Installation view of 《Smiley Suicide》 © Night Gallery

In the work of Gyung Jin Shin, systems are developed to misuse the established order. The actual function of technology, equipment, or a formula is converted into an irrational and unpredictable object, procedure, or operation that generates intentional mistakes or misunderstandings.

With a prevalent sense of humor, Gyung Jin locates loopholes in technology in order to comment on a fluid sense of identity, and the impossibility of complete understanding and knowledge.

In the performance video Smiley Suicide, a kind of black comedy, Gyung Jin's body and face function as a field where opposite values, meanings, and emotions meet. She disguises herself as a smiley face and repeatedly mimes shooting herself with a toy gun that emits laughing gas (Nitrous oxide) from a whipped cream dispenser.

Mixing a dizzy, hallucinatory loss of self with laughter, she evokes the spectrum between two opposites: laughing and crying, happiness and sadness. The laughter caused by the laughing gas is the result of a lack of oxygen in the brain; this sensual pleasure and the biological pain are two sides of the same coin.

A "smiley", a stylized representation of a smiling human face, is often used as a generic term for emoticons—symbols that divide human emotions into several simple, typified icons. In the real world, however, human emotion is more like a chaotic, messy mass of contradictions rather than an organized chart. At the end of the video, by cracking the yellow face, Gyung Jin— an Asian woman—attempts to deny a standardized and fixed identity.

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