Exhibition poster © Chamber

Place names containing “Seon (仙)” trace back to the Silla period, when Hwarang warriors trained their bodies and minds. This training ground (“pyeong,” 坪) continued into the late Joseon dynasty as “Samseonpyeong (三仙坪),” remaining the closest military training field to the capital and the site of the first large-scale athletic events.

The terrain of “linear plains + steep valleys + fortress walls” captures the spatial character of the Korean Peninsula, a land where wartime simulations were always possible.

Viewed through the question posed by Hito Steyerl in Is the Museum a Battlefield? (2013), Samseon-dong’s training-ground nature may be seen as the starting point of preliminary maneuvers before an artist enters the arena of contemporary art. Located here, Chamber 1965 aims to serve as a “chamber” for artists just before they pull the trigger of creation.

In 《SSP Gunshop 2023》, visitors find themselves within a training field of diverse topographies—an environment like a battlefield where one cannot focus on a single point. Though the exercise demands rigorous concentration, the hope is that every participant will nonetheless find a moment to “test-fire” their own artistic weapon.

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