A video of a little over five minutes loops. Within an infinite loop that manifests a kind of eternity, the body is torn to pieces. A belly that is “about to burst” from having eaten too much is thrown down and finally explodes, and organs spill out. A gear that catches in the wrong direction splits a hand into two, and the split hand and arm begin to dance on their own (Crack Crack, 2011). From an eye socket pierced with the mouth of a PET bottle, an eyeball pops right out, and a bundle of nerves stretches and dangles (Pong Pong, 2014).
The figure is not merely calm while watching organs burst from her body and eyeballs bounce out and roll across the floor; she even joins in. And as though racing toward the peak of pleasure, she accelerates the dismantling of her body. All the while, she screams, or laughs so hard she screams, or screams until she laughs!
Hansol Ryu’s “human body disassembly show” began around 2011 and has unfolded across a range of media including video, performance, painting, photography, and sculpture. The artist has understood the human body as a collection of parts, each possessing its own individuality, or as the parallel movement of strange and unknowable worlds, and has given form to it as such.
《Every Body, Come On! Yo!》 brings these works together and presents them in one place. A tongue dripping with saliva, a pierced torso stained with blood, a shattered head—such things fill the exhibition space. Torn flesh is crushed and spurts liquid, while bodies stretched like strands of noodles keep extending without limit, obstructing the space. And yet, among these scattered bodies, some kind of release, pleasure, and laughter spreads. Why? What is the identity of this suspicious laughter?
When Hansol Ryu shows eyes, noses, mouths, limbs, and organs detached from where they are supposed to be and existing however they please, the strange pleasure this produces has something in common with familiar jokes. In expressions like “my neck is falling off from waiting,” “I’ll tear off this flab I’ve put on,” or even “I’ll stick it somewhere else,” the body is freely detachable. The same is true of saying you’ll “pluck out and rinse” a head that won’t turn or tired eyeballs, or that you’ll “wash your insides like laundry” to clear out a clogged stomach. But in most jokes, we do not actually imagine the blood, saliva, screams (…) that would result if such things really happened. A joke hides chilling fact within the impossibility of imagination made real.
Hansol Ryu’s work, by contrast, does not feel like a simple joke. She reveals the reality that prevents a joke from remaining just a joke, the surplus concealed within it. In these body-disassembly shows, reproduced as if they were real, the artist focuses on bodies exploding at high speed and spewing blood and saliva. The body that bursts apart (as image) is of course not a whole, unified individual, nor an upright, singular body. Instead, it is chopped into fragments that cannot be identified as belonging to anyone, nor even named as any particular body part.