Poster image of 《The Ordinary Day》 © Plan B Project Space

Plan B Project Space presents 《The Ordinary Day》, a solo exhibition by Seungwon Park, on view for one month beginning September 30.

Working primarily with performance and video, Park brings together a diverse range of works in this exhibition, including three video pieces such as the single-channel work Macrology, in which the artist recites Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot to a toy parrot; a photographic work that served as the narrative impetus for the original play The Ordinary Day; forty-four new drawings; and mixed-media installations.

Coinciding with the exhibition, Park will also publish the original play The Ordinary Day (published by Plan B Books, 2022), written from recorded conversations between the artist and his father.


Seungwon Park, The Ordinary Day, 2020 © Seungwon Park

Seungwon Park’s solo exhibition 《The Ordinary Day》 begins with experiences of absurdity arising from an awareness of death: a body condemned to die; a fascination, rather than sympathy, toward a body darkening in decay under one’s gaze; the impulse to identify the foul breath of the self with the pigeons roaming the streets, and even to become a pigeon oneself.

Threaded throughout the exhibition is the element of corporeality, while the absurd condition inherent to human existence as living flesh is mediated through Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot. Machines composed of interconnected components evoking fragments of the body — such as the human heart and peripheral organs — emit harsh, labored breaths, while suspended bodily fragments sway ceaselessly in midair.

Literary texts, delivered through the format of extended recitation over the course of several hours, are ultimately reduced to acts of vocal utterance passing through the mouth.

Through the exhibition, Park seeks to communicate a silent proposition to the viewer: to perceive both the world and oneself through the body. More than conveying this through language, the artist attempts to create an experience that can be physically sensed and inhabited.

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