Exhibitions
《HAPPY TIME IS GOOD》, 2021.04.09 – 2021.05.09, Hapjungjigu
April 08, 2021
Hapjungjigu

Installation view of 《HAPPY TIME IS GOOD》 (Hapjungjigu, 2021) ©Hapjungjigu
From
April 9 (Fri) to May 9 (Sun), the art space Hapjungjigu in Seogyo-dong, Seoul,
presented Yeoreum Jeong’s first solo exhibition 《HAPPY TIME IS GOOD》. In this exhibition,
Jeong investigates the unique space of U.S. military bases in Korea, along with
the public and private experiences and ideologies surrounding them. The
exhibition centers on Graeae: A Stationed Idea(2019), which
was screened at multiple film festivals including the DMZ International
Documentary Film Festival and the Jeonju International Film Festival in 2020,
as well as the new work The Long Hole.
Due
to security concerns, the interiors of U.S. military bases are not only closed
to the public but also omitted from satellite maps. Yeoreum Jeong attempts to
access the Yongsan U.S. military base through the augmented-reality game
Pokémon GO. Graeae: A Stationed Idea assembles the desires
and signs that emerge during this process like a puzzle. Traversing both ends
of time—from archival materials dating back to the Japanese colonial period to
3D blueprints of the future Yongsan Park—the work excavates the foundations of
what is believed to be reality or substance.

Installation view of 《HAPPY TIME IS GOOD》 (Hapjungjigu, 2021) ©Hapjungjigu
“Camp
Long” is an abandoned U.S. military base, and Yeoreum Jeong’s new work The
Long Hole takes the form of a detective’s report investigating
the time embedded in this site. Like other U.S. military bases, Camp Long is
concealed on Google Maps, yet the detective discovers one remaining data point
there: “Camp Long ATM.” This coordinate is the only identifiable piece of
information left on the site. Beginning from this point, the detective
investigates rupture and forgetting, drawing on Google Earth’s satellite
imagery archives and individual memories.
By
examining concealed and disguised places and narrating the memories and
experiences embedded within them, Yeoreum Jeong expands the conceptual horizon
of colonial sites. Detailed schedules can be found on the Hapjungjigu website
(hapjungjigu.com). The exhibition runs from March 5 (Sat) to April 4 (Sat).