Since its
formation in 2018, Team TRIAD has continuously explored ways of translating
data that constitutes cities and society into sensory experiences. For the
collective, data is not merely information or a subject of visualization, but a
trace and narrative accumulated within urban environments and individual lives.
They view shared social concerns as being inscribed in the structures and
environments of cities, and seek to read and reconstruct these traces through
urban data. This perspective is clearly articulated in their early
work The Musical Score of the City: Jongno (2018).
The
Musical Score of the City: Jongno is structured by layering
subjective sounds interpreted by the three artists onto algorithmically
generated visuals and sounds based on thirty years of building data. Through
this process, Team TRIAD juxtaposes objective data with individual sensory
interpretation, presenting the city not as a fixed structure but as a
collection of rhythms and temporal layers open to interpretation. This approach
marks the starting point of a core concept that recurs throughout their
practice: maintaining tension between the “objectivity” of data and the
“subjectivity” of human perception.
This line
of inquiry expands further in Data Pulse:
Incheon (2019), where the city is understood as a living
organism. By analyzing logistics, atmospheric, and urban structural data from
Incheon, the collective likens the circulation of a port city to the human
circulatory system, revealing the city as a constantly flowing and pulsating
system. Here, data functions not as abstract numerical values but as a medium
through which the city’s physiology and rhythm are made perceptible.
From 2020
onward, the ‘Urban Jaesaeng Device’ series shifts the focus of data toward
questions of temporality, memory, and representation. Works such
as Urban Jaesaeng
Device (2018), Urban Jaesaeng Device #2: Sound
Walk (2022), Urban Jaesaeng Device #3:
Rotary (2022), and Urban Jaesaeng Device #4:
Phantom Pain (2024) share a common question: how can traces of
cities that have disappeared or become inaccessible be reactivated through
sensory experience? Through data and technology, Team TRIAD connects past,
present, and future, inviting viewers to reconsider the city on the levels of
memory and imagination.