Atta Kim, On Air Project – Indala Series “Delhi – 10000”, 2007 ⓒAtta Kim

On June 5 (local time), at Palazzo Zenobio in Venice, as church bells signaled 1 p.m., Korean songs such as ‘Spring in My Hometown’, ’Jeongseon Arirang, and ‘Thoughts of My Brother filled the air’. Five performance artists began moving: Professor Lee Ju-hyang of Suwon University performed full-body prostrations in one corner of the garden; one man repeatedly climbed stairs; one woman gestured directions; another moved swiftly among the approximately 350 visitors to clear paths; and yet another approached viewers, asking, “Who are you?”

Artist Atta Kim (53), who has shown determination to take on Venice following New York, appeared dressed entirely in black with dark glasses. Standing atop a 10-meter-high lift, he suddenly raised his hand and released 10,000 photographs—printed on traditional Korean paper (5×7 inches) for the ‘Indala Series’—into the air. His photographs, transformed into butterflies, conveyed the message “Form is emptiness, emptiness is form.” This performance marked Kim’s first in five years, dedicated to Gaia, the goddess of the Earth.

Declaring on the invitation that he had “dared to trace the substance of emptiness,” Kim used this special exhibition—running until November 22, the closing of the Venice Biennale—to demonstrate his struggle to re-emerge as a global artist. That struggle, he emphasized, was fundamentally an act of discarding.

After discarding the ‘Deconstruction Series’, he gave rise to the ‘Museum Series’; after discarding the ‘Museum Series’, he created the ‘ON-AIR Project’, which conveys the lucid message that “everything disappears.” For Kim, discarding is the driving force that propels him forward.
“If you do not discard what came before, you cannot change,” Kim said. “Discarding requires action, and the greater the discarding, the denser it must become. I am even prepared to discard the fact that I am here in Venice for this special exhibition.”

This special exhibition, recognized by the Venice Biennale office and organized by Gallery Hakgojae, marks the second such presentation by a Korean artist following Lee Ufan in 2007. Under the title 《ATTA KIM: ON-AIR》, the exhibition presents 22 works across three rooms, including the ‘Ice Monologue Series’, works from the ‘ON-AIR Project’, and the ‘Indala Series’. Particularly notable is Parthenon, which documents the melting of a one-tenth-scale ice replica of the Parthenon over two weeks, accompanied by a 40-minute process video.

Kim considers the ‘Indala Series’ the centerpiece of the exhibition. From 2007 through the previous year, he photographed 10,000 images per city—including Delhi, Washington, New York, Tokyo, Moscow, Prague, Berlin, Paris, and Rome—and layered them to create composite images. Each resulting image embodies Kim’s long-standing assertion of emptiness.

Independent curator Lee Ji-yoon commented, “The ‘Indala Series’ is a work that instantly reveals Atta Kim’s philosophy of emptiness and is significant in that it expands the meaning of photography as a medium that records and represents the present.”

Kim has expressed plans to pursue new forms of work that combine photography and video, rejecting the label of photographer and instead positioning himself as a comprehensive contemporary artist.

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