Nayoung
Kang’s early works were based on her personal experiences during her time
living abroad, exploring psychological states such as instability and
loneliness encountered as a foreigner. In works such as 〈The Road〉(2019), she addressed the point at
which an internal gaze collides with an external gaze—where the personal
meaning of life clashes with an objective judgment from the outside, resulting
in a sense of meaninglessness.
This
thematic focus expanded into a more specific, relationship-centered realm,
leading to For the Fist Bump I(2021)
and For the Fist Bump II(2022). From this period, the
artist began to focus on the decline of bodily functions and the resulting
physical and emotional tension, examining these within the context of
caregiving, and imbuing specific body parts—such as the “right hand”—with
symbolic meaning to explore basic functions and the diverse significations
surrounding them.
She later
extended her interest to concrete scenes and physical environments in which
caregiving takes place. In To Barely Fit(2023) from 《DOOSAN Art Lab Exhibition 2023》, she
reinterpreted the revolving door, an everyday architectural feature, by noting
that it can act as an obstacle for certain bodies. Here, she translated the
themes of accessibility, protection, and physical accommodation into spatial
structures, expressing the possibility of overcoming physical barriers through
a “gesture of gentle support.”
In solo
exhibition 《Heavy-Duty》 (CR Collective, 2024), Kang expanded the metaphor of the “home”
into a site of relationality, visualizing moments of training, daily routine,
tension, and balance within landscapes of mutual dependence created by
assistive devices and living spaces. In the ‘Local Rule’(2024) series, works
such as Local Rule:
Bathroom and Local Rule: Mind the
Gap addressed processes of rehearsal and coordination that take
place in thresholds and spaces such as doorsteps, bathrooms, and entrances,
revealing a relational sensibility for managing fragile strength.
In her
recent solo exhibition 《A Sunday Outing》(Kumho Museum of Art, 2025) and in the work E14(2025)
presented in 《Young Korean Artists 2025: Here and Now》(MMCA), she focused on journeys that traverse the boundaries between
inside and outside the home, emphasizing elements such as time, speed,
distance, and emotion embedded in the process of movement. In particular, she
used concrete sites such as cars, movie theaters, and parking lots as narrative
mediators to convey both the yearning for “ordinary life” with a family member
with disabilities and the tensions that arise throughout the process.