Undefined Panorama 2.0 - K-ARTIST

Undefined Panorama 2.0

2019
Single-channel video, color, stereo sound
7 min
About The Work

Yang Ah Ham has been working on themes related to individuals and groups within societal systems and the socialized nature, drawing from her experiences living in various regions such as Korea, the Netherlands, and Turkey. Based on these themes, she has presented experimental installations using a variety of media, including video, sculpture, installation, and objects. As a media artist, Ham starts from individual experiences, embedding unique narratives in her works that metaphorically depict slices of society.

Solo Exhibitions (Brief)

Yang Ah Ham has held solo exhibitions at Kumho Museum of Art, Insa Art Space and Art Sonje Center. Most recently, she presented 《Okul [School]_What Do We Learn》 (2021) at PIBI Gallery, examining the conditions and values of learning and education.

Group Exhibitions (Brief)

Yang Ah Ham has participated in numerous exhibitions including 《Platform Seoul》(2008), 《Title Match》(2020, Seoul Museum of Art), 《The Challenging Future》(2023, National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Seoul), and 《Korean Video Art 7090》(2019, MMCA Gwacheon). Internationally, she has shown work at the Shanghai Biennale (2008) and AGA in Amsterdam.

Awards (Selected)

Yang Ah Ham received the 3rd Daum Artist Award from the Geonhi Art Foundation in 2004, the Grand Prize in the Artist of the Year Award from the Arts Council Korea in 2005, and the Hermes Foundation Missulsang in 2008. In 2013, she was nominated for the Korea Artist Prize at the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art.

Residencies (Selected)

Yang Ah Ham has participated in major residency programs including Artpace (2000, Texas), Ssamzie Space (2002, Seoul), ISCP (2003, New York), A.I.T. (2005, Tokyo), and Rijksakademie (2006–2007, Amsterdam).

Collections (Selected)

Yang Ah Ham’s works are included in the collections of major institutions in Korea, including the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, the Seoul Museum of Art, and the Gyeonggi Museum of Modern Art.

Works of Art

Work as an ‘Abstract Reality’

Originality & Identity

Yang Ah Ham’s work has consistently centered on the ontology of individuals and collectives living within social systems. Her early works, such as Cheese (1996–1997) and Sensuous Space (1998), metaphorically address the cycles of life and death, growth and decay, by documenting subtle transformations in natural matter. Through these pieces, she explores temporality and existence, using video to pose fundamental questions about the conditions of being.

From the early 2000s, she began to explore the boundary between documentary and fiction, expanding the possibilities of narrative grounded in reality. fiCtionaRy (2002–2003) is a key example, presenting the overlap of real-life scenes from independent film production with the fictional world of the film itself. The work dismantles the boundary between reality and fiction, presenting the ambiguous in-between space through her visual language. This piece marks her shift toward narrative-centered practice.

Land, Home, City (2006) features fictional characters based on the artist’s experience living across different countries, unfolding the themes of mobility and identity through narrative video. The work reflects the recognition that identity in the era of globalization is no longer fixed, but continually reshaped through movement and lived experience.

In her later works, Ham addresses the structures of social systems and ideology with greater clarity. Pieces such as Chocolate Head (2007), Nonsense Factory (2010), and Undefined Panorama 2.0 (2019) metaphorically depict complex systems of institutional power, social exclusion, and political organization through constructed fiction. Her practice demonstrates a consistent trajectory from personal experience toward a broader structural critique of society.

Style & Contents

While rooted in video, Yang Ah Ham’s work experiments across multiple formats including installation, objects, and performance. Early works like Cheese and Sensuous Space are composed by directly observing and recording the transformation of organic matter over time. With minimal intervention, these works emphasize the raw process of change, allowing the viewer to experience temporality and biological cycles viscerally.

In fiCtionaRy, she expanded the structure and temporality of video through split-screen composition and cross-editing, juxtaposing fiction and documentary. Here, video functions not merely as a recording medium, but as a narrative tool that reconstructs and interprets reality.

After Land, Home, City, her focus shifted further toward fictional structures, incorporating scripted characters and scenarios. While maintaining elements of documentary, she actively stages situations where fiction and reality intermingle, disorienting the viewer’s perception. In Chocolate Head and Out of Frame (2007), performative interactions and autonomous actions by performers visualize the formation and dissolution of power. These works effectively reveal tensions between viewers and participants within conditions the artist has constructed.

In Nonsense Factory, presented during her participation in the Korea Artist Prize at MMCA, she utilized the entire exhibition space to construct a complex installation composed of text, drawings, and photographs. Her more recent work, Undefined Panorama 2.0, combines photo montage and video into a hybrid medium, constructing a puppet-like performance of social roles against the backdrop of a bureaucratic organizational chart. This evolution demonstrates Ham’s increasing command of layered media and spatial storytelling to deepen her narrative structures.

Topography & Continuity

Since the beginning of her career, Yang Ah Ham has persistently explored themes of “temporal life,” “conditions of existence,” and “the boundary between reality and fiction.” Her unique narrative strategy—navigating between documentary and fiction—and her critical construction of identity and roles within social structures have positioned her as a leading figure within contemporary media art.

She is widely recognized for going beyond mere documentation, instead using video to dissect societal structures and reassemble them through metaphorical visual scenes. As her work has evolved from examining individuals to critiquing collectives, and from existential inquiries to political organizations, she has consistently maintained a deep ethical and philosophical engagement with the notion of reality.

Her recent projects move beyond visual composition to embrace strategies of construction, aiming to deconstruct and reorder the systems of the real. Drawing on the language of Russian Constructivism, she attempts to visualize the immaterial structures that govern the relationship between image and reality.

Going forward, Yang Ah Ham is expected to further develop her multi-layered reflections on non-narrative reality, continuing to pose critical questions about global political and social systems. With her diverse cross-cultural experiences and deep understanding of media, she is well-positioned to remain a vital force in the field of contemporary global art.

Works of Art

Work as an ‘Abstract Reality’

Exhibitions

Activities