Yiyun Kang, Infinite, 2021, Moving projection installation, 1.5 m diameter rotating object, motor, projector, computer, 1 min 45 sec © Yiyun Kang

PKM Gallery presents a solo exhibition by Yiyun Kang (b.1982), one of the most active Korean media artists on the international stage today. Titled 《Anthropause》, the exhibition features two new works, Infinite and Finite, which reflect on the current moment of the pandemic, alongside drawings that document the conceptual and developmental processes behind these works.

Yiyun Kang has developed a practice centered on projection mapping, creating spaces through moving images and sound. In this exhibition, the artist addresses humanity, which has long been captivated by the illusion that life, like endlessly expanding digital data, can increase infinitely in both quantity and quality, while forgetting the fundamental truth that all existence is finite.

She focuses on the pandemic as a consequence of the indiscriminate actions born from this collective amnesia and on the emergence of an “anthropause”—a temporary slowing of human activity. At the same time, through the works on view, Kang expresses her hope that this pause will not be consumed meaninglessly but instead transformed into a “productive pause.”


Yiyun Kang, Finite, 2021, Immersive audio-visual installation, 5 projections, 12-channel audio, 6 min 20 sec © Yiyun Kang

Infinite is a work in which moving images are projected onto a precisely engineered screen. Light is partially transmitted, absorbed, and reflected by the circular screen, extending throughout the exhibition space. The imagery projected onto the endlessly rotating screen changes in response to the increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations over the past 150 years, from 1880 to the present.

Progressively accelerating from one minute to thirty seconds and then to fifteen seconds, the sequence visualizes the dramatic rise in carbon emissions throughout human history, while the constantly shifting exhibition environment suggests the transformations of our changing climate.

Through this work, the artist reveals the causal relationship between human activity and environmental change, reminding us that finite human beings exist within this perpetual interaction.

In contrast, Finite is an immersive video and sound installation of overwhelming scale that fills the exhibition space. Digitally generated scenes—including skyscrapers engulfing burning forests and mountain ranges disappearing into darkness—are accompanied by sounds of forest vibrations, urban noise, recordings from the First and Second World Wars, and a string duet, heightening the sense of presence.

The work synesthetically conveys the rapid depletion of the Earth's finite resources in service of humanity's pursuit of permanence, compelling viewers to confront and feel this uncomfortable truth.

Together, the two artificial environments created by Yiyun Kang, Infinite and Finite, resonate within the broader framework of the exhibition, inviting us to consider whether the current anthropause might become another point of departure toward a sustainable future.

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