Installation view of 《Jetlag》 © N/A

"In my work, 'water' always connects forms; it has been a pathway for changing imagination and understanding the world. Amidst the vast ocean filled with sublime information, flooded with countless textsand images that bridge between reality and virtual reality, I stand on two feet with a heavy head dropped to the ground, burdened by complex inputs that I still cannot solve, and while feeling the 'water' flowing along the circulation of my body." - From the artist’s note

Installation view of 《Jetlag》 © N/A

Humankind, as well as all living organisms, including plants and animals, have maintained a life of sleep and rest by stopping activities according to ‘day’ or ‘night’. In this way, the biological rhythm, which is a 24-hour cycle, applies not only to humans but also to the nature.

In the year the pandemic began, we experienced spatial and temporal ‘jet lag’. Daily life and communication with the outside was stopped. Time went by as we were forcibly isolated in a familiar space, and we observed the sudden change in our situation. This exhibition begins with the ideological landscape of artificial nature that Park usually contemplates in her studio, along with artificial communication patterns such as speech balloons.

Installation view of 《Jetlag》 © N/A

At the time, Park observed gifted hydrangeas and used them as the subject of a self-portrait. Park reflected on this to form the mechanism of human thinking by exploring the boundary of the figurative and abstract. This adaptable plant, which changes depending on its surroundings indoors or outdoors, shows its unique aesthetic and how its appearance transforms conditioned upon ‘water’ absorbed from the soil. She observes and expresses how the spectrum of colour is perceived through the attribute of ‘water’.

This exhibition 《Jetlag》 shows the current uncanny transition from a pandemic to an endemic situation by depicting the feeling of jet lag between day and night, remembered like a dream, and evoking the unfamiliar yet strangely familiar impression of hydrangeas.

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