Installation view of 《Hands, Hands, Hands》 © Homesession

Solin Yoon’s exhibition features three acts of the hands analyzing heterosexual romanticism: the captured hands, the disassembling hands, and the hands placed between the two. 

The one “hands” in the video carefully takes apart an old bouquet. This visual is paired with an overlapping narrative that conveys conflicting emotions—either a desire for validation from the patriarchy or an urge to liberate oneself from it. 

Installation view of 《Hands, Hands, Hands》 © Homesession

Yet another “hands” is printed onto the film. The film’s strategic placement within the exhibit makes the audience explore the structural conditions. As the artist journeys through Barcelona’s museums and attractions, the artist meticulously curates and edits images from diverse locations into a single roll of film. And With this exploration, the artist tracks ‘heterosexual romanticism’ as a culturally consumed code. 

Installation view of 《Hands, Hands, Hands》 © Homesession

Meanwhile, in the exhibition space, the hands of the audience can touch the images and treat them as physical entities. Or they can tune into the intimate monologues within the artworks, exploring the relationships depicted between these images and monologues. 

This exhibition suggests the audience’s hands oscillate between internalizing heteronormative romanticism as a cultural asset and taking a deconstructive re-evaluation of it. Through this, it prompts a deep reflection on the intricate interplay between cultural influences that exist by inertia and gender dynamics.

References