Poster image of 《My Sleep》 © Culture Station Seoul 284

Sleep is one of the most essential activities in human life. People spend about one third of their day sleeping. In other words, the time for rest and replenishment—apart from working and leisure—is largely constituted by sleep. Among the basic human necessities of food, clothing, and shelter, “shelter” ultimately centers on the space for sleeping, namely the bedroom.

In many ways, a significant portion of human labor appears to be an effort to achieve the most comfortable sleep possible. As economies develop, the scale of industries related to sleep continues to grow. People increasingly seek more luxurious and comfortable bedrooms, beds, and related consumer goods. Sleep is becoming ever more significant across social, economic, industrial, political, and medical-scientific dimensions.

The theme of this exhibition is “My Sleep.” Sleep is in the first person—it is mine. The fact that sleep belongs to me is similar to how love or death belongs to me. Just as love or death cannot be shared with others, sleep cannot be shared either. It is something that happens only to me and only within me. My sleep does not belong to the world. The right not to belong to the world—that is my right to sleep. My sleep contains my detachment from the world, from the present, and from the self.

Through this exhibition, I hope viewers will recall their own experiences of sleep and project them onto the works presented here. Furthermore, I hope it will encourage deeper and more engaging reflections on sleep. I dedicate this exhibition to the audience with the wish that sleep may be considered not as a “remainder” or a “margin,” but as a central axis of life.

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