Daewon
Yun’s practice begins with a fundamental inquiry into how the body is sensed,
perceived, and brought into relation with others at the boundary between the
real and the virtual. He understands the body in a digital media environment
not as a fixed or stable entity, but as a variable one—edited, expanded, and
transformed through technological mediation—and investigates how modes of
sensation and perception shift under these conditions. This line of inquiry
runs consistently from his early video work Virtual Body Lab no.1
: Microscope(2018) to his recent performance Circle,
Chase, Contact(2025).
In his
early works, Yun converted his own body into digital signals, editing,
fragmenting, and recomposing them to generate movements that depart from the
structure of the physical human body. The sense of “uncanniness” that emerges
in this process does not stem from unfamiliar bodily forms, but rather from
gestures that are perfectly calculated and aligned. This tendency becomes more
explicit in his first solo exhibition 《4 and one-half, knuckle》(Art Space
Hanchigak, 2021), where subtle dissonance and tension arise from human gestures
placed onto quantified coordinates.
The artist
later expanded his inquiry to the boundary between the human and the non-human
through the ‘Factum Socies’ series, which departs from the hypothesis that
future humanoids would seek to learn human imperfection. The
performance Birthday(2020) depicts a humanoid imitating
the movements of a newborn child, foregrounding a body in a state of immaturity
and rehearsal rather than completion or progress. This work can be read not as
a critique of technology-driven futurism, but as an attempt to reconsider the
conditions of humanity itself.
In more
recent works, the sensory gap between “connection” and “contact” has emerged as
a central theme. Tactile-Transmission(2024) juxtaposes
the sensory differences between humans and artificial intelligence by
translating tactile sensations into language and then into AI-generated images,
while Circle, Chase, Contact experiments with
shifts in relational dynamics and communal rhythm triggered by moments of
physical contact. Through these works, Yun continuously reexamines the
conditions of bodily existence and modes of relating within a digitally
mediated environment.