Installation view of 《Missing Species in DMZ Biodiversity》 (Crafts On The Hill, 2023) ©Seungjoon Song

《Missing Species in DMZ Biodiversity》 aims to uncover the unsettling foundational structure of the concept of nature through the ecosystem of Korea’s Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), where human access has been restricted for 70 years.

Unexploded landmines, armed guard posts, chemical operations, and barbed-wire fences pose threats not only to humans but also to the species living within the DMZ. How, then, could the DMZ become one of the peninsula’s core ecological axes alongside the Taebaek mountain range today? The peaceful-looking green landscape of the DMZ is, in fact, a landscape that has adapted to a violent history of division.

To live sustainably, its species ironically rely on the very violent infrastructures occupying the DMZ. We romanticize humanless nature as pristine wilderness, yet the DMZ ecosystem demonstrates how such “pristine nature” can be designed.

Installation view of 《Missing Species in DMZ Biodiversity》 (Crafts On The Hill, 2023) ©Seungjoon Song

In response, Seungjoon Song introduces eight fictional species that have evolved in strange symbiosis with the violent infrastructure of the DMZ. The DMZ is a real place, yet inaccessible—making it simultaneously a fictional space.

Its ability to exist only as fiction allows us to experience its violent reality. The eight unique species of the DMZ exist solely within Song’s speculative scenario, yet no one can definitively claim they do not exist. They might very well be living in the DMZ today.

References