Installation view of 《SARORI SARORIRATTA》 © Gyeongnam Art Museum

Before COVID-19, artists tended to place great importance on their own creative impulse — the desire to make art — and often did not deeply consider the public who would experience their work. However, the outbreak of COVID-19 and the seemingly endless period of social distancing compelled us to reflect on the social role of art.

Across the art world, a shared understanding began to emerge: in a society marked by disconnection and isolation, art should offer people at least a small measure of comfort and consolation. Museums were no exception. They began to move away from the attitude of proudly presenting deliberately obscure contemporary art filled with difficult discourse, and instead turned their attention toward exhibitions that could provide emotional support to psychologically exhausted audiences.
 
Of course, when we first invited Choi Jeonghwa and began 《SARORI SARORIRATTA》, this shift had not yet appeared. Yet from last February until the opening today, the museum and the artist have remained keenly attentive to this changing atmosphere, sharing sincere discussions about the role of art.

Interestingly, Choi Jeonghwa — regardless of COVID-19 — has always believed that making art is connected to an act that anyone can recognize, smile at, and enjoy. He says the moment his art begins is when one’s “eyes widen” and “mouth opens in delight.” Perhaps he had already given us the answer long ago; perhaps the questions and answers once posed in the past are only now arriving because of COVID-19.
 
Despite many limitations caused by the pandemic, over the past ten months the museum and Choi Jeonghwa traveled throughout Gyeongnam, sharing its histories and places. We encountered fish crates and parasols (Masan Fishery Cooperative Auction Market), fruit handcarts (Masan Produce Market), and gobi — letter boxes from the Joseon dynasty.

We spoke about the newly emerging Namhaegak and about Bugok Hawaii, pausing between past glory and present quietness, sometimes sharing a bowl of makgeolli. We also remember meeting the history of Gaya — once an ancient maritime power — in Gimhae. Above all, we were fortunate to encounter the lives (tableware) and histories (photographs) of Gyeongnam residents through the ‘Moamoa’ project and the ‘Memory Collection’ project.
 
Now, with these small yet precious stories we have all built together, the exhibition unfolds. Will Choi Jeonghwa once again offer us an experience where our eyes ‘spark open’ and our mouths ‘open wide’? Or perhaps, through the countless stories he encountered in Gyeongnam, his own eyes have already sparkled and his mouth opened in delight.

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