Installation view of 《Green Shivering》 © Busan Museum of Contemporary Art

《Green Shivering》 represents a new curatorial initiative by the Busan Museum of Contemporary Art, exploring the potential and function of contemporary art within interdisciplinary practice. Focusing on the diversity of expanded art forms, the exhibition integrates installation, video, performance, and sound art. Centered around the ecological context of Eulsukdo Island, it examines the multilayered meanings of nature and forests, inviting audiences to reimagine their relation to the environment.

Installation view of 《Green Shivering》 © Busan Museum of Contemporary Art

Philosopher and ecologist Timothy Morton offers a key theoretical reference in Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology after the End of the World, describing our entry into “The Age of Asymmetry”—an era defined by the collapse of anthropocentric certainties. The exhibition resonates with Morton’s view by addressing entangled relations between humans and nonhumans and questioning humanity’s belief in its mastery over nature.

Installation view of 《Green Shivering》 © Busan Museum of Contemporary Art

Featuring works by Sojin Kwak, Kim Ikmyung, Lee Sujin, Lim Goeun, and Heiner Goebbels, the exhibition reinterprets contemporary ecology through diverse artistic vocabularies. Extending beyond the local environment of Eulsukdo, it expands toward a planetary ecological awareness, encouraging reflection on both human and nonhuman coexistence through performances and workshops accompanying the main show.

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