Poster image of 《Vacant》 © Songwon Art Center

National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea (Director Bae Soon-hoon) operates the Changdong Studio, which will present the exhibition 《Vacant》 beginning June 23 (Wed) at Songwon Art Center in Hwadong, Jongno-gu.

Held outside the studio through collaboration with an external institution, this exhibition by the resident artists reflects upon ourselves living within the modern conception of time — past, present, and future — in which the past is dismissed or neglected as something already gone, while the present is sacrificed for the sake of an unexperienced future.

The title 《Vacant》 refers not only to a space containing traces of the past, but also to a space emptied in the present for some future purpose. Yet the emptiness of space is synonymous with the fullness of time, and within this site six young contemporary artists disturb and unsettle “already constructed” time.

Located at 106-5 Hwadong, Jongno-gu, Seoul, Songwon Art Center is not a conventional gallery exhibition space, but an ordinary residential house consisting of three above-ground floors and a garage. Since 2006, more than ten exhibitions have been held there, and following this exhibition the building is scheduled to be demolished and newly renovated.

For over a decade, the house has ceased to function as a residence; except during exhibition periods, it has remained almost abandoned as an empty house. After serving for some time as an exhibition venue for various artists, the space was left unused for nearly a year and fell into a state resembling ruins, ultimately becoming the site where the exhibition 《Vacant》 was conceived.

In truth, although described as an empty house, the space had become an ambiguous void in which traces of its former residential life intertwined with remnants from its later use as offices and exhibition spaces. The past is not truly dead simply because we cannot see it; rather, it continues into the present and future.

Through site-specific installation works within this empty house — a space where distinctions between past, present, and future lose meaning — the participating artists excavate and transform the past buried within emptiness, presenting newly commissioned works born from this process.


Youngho Lee, collage leaves of grass, 2010 © Youngho Lee

Youngho Lee creates ever-changing collages of light through a kaleidoscope within a space where the empty house and the external environment intersect. Just as a camera uses light to preserve time within space, the environments surrounding the empty house in collage leaves of grass continuously move and are recorded through the kaleidoscope.

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