Installation view of 《Immortality in the Cloud》 © Ilmin Museum of Art

A desire for immortality, Regenerated into the digital cloud!
 
The Ilmin Museum of Art (Director Kim Taeryung) presents the first exhibition of 2019, 《Immortality in the Cloud》 viewing the works of 6 visual artists Yiyun Kang, Hayoun Kwon, Suh Yongsun, Woosung Lee, Eunji Cho, Fabien Verschaere reinterpreting the immortal values such as history, mythology, religion and love in contemporareinity.
 
We as humans desire to be recognized of our being. We hope to be loved and cherished forever by our close friends, and even hope to remain in history for general others. Individuals with great and small desires come together to form a society and create countless events. The human desire for the immortality has driven the lives of individuals and has written history by repeating transition and progress.

In the near future, one’s memories and experiences for a lifetime accumulated in the brain continue to stay in future generations and physically exist as they are stored in the cloud by artificial intelligence. In such a world, promising life after death, what role does religion will maintain after it has perdured eternal time? What about human records and history?
 

Text-typography into hypertext: “Rewrite” the history in the post-history era
 
This year marks the 100th anniversary of the March First Independence Movement and the establishment of the Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea. We are arrived at the time to look at Korean modern history with fresh eyes. In the current cultural environment, it is not easy to arouse sympathy about history as a grand narrative for it is detached from daily lives.

Young people in millennial generation discover new images in an era that they have not experienced in big data and internet environment. If the modern writing in the tradition of Enlightenment was about a linear sense of time, today’s media environment allows us to have a cyclical sense of time where the time of the remote past is embedded in the time of present or future. We are able to write a new history focusing on the daily life stories of ordinary people, which have been concealed and hidden in history written only by winners.

By presenting 6 artists – Kang Yiyun, Kwon Hayoun, Suh Yongsun, Lee Woosung, Cho Eunji, and Fabien Verschaere – whose works are made in various media, this exhibition observes how history is newly being conventionalized under conditions of contemporaneity. And, particularly, it aims to explore how historical, ethnic, and cultural characteristics are being “rewritten” in the present day where the encounter among different cultures, religions, and languages has been intensified.

References