Working across sculpture, painting, digital imagery, and installation, Kyungmin Sophia Son examines the position of humanity, transhumanism, and the complex relationships among diverse species within the context of technology’s impact on the Earth, exploring the challenges faced by the world in the post-Anthropocene era.
Kyungmin Sophia Son’s projects begin by examining how advanced technologies shape our social environment, and how art—already influenced by technological development, capitalism, demand, geological change, and the complex structures that constitute the world—interacts with nature and human life. Building on this, the artist seeks to understand the various interconnected processes that construct the world, placing particular emphasis on anticipating possible futures for humanity.
Son considers how these ideas can be visually articulated and communicated to a broader audience, approaching the multilayered relationships between the microscopic and the macroscopic, the material and the immaterial. She unravels the intersections that arise between them through a range of real, abstract, and speculative relationships.
Grounded in this worldview, her work engages with bodies that expand beyond species boundaries, combining nonhuman entities—such as microorganisms, plants, and animals—with digital technologies. It speaks to the ongoing relationships that continuously constitute the Earth, connecting all things whether visible or invisible.
Son’s practice encourages viewers to perceive the existence of the world from perspectives beyond anthropocentric thinking. In doing so, it invites reflection on the crises of life on Earth that we now face, as ever-advancing technologies extend beyond the limits of human control, as well as on the harmony between human and non-human entities, and the directions and relationships that may shape our shared future.