Gwon
Donghyun × Kwon Seajung work across video, sculpture, and installation, using
these media in complementary rather than strictly divided roles.
In Seddy, How to Meet Dodo(2021), the robot “Seddy”—a
home camera outfitted with a human-like face—functions as a sculptural
intervention that becomes central to the video’s narrative. Here, sculpture
operates not as a standalone object but as a physical mediator that exposes how
human vision and voice are transmitted to a non-human subject.
Subsequently, Woman
with Dog, Dog with Woman(2023–2024) translates moments of care
captured on video into sculptural form, conveying both intimacy and instability
in the relationship. The sculptures’ similar yet subtly divergent gestures
suggest that human–dog relations are not fixed but continually shifting. While
they complement the moving image, these works also generate a sensorial
afterimage beyond the screen.
Within the
‘Love Death Dog’ Series, research-based video forms the core, while sculpture
and objects attend to sensory and material dimensions often omitted from linear
narratives. In the exhibition 《Love Death Dog》(YPC SPACE, 2023), fragments of intermediary bodies—neither fully
human nor animal—visualize perspectives excluded from historical records. This
demonstrates how the temporal scope of video and the material presence of
sculpture operate on different yet intersecting levels.
At 《Young Korean Artists 2025: Here and Now》(National
Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, 2025), multi-channel video is
accompanied by objects and craft-like sculptures collected and derived from the
research process, distributed throughout the exhibition space. Rather than
reinforcing a single historical storyline, these objects function as traces of
thought, revealing how humans have perceived and treated animals and inviting
viewers to approach the structure of these relationships from multiple angles.