Installation view of 《Bek Hyunjin: Public Hiding》 © Bek Hyunjin

Bek Hyunjin, who is close to a multidisciplinary artist as a visual artist, musician, and actor, presents his persona as a painter and musician in the exhibition 《Bek Hyunjin: Public Hiding》. This exhibition focuses on the fatigue of breaking away and the depression that arises at a moment when the absolute necessity of social distancing is demanded, as the pandemic that struck us—who had been accustomed to life in densely urbanized environments—prolongs.

Today, when the concept of community has nearly disappeared, where might be the appropriate space that we instinctively seek within the shared environment in which we experience, perceive, and engage in social exchange on a daily basis? By discovering that the continued experience of a disconnected life renders depression, lethargy, and a sense of social isolation into a shared bond, the artist presents a sense of memory and time that we commonly experience.

Installation view of 《Bek Hyunjin: Public Hiding》 © Bek Hyunjin

《Bek Hyunjin: Public Hiding》 takes the form of a vast shelter that mediates shared memory and contemporary life, moving toward the collective goal of safe isolation and freedom. The installation sculptures, summoned in forms that might exist in childhood memories and fantasies, function as public spaces through which one passes to secure a domain for self-protection. This shelter, like an in-between zone belonging to neither a specific place nor time, leads us to internally sense the sudden life and emotions of anxiety, depression, despair, loneliness, and isolation that have come upon us.

Rather than escaping and hiding from a reality in which we cannot stand where we wish to be, it is closer to a space where we confront inner solitude. Through such intensity, we may all be failures in life in reality, yet each individual’s shelter—where solitude is voluntarily shared—functions as a centrifugal force that enables us to endure life by oscillating between appropriate distance from and closeness to the world.

Installation view of 《Bek Hyunjin: Public Hiding》 © Bek Hyunjin

In this exhibition, paintings, installations, and sound—presented without hierarchy—represent an attitude toward life premised on error and intuition. It imagines a spacetime that preserves our flawed lives, in which we, as imperfect human beings, experience uncomfortable moments that can be both tragic and comic, and melancholic moments that can hit rock bottom at any time, yet can be overcome with humor and cynicism.

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