Exhibition poster ©Lee Gunjung

The exhibition leans against a corner of the library. Like an italicized sentence in a book, a mere slant shifts one’s breathing, slows the flow, and sets a mood. In the same way that italics signal emphasis—words or sentences corresponding to an underline, quotations, foreign languages, onomatopoeia and mimetic words, or a P.S. at the end of a letter—Song Minjung’s works are placed within the library.

We decided to call this single day “Italic Time.” Over the course of the day, memories and time from past works are recalled and then returned to the present moment and place—spinning between past and present. Alongside Song Minjung’s JOE (2021) and Atmosphere (2023), the library hosts works detached from, or used as clues to, previous projects. Once removed from their original contexts and set on a new page, they operate like italicized words/sentences—working as emphasized images/scenes. They blink again, signaling what comes next. 《Italic Time》 resembles a hard-to-name potential interval—after a past exhibition and before an upcoming one—the valley time that lies between mountains. This is a time that exists to store energy and drink water.

Song Minjung leans her works into the very place of the library—on a shelf’s edge, between books, on loose sheets of paper, amidst people each absorbed in a different book. Visitors set out to find the works scattered through the library, recalling childhood memories of mazes or treasure hunts. The exhibition welcomes wandering in the library, getting lost among countless catalogs, and the joy of drifting off-course. If you miss the piece you were seeking but encounter a new book or scene along the way, that is good in another sense. At some point, we have gained great joy from such unexpected time.

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