Installation view © Art Sonje Center

Art Sonje Center is pleased to present Heinkuhn Oh’s solo exhibition 《Middlemen》 from May 3 to June 17, 2012, which shows portrait photographs of soldiers. This is the first time to present a portrait series of soldiers portraying them as individuals, as art in Korea, where is under suspension of fire for 62 years. Oh has documented the portraits of the army, navy and air force throughout Korea, supported by the Ministry of National Defense since 2009.

Since his 1999 exhibition 《Ajumma》 at Art Sonje Center, Oh has been revealing prejudices and stereotypes inherent to Korean society through his portrayal of women and the anxiety they represent. The ‘Middlemen’ series, on the other hand, presents an unstable male state of mind. In addition, the artist has shifted his reflection onto the military so as to examine the concept of concrete ‘we’ rather than the groups that correspond to conventional notions in the society. However, while taking photographs of military troops, which signify a typical collective body symbolizing masculinity and the obligation duty in Korean society, he discovers that the concept of “we” is erased when facing individual soldiers. Therefore, Oh’s portraits convey the obscure anxieties of being situated in the middle ground of the “we” and “I” conflict.

Installation view © Art Sonje Center

Through the viewpoint of an absolute outsider, Oh excludes photographic devices such as harsh lighting, unusual casting and fabricated situations. He neither criticizes the military, nor represents it in a positive light. His neutral attitude is in correlation with the use of a middle tone and lighting in photography. This is also his photographic technique which he intends to capture ambivalent “middleness”. In his previous works, the figures were highlighted; however, Oh also focuses on the background of a picture to express a sense of isolation. The backgrounds of his pictures are a motif that takes on the role of Mise-en-Scene by intentionally being juxtaposed with objects in his photography.

Heinkuhn Oh states that his narrative perspective, which views the military as ‘Middlemen’, is merely his own reaction, but that it does not approach the essence of his subjects. The issue in his works is how one looks at an object, not what the actual object is. Thus, his photographs of soldiers arouse diverse responses depending on viewers’ different personal and individual backgrounds as well as their experiences of military duty.

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