Installation view of 《On Flowing Things》 © Gallery Bakyoung

Gallery Bakyoung, located in the Paju Book City, presents 《2025 BAKYOUNG THE SHIFT – On Flowing Things》 as the second part of the 10th edition of the 2025 BAKYOUNG THE SHIFT artist competition exhibition, from August 8 to September 30, 2025.

Under the theme of “time,” eight contemporary artists working across various genres, including painting, installation, and media, participate in the exhibition, visually exploring layers and sensations of time from the perspectives of past, present, and future.

This exhibition looks at time through the personal experiences, social histories, and cultural memories shown within the works of the eight participating artists. Rather than arranging time in a single linear sequence, it gives form to time as something transformed and varied within a flow.

The exhibition metaphorically and visually explores the dynamic and multilayered nature of time, presenting various perspectives that look back on the past, live through the present, and move toward the future.

Time is invisible, yet it is the most fundamental element influencing every layer of our lives. This exhibition is noteworthy in that it places time as an axis and interprets it through the personal narratives of the artists, social contexts, and formal experimentation.

Each artist exists within their own time, visualizing various themes such as the flow of emotion, the disappearance and rebirth of objects, the overlap of memories, and the collision between tradition and the present, allowing viewers to confront their own time.

As its title suggests, 《On Flowing Things》 focuses on that which is not fixed and on flows that cannot be clearly delimited. This includes not physical time alone, but also emotions that remain in memory without disappearing, repeated everyday life, moments that pass without trajectory, and possibilities that have not yet arrived.

The elements that compose the works range widely from painting to installation, craft, and media, functioning as means to more richly convey the fluidity and complexity of time.

Installation view of 《On Flowing Things》 © Gallery Bakyoung

The eight participating artists address time in their own ways, through the transformation of objects, folk-painting imagination, the persistence of lacquer, digital records, and metaphors of emotion. Through various media, including painting, installation, handicraft, and media, they visualize the sensuousness and form of time, and viewers are led to retrace their own time through the works.

For ten years, Gallery Bakyoung has steadily discovered emerging artists under the name “The Shift,” reflecting within that accumulated flow the changing languages and concerns of contemporary art. This exhibition serves both as a condensed presentation of that result and as a kind of prologue for the next ten years.

This exhibition views time not as a single linear line, but as an organic flow. The participating artists unfold various aspects of time—memory, materiality, emotion, imagination—through their own formal languages. The exhibition is organized around three keywords: “past,” “present,” and “future,” with each section structured as follows.

What Has Flowed – Traces and Memories of the Past: This section retraces things that have disappeared or been forgotten, summoning objects, spaces, and emotions as remnants of time. Bokyung Kim captures the moment when an object’s function comes to an end, and by dismantling and reconstructing it, gives new life to “dead objects.”

Kim Hyuna intersects personal memory and urban landscapes through architectural form and restrained sensibility, exploring the interaction between identity and time.

What Is Flowing – Present Time and Sensation: The time of the here and now is the shortest, yet it is composed of the densest sensations. Shin Mikyung creates a temporal space in which dream and reality, past and present drift together through the forms of minhwa and the reinterpretation of traditional narratives.

Ellie Jung transforms repeated acts of labor into painterly techniques, drawing out the energy of emotion and color embedded in ordinary and tedious everyday life.

Lee Sujin focuses on the “persistence” and “accumulation” of lacquer, a traditional material, showing how time permeates matter. Lee Sun visualizes images of the unconscious and the flow of emotion through the metaphor of the pink elephant as the self. The surface of this emotion is both beautiful and unstable.

Things That Will Flow – Future and Possibility: Based on the premonition and imagination of time, this section gives form to what has not yet arrived.

Choi Hanjin begins from the personal past of being an “Island Boy” from Obido in Tongyeong, and presents future forms through a formal language inspired by the sea and living organisms. Ahn Jongwoo reconstructs fragments of memory through digital records and the extraction and dismantling of photographic images, leading viewers to think simultaneously about the past and future from the standpoint of the present.

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