Kwon Hahyung, ‘(Maybe) Deviated Map’ Series, 2020, Installation view of 《Vision and Perspective 2020 – Stranger in Strange Land》 (Busan Museum of Art, 2020) © Kwon Hahyung

《Vision and Perspective》 is an exhibition continuously organized by the Busan Museum of Art to discover and support emerging artists. Since its inception in March 1999, it has introduced over 60 young artists through a total of 15 exhibitions up to 2018. The exhibition is designed to support young artists with relatively limited exhibition opportunities, to stimulate their creative momentum, and to identify and present the trends and possibilities of contemporary art. These objectives align with the role and exhibition policies that a public museum is expected to fulfill. 

For 《Vision and Perspective 2020 – Stranger in Strange Land》, the selection of artists and the exhibition format were carefully reconsidered with the aim of supporting artists. While previous exhibitions mainly selected artists active in Busan, this exhibition expanded its scope to include not only artists working in Busan but also those with connections to the city.

In addition, whereas previous exhibitions relied on in-house curators to write critiques of the artists and their works, this exhibition assigned an external critic to each artist on a one-to-one basis. Critics based in Seoul were paired with artists from Busan, and vice versa, fostering exchange and aiming to broaden the exposure and discussion of artists and their practices beyond regional boundaries. 


Installation view of 《Vision and Perspective 2020 – Stranger in Strange Land》 (Busan Museum of Art, 2020) © Busan Museum of Art

The common thread running through the works of the six selected artists is the question of standards and boundaries. Starting from questioning the norms, frameworks, and fixed ways of thinking within their respective societies, the artists unfold their individual narratives. The subtitle “Stranger in Strange Land” refers to an outsider standing in an unfamiliar world or environment, and is a phrase that appears in the Bible as well as in various literary works.

It is used in Exodus 2:22 to describe Moses as “a stranger in a foreign land” after fleeing Egypt, and is also the title of a novel by Robert A. Heinlein (1907–1988) about a man from Mars, as well as a phrase used in Bram Stoker’s ‘Dracula’ (1847–1912) to describe Count Dracula as a being that does not belong to any category created in this world. It encompasses the sense of unfamiliarity, realization, and transformation in thought that arise when one who has experienced a solid world encounters another, as well as questions of perspective, standards, and frameworks from which that person is viewed. 


Installation view of 《Vision and Perspective 2020 – Stranger in Strange Land》 (Busan Museum of Art, 2020) © Busan Museum of Art

The six artists present stories about certain aspects of our time and society that they have socially and culturally experienced within their respective environments. Although they are positioned within the internal world in practical terms, they view the world from the perspective of an outsider. Through this, they invite us—who live as complete insiders—to look again at scenes to which we have become desensitized, from an external viewpoint, and to question the standards and fixed modes of thinking that operate in society.

These are also stories of voices that always exist as part of our society but remain unaccepted and omitted, memories of certain times and spaces that most people have forgotten, and aspects of the society and lives in which we are situated without being fully aware of them. 

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