Exhibitions
《4℃》, 2024.01.30 – 2024.04.28, Sehwa Museum of Art
January 30, 2024
Sehwa Museum of Art

Installation view ©Sehwa Museum of Art
In an age where digital media
seamlessly overlays our reality and the boundary between AI and human appears
increasingly blurred, one must ask: what remains fundamentally irreducible to
algorithms in the human experience? The exhibition 《4℃》, part of the “Non-Algorithm Challenge”
series, turns to memory in search of this elusive element.
Defined as “the mental function
of receiving, storing, and retrieving information about objects,” memory
occupies a central role in human cognition. Retracing this meaning reveals the
close ties between memory and cognition—mechanisms that artificial intelligence
attempts to emulate. Deep learning models, in particular, process and analyze
data in ways strikingly similar to how humans learn through experience,
gradually improving over time. This resemblance can make AI seem poised to
surpass human cognitive capacities altogether.

Installation view ©Sehwa Museum of Art
And yet, the complex web of
embodied cognition and subjective experience—formed and layered through lived
memory—is something AI cannot replicate. The capacity to feel, to sense, to
accumulate memory through bodily experience remains unique to humans. While
data serves as a foundational operational unit for machines and AI, unlike
human memory, it does not accommodate contradiction, forgetting, leaps in
logic, or illogical associations. Attempts to examine memory inevitably
confront its irrational and paradoxical nature.
Questions emerge: How
does memory sink or surface? Is there a primordial memory that makes us yearn
for places we’ve never seen? What kinds of memories might digital or
(non-)human entities in virtual worlds possess? What if all memories suddenly
disappeared? What if one could choose different memories?
《4℃》 raises such
questions through works by SEOM:, Omyo Cho, and Taekim, connecting sensory
experience, memory, and the (non-)human. This exhibition probes the uniquely
human quality of “humanness” through memory, while also asking: what can be
drawn out at this juncture where the Non-Algorithm Challenge now turns its
attention to memory, following earlier inquiries into sensation and the body?
《4℃》 proposes a
connection between memory and a world that holds risk and mortality—a world
unlike the frictionless, mirror-smooth surfaces of artificial domains. In
imagining such a world, the metaphor of water at four degrees Celsius naturally
emerged: the state at which water is densest, and thus symbolically saturated
with the potential of memory itself.