Hong Seung-Hye, My Garage Band, 2016, Flash animation, Dimensions variable © Hong Seung-Hye

Music, with its repetitive fundamental beat and variations of rhythm, harmony, and timbre, may well be considered the most intuitive art form — one that possesses strong temporality while immediately drawing emotional response from the audience. This moment of perfect abstraction disappears the instant it reaches our ears. The score that records the sounds and rhythms remains only as a surface of signs and must be embodied again through someone’s body to be realized. In comparison, the afterimage of visual art is far clearer, because it remains in materialized form.

Looking closely at Hong Seung-Hye’s well-known “Organic Drawing” series composed of grids, one notices slight differences in the number of pixels, subtly disturbing overall uniformity. It resembles music in the manner of a canon with variation, maintaining rhythmic balance. While employing geometric images beginning from the pixel unit, the artist often incorporated sound.

The starting point appears to be the video work The Sentimental 1 presented at the 2002 Seoul Mediacity Biennale. By adding full movement through computer-graphic animation effects, the pixel — a principal element of her earlier paintings — acquired temporality, while sound elements were effectively integrated. This enabled the expansion of “Organic Geometry” and ultimately led to the formation of My Garage Band in this exhibition, allowing for a composite art form actively incorporating music.

The physical expansion of pixels on the screen had already been realized through pixel masses discovered in real space. For example, in a 2004 solo exhibition at KUKJE GALLERY, a pixel was found in part of a building: a protruding white wall transformed into a gigantic pixel mass when colored purple. This time, the space of Space Willing N Dealing will transform into the interior of a pixel filled with sound. Inside, viewers encounter performers of the artist’s invented band moving rhythmically to music while simultaneously experiencing the emotions conveyed through their sound.

As the seasons continue their cycle and we arrive again at the spring of 2016, the “amateur spirit” presented by the established artist Hong Seung-Hye in this exhibition at Space Willing N Dealing gains deeper significance through her process of speaking about “beginnings.” The video concert shown in this space will likely sound like a song of encouragement addressed to all of us, sustaining the freshness of artistic experience through her constant pursuit of newness.

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