Changchang Yoo, Dead animals(The night), 2009 © Changchang Yoo

Artists sometimes lead us into an endlessly deep well hidden within our gaze through unsettling texts, images, and gestures. The artist descends into that vast darkness on a pulley, while we hold onto the rope he hands us, and between us a sticky, intimate communion takes place.

By imagining a crashing airplane as the structure of the world, Changchang Yoo presents the airplane as a representation of a social system, while its fall foreshadows the decline of a society that has reached its peak. We, the passengers inside, are left with no choice but to remain aboard. The pulley unwinds downward into the darkness. Not only the artist, but we too descend together. Outside the rapidly falling airplane, existing forms disappear and new phases emerge. Passing through ascent and descent, they become heightened toward destruction.


Changchang Yoo, Couple. We Knew We Would End Up Like This, 2010 © Changchang Yoo

This exhibition, 《How Come We Are This Childish》, expands from an intensified interiority into a realm beyond perception. Unknown animals gathered in groups, all moving in the same direction, densely fill the canvases and vinyl surfaces. They appear as though cast outward from the pupil of darkness, beyond the field of vision. The artist describes these animals as beings belonging to another psychological dimension. They transition and circulate toward a new dimension, moving in the same irreversible direction. This cyclical movement—passing through ascent, descent, and destruction—allows us to newly perceive the engraved negative space concealed within the entities we have previously understood only in flat terms.

This also resonates with the artist’s working process. The act of drawing, cutting out, and attaching each animal causes the canvas itself to recede, allowing something new to emerge. Yet the destination toward which these animals move is either severed by the canvas or left unclear upon the vinyl. No conclusion is presented; only phenomena remain. It is precisely at this point that the artist places the rope of the pulley back into our hands.

The animals appearing in this exhibition are the expanded pupils of the passengers, the swarms born from the instant of the fall. They make us perceive a new space, and soon they will disappear. For although the fleeting instant always exists, it is not always open. And so, this exhibition quietly permeates.

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