Installation view of 《Lingering Nous》 © Gallery Purple

Without confining himself to a single method, Je Baak has continually pursued new modes of expression through which he reexamines the subject of the act of “seeing.” More recently, he has presented installations that materialize gaze data itself. By using eye-tracking technology to record the movements of eyes observing themselves in a mirror, he has transformed this data into sculptural language and spatial environments.

Through this process, the artist has developed diverse methodologies, culminating in two new works that further expand his investigation into the modes of existence of immaterial actions.


Je Baak, Different View 23142, 2021 © Je Baak

Different View

Through a sculpture incorporating smart glass arranged across surfaces set at various angles, the work reveals shifting states of transparency and concealment. In doing so, it introduces a new grid onto everyday landscapes, reinterprets familiar spaces, and presents viewers with scenes of daily life rendered unfamiliar.


Je Baak, Mariotte’s Spot, 2021 © Je Baak

Mariotte’s Spot

The artist presents a paradoxical process in which a drone, programmed with the movement of the viewer’s gaze, produces drawings that gradually obscure the very scene being observed in the mirror, rendering invisible what had initially been visible. Through this contradiction, he invites viewers to reconsider what it means “to see,” addressing both the act of seeing itself and the things one chooses to overlook through the act of looking.

Mariotte’s Spot is a work activated in the exhibition space through the direct application of eye-tracking technology to a drone, and documentation of the performance process will be presented alongside the installation in video form.

Through these two works, the artist raises questions regarding the subjectivity of seeing, as well as karma and causality arising from it. Rather than presenting artworks as completed objects to be viewed, he proposes an inverted process in which artworks are generated through the act of seeing itself, thereby returning the value of art to its original performative act and repositioning human perception at the center of artistic experience.

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