Installation view of 《Night Turns to Day》 © Art Sonje Center

Art Sonje Center presents the exhibition 《Night Turns to Day》 from December 28, 2019 to February 9, 2020.

Though we assign meaning to the passage of years, time is merely a continuing expanse. Twenty years have passed since all the fuss over the “21st century,” and while we would like to believe the world is moving in a slightly better direction, we also look back and wonder what has really changed.

Time has flowed amidst the vicissitudes as people have joined forces and strived to turn moments of doubt into hope, only to be thwarted once again. For 《Night Turns to Day》, we join five women artists to look at time as its passes now, speaking to the things that have changed, the things that haven’t changed, and the things that must change. 


Installation view of 《Night Turns to Day》 © Art Sonje Center

Eunyoung Kang, AN Chorong, Song Min Jung, Jiyoung Yoon, and Hyein Lee have each pursued different approaches, working in their respective media of plants, photography, video, sculpture, and painting.

This single setting brings together the work of Lee Hyein, who juxtaposes the process of painting with its results to record time and object together; AN Chorong, who uses different forms of installation to explore the ways in which photography captures particular scenes and records the associated time; Eunyoung Kang, a flower shop owner and artist who shows narrative imagination through her arrangements of plants; Jiyoung Yoon, who has gone from exploring methods of physically embodying psychological and relational circumstances like “sacrifice” to experimenting with sculpture-based subversion of the structures of inequality distorted by longstanding mythology; and Song Min Jung, who interrogates the present moment with video work that cuts across multilayered timelines and settings where darkness and light intersect.

Their different works of art each adopt a different approach to looking back on the past and recording time, yet all of them converge upon female narrators and female narratives. Remembering a past where we have witnessed close and distant tragedy so often that it seems like old news, the exhibition looks ahead to the as yet unfamiliar number that is “2020.”

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