Installation view of 《earcabinet》 (Mullae Art Space, 2022) ©Seo Minwoo

Is it possible to experience perfect sound? We sometimes believe that we are hearing perfect sound when listening to music or attending performances. Yet it is impossible to perceive reproduced sound in its entirety, and sounds we deem pleasant or musical are ultimately illusions shaped by the limits of human cognition. Sound exists as countless frequencies across a spectrum, but through perceptual processes and interference, it becomes experienced as “sound.”

Despite this, we persist in believing that owning a perfect MP3 player—or retaining even a single remaining bit—allows for flawless listening. In reality, the sounds we hear have never been perfect. What, then, does a “perfect” listening experience entail?

The 《earcabinet》 showcase is an exhibition and performance commemorating the release of Seo Minwoo’s album earcabinet (2022). It is also part of the ongoing trajectory of the ‘Eartrain’ series, which reveals the artist’s sustained experiments with sound. Rather than adhering to the conventions of familiar concert venues, this showcase constructs an alternative acoustic environment—one in which sound can never be heard perfectly anywhere.

As a result, listeners are compelled to invert their own listening habits and attune themselves to sounds selectively arranged by the artist. The showcase thus departs from the illusion that sound must be musically “perfect.”

Sound is transmitted through the movement of solids and surrounding materials. Vibrating through a medium, sound is perceived through the collision of minute particles and therefore lacks a fixed material form. Building on this property, Seo constructs environments that experiment with how sound physically reorganizes spatial perception. Listening emerges as a layered space of contingent events occurring within a structurally designed environment.

Installation view of 《earcabinet》 (Mullae Art Space, 2022) ©Seo Minwoo

The axis of the space is formed by “sound sculptures.” Rather than sculpting sound, it may be more accurate to say that Seo sculpts space through sound. Observing how sound occupies space by vibrating through a medium, the artist generates sound waves through the act of viewing.

These results resemble sculptural concretizations: objects that function as supports for sound while existing in a process of transformation. By experimenting with sound phenomena from both physical and material perspectives, the work reactivates sculptural language while simultaneously repositioning its status.

The sculptures created for sound depend entirely on the vibration, amplitude, and frequency design of the speakers housed within them—speakers fabricated by the artist himself. Each speaker produces different sounds depending on its form, while its fixation and placement alter depth and resonance. Seo continues to modify and transform speakers, developing them as objects that function simultaneously as instruments for performance and as sculptures.

This showcase consists of two sound sculptures previously exhibited in 《EarTrain_Reverse》 (2021), two speakers referencing the performance 《eartrain tuned》 (2022), and a state-motion system derived from eleven soundtracks included in the album earcabinet (2022). These elements dominate the physical environment, generating and mediating sound so that perception varies according to each visitor’s position, movement, and posture.

By revisiting the sounds of 《EarTrain_Reverse》 and integrating musical flow with artistic intervention, subjectivity, and sculptural form, the showcase unfolds a collaborative engagement with sound sculpture. Through variation and reconstruction, the ‘Eartrain’  series renews existing conventions and opens new approaches to sound.

 
Text by Moon Hyunjeong

References