Song Min
Jung treats intangible states—such as the here-and-now mood and atmosphere—as
primary materials, capturing and rearranging images and language that drift
along online timelines. Works like DOUBLE DEEP HOT SUGAR - the
Romance of Story -(2017), CREAM, CREAM
ORANGE(2017), and “Est-ce vraiment
nécessaire?”(2017), which appropriate the rhetoric of film/TV teasers
and advertising, present “mood” as if it were a service rather than a tangible
product, elevating the gimmick—as a trigger of consumer desire—into a central
concept and strategy. Here, “time” is handled not as a completed past but as a
sensation pressed up against the “present-soon-to-be-past,” and the work exists
as an event that appears and vanishes like a pop-up ad or store.
In 2018,
the solo exhibition 《COLD MOOD
(1000% soft point)》(Tastehouse, 2018) “translated” the
moods and narratives assembled online into a physical space, turning the gap
between a psychological site (timeline) and a bodily site (gallery) into a task
of experience. Viewers moved along a showroom-like setting of perfumes,
beverages, and desserts and a tablet “kiosk” itinerary, passing through points
where the work’s context dovetailed with the logic of commodities. The curated
“feeling” lingered without being fully grasped, and that very slippage of
sensation became the core content of the work.
At MMCA’s
exhibition 《Young Korean Artists 2019:
Liquid, Glass, Sea》, the
works Talker(2019) and AKSARA
MAYA(2019) introduced first-person vlog and RPG structures to explore
the division and generation of a “non-physical self” composed of screen, voice,
and text. In the rapidly shifting online environment, identity operates not as
a single entity but as a device of multiple accounts, voices, and roles, with
the user acting as a “shadow writer” who fine-tunes the narrative.
Since
2020, Wild Seed(2020) and the Busan Biennale
work Custom(2022) have expanded the concept toward
issues of “erasure/replication of existence” in a datafied society. Vanishing
SNS residues (Wild Seed) and a mystery of relations and
desire traced through smartphone timelines (Custom) redefine
the meaning of “movement” that shuttles across the borders between
virtual/real, city/sea, and interior/exterior.
In 2024,
the one-day exhibition 《Italic Time》(Namsan Public Library) distributed works such
as JOE(2021) and Atmospheres(2023)
throughout the library to summon the italic “tilt” of a paragraph as a pocket
of time, extending the provisional interval between “after” and “before” into
the exhibition itself.