecho Bazaar, a “museum under the bridge” created by converting the space beneath a railway overpass in Yokohama’s southern Koganecho district, an area once known for its long history as a red-light district.

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