Installation view of 《Bridging the Unseen》 © Wooran Foundation

When we view a boundary as a line that clearly separates two domains, or focus only on the two elements that form that boundary, the “in-between” is often overlooked. The “in-between” refers to the space or interval between two elements, the duration from one moment to another, or the relationships that are formed. A boundary is created at the point where two different worlds meet, and at the same time, the boundary forms a new space of “in-between.” In this sense, the “in-between” is conceptually connected to the notion of a boundary.

The exhibition 《Bridging the Unseen》 considers boundaries not as lines of disconnection, but as spaces of “in-between” where countless relationships and possibilities breathe within invisible margins.

Installation view of 《Bridging the Unseen》 © Wooran Foundation

Today, in various media, the act of consistently expressing one’s preferences or clearly articulating one’s opinions and identity is regarded as a form of competence and strength. On the other hand, maintaining a position that avoids definitive choices and remains at the boundary is often not considered a valid option, but rather dismissed as being “neither this nor that.” However, it is precisely because it is neither this nor that that we are prompted to search for new possibilities—perhaps this is what makes boundaries special.

To explore this, the exhibition examines boundaries through the concept of liminality, which refers to the threshold or “in-between” zone connecting here and there. Liminality generates novelty by combining familiar elements with different situations or states. This intermediate zone is a hypothetical space filled with the potential to create new orders and identities, and a ground where fixed meanings are dismantled and transformed into dynamic, creative conditions that drive change and innovation.

Standing at the boundaries between tradition and modernity, craft and fine art, material and immaterial, Donghae Kim, Moonyeol Park, Hyunki Park, Jesung Oh, Namkwon Yoo, and Seulgi Lee connect and reweave these in-between spaces, materializing new meanings and possibilities that were previously unseen through a contemporary sculptural sensibility, and visually demonstrating the creativity of boundaries.

Installation view of 《Bridging the Unseen》 © Wooran Foundation

Considering that many concepts we now refer to as “tradition” were in fact established after the modern era, the artists’ attitudes—viewing boundaries as fluid and naturally connecting them—offer a new perspective and alternative to the ambiguity of standing at a boundary. This is evident in works that continuously connect and intersect the past and present to reconstruct them as new memories, works that expand craft beyond its functional and physical forms into conceptual and experiential dimensions, and works in which all of these elements are intertwined.

The world we live in today may in fact be connected through countless “in-between” spaces that influence one another. While the uncertainty and ambiguity of boundaries can sometimes make our lives unstable, they also have the power to open up creative and new possibilities. Boundaries do not disappear; they continue to change and expand, creating new narratives. The perspectives of “in-between” presented by the six artists encourage us to imagine new possibilities rather than fear ambiguity, offering an experience of becoming something—and someone—in a special “in-between” that crosses boundaries.

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