Exhibition poster © Soohoh Gallery

Within the category of human and environmental evolution/growth, this exhibition addresses destruction, disappearance, stasis, camouflage, and coupling/coevolution, indulging in the tremors of movement and patterns of change in evolution as an infinite and cyclical process.

It also attends to the process by which the human being is reborn anew—that is, the flow in which eruptions, friction, and abrasion colliding between inside and outside lead beyond the expansion of body and mind to an expansion of space; a process of continuity and circulation, and a play of concealment/revelation, are explored as if within another skin/flesh. The work focuses on transcendence or molting of spirit and body.

This foundation begins from data of natural and artificial objects that are collected and refined, posing an essential question about what it means to transgress the boundary between self and non-self.

Beginning with the act of draping something on the body or an object and extending into space, the work revisits evolutionary and morphological tendencies in sculpture/space and their dualities, observing the stepwise and interdependent systems within. It examines internal and external bodily changes through movement, attending to patterns of breath, the radius of physical activity, and recoil.

Hkason proposes a worldview in which humans and nature exist as co-evolving entities released from a long-standing relation of tension. Amid countless currents of coevolution, the human overcomes lack and is reborn as a fortified—new—human.

References