Moon
Sanghoon’s work begins by asking how the lives of lesbians, queer people, and
women-minorities are pushed into invisibility or misunderstanding, and under
what conditions they can be spoken of again. The artist addresses the question
of boundaries through the body and relationships of the individual, words
exchanged within communities, encounters, and the sense of failure.
As seen in 〈Chronicles of My Failure〉(2017-2018) and
Unknown Fax(2017-2018), Moon Sanghoon has focused less on
completed narratives of success than on failure, undelivered messages, and
states of misaligned communication. This concern moves toward anonymous
relationships within lesbian communities and questions of the queer body.
Moon
Sanghoon’s first solo exhibition 《We will always cross each other》(Keep in
Touch, 2019) foregrounded the existence of lesbians, which had not been
sufficiently addressed within art history or institutions. The ‘Hand
Genital’(2019) series is a photographic work in which lovers who identify as
lesbians photographed each other’s hands, revealing the sensory and sexual
meanings that hands hold within lesbian relationships.
While the work appears
like typological photography, it simultaneously questions binary standards that
distinguish sex and relationships through a genital-centered framework.
Hello, Strangers(2018) uses a location tracker to confirm
the moments when the artist and an anonymous stranger may have passed each
other over the course of a month, revealing the expectations, distance, chance,
and uncertainty involved in lesbian encounters.
The 2020
solo exhibition 《Wish You Were
Coming Here》(Yeon Rainbow x Oson Doson, 2020) brought
anonymous voices drifting within lesbian communities into the exhibition space.
The artist took as the exhibition’s point of departure the culture of lesbians
who, after being blocked by ex-lovers, search online communities for someone
who will not return and receive comfort from complete strangers.
In the dark
exhibition space, viewers’ messages continue through a recording device,
leaving only voices and words without bodies. In this work, lesbians appear not
as objects consumed by the voyeuristic gaze of outsiders, but as beings who ask
after one another, share loss, and connect through anonymity.
In 《No Future》(Space illi, 2021), Moon
Sanghoon’s concern shifts from lesbian communities and relationships to the
boundaries in which the body itself is placed. The artist asks about the
difference between illegality and legality, normality and abnormality, the
ordinary and the strange, and attempts to directly embody the future they
imagine through their body.
No Future: Beards(2021) deals
with the process of consulting for beard transplantation and the desire for an
ideal self, revealing a complex position between assigned gender and gender
expression, masculinity and non-masculinity. Here, the body is not evidence of
a fixed identity, but a site where social standards and personal desires
collide and are readjusted.