Byungjun
Kwon (b. 1971) began his artistic career in the 1990s by forming a music band
and entering the world of popular music. In the mid-2000s, he worked as a
hardware engineer at STEIM (Studio for Electro-Instrumental Music), a Dutch
institution dedicated to electronic instrument research and development.
Currently, he is active as a media artist, presenting new media performances
that incorporate various technologies.
In
his work, "sound" and "robots" frequently appear as key
elements, not only on a technical level but also as mediums that reflect
contemporary Korean society from the artist's perspective, engaging with the
audience in this context.
Byungjun Kwon, This is me, 2013 ©Nam June Paik Art Center
In 2011, after returning to Korea
following his research on electronic instruments, Kwon began to explore the
expansion of sound. He no longer limited sound to an auditory element but
experimented with expanding sound into various dimensions of sensory experience,
exploring the interplay of sound transitions and rhythms through diverse
sensory orchestrations.
As part of these experiments, Kwon
began planning performance art, expanding his sound devices beyond mere
instruments to include various mechanisms within the stage environment. In his
audiovisual performance This is me (2013), commissioned by
the Nam June Paik Art Center, Kwon used himself as the medium.
Various sounds layered and filled the
space, while his face became a screen, projecting images of figures like
Marilyn Monroe, George Bush, and Nam June Paik, until his own face was
completely erased, as if he was wearing a mask.
In a continuation of his work that
integrates his body with other media on stage, Byungjun Kwon presented Another
Moon Another Life (2014) the following year. This piece featured an
intricate fusion of advanced technological devices, such as holograms,
alongside natural phenomena like water, wind, steam, light, and sound, creating
a synesthetic environment that formed a mysterious harmony.
Kwon, along with other performers,
positioned themselves within this complex environment, floating freely within
the field of sound. During the performance, steam emitted from the machines
replaced the artist's face, and the performers did not stand out as central
figures but existed as one of the many elements contributing to the transition
and expansion of sound.
Another Moon Another Life
was later reinterpreted nearly ten years later in Kwon's new work A
Robot Crossing a Single Line Bridge for the 2023 MMCA "Korea
Artist Prize" exhibition. In this reimagined work, it is not the artist
but a robot that crosses the line bridge and performs.
With the presence of the robot, elements
that might seem incompatible—technology and nature, virtual and real, inside
and outside, chance and planning—combine to create an even more unfamiliar and
uncanny scene, prompting the audience to imagine a new world beyond existing
boundaries.
In 2017, Kwon began creating robots as
fictional strangers, inspired by his encounter with South Korean society's
exclusionary attitudes toward Yemeni refugees arriving in Jeju. He developed
one-armed robots named "GF (Golden Flower)" that reached out their
hands to people.
Some reacted with fear, others saw
them as beggars, and still others grasped their cold hands. Kwon believed that
these one-armed robots, as unfamiliar and outsider-like figures, revealed
people's values and inner thoughts when confronted by such an alien presence.
The 'GF' robots are half-formed beings, with only one arm each. However, they shine light toward one another, casting shadows, and when these two shadows meet, they finally form a complete two-armed robot. Through this imagery, we can imagine the possibilities of solidarity, communication, and coexistence within human society.
Unlike ordinary robots that are created for specific purposes, Kwon’s robots serve no practical function. Instead, they perform seemingly purposeless actions such as fan dancing, doing five-limbed prostration, or doing the wall meditation/practice. These performances, devoid of utility and functionality, act as a kind of satire on modern society, where value is determined by usefulness within the logic of capitalism.
Byungjun Kwon, Forest of Subtle Truth 2, 2018, Installation view of “10th Seoul Mediacity Biennale” (Seoul Museum of Art, 2018) ©SeMA
Another of Kwon’s works that invites reflection on society through the expansion of sound is the Forest of Subtle Truth series. First introduced at the 2017 Arko Art Center sound art group exhibition “Revolution Will Not Be Televised,” Forest of Subtle Truth uses location-aware headphones, allowing the audience to walk around and move, engaging in a kind of 'sound walk' that encourages interaction with various sounds.
The recording of children from multicultural families, Production photo of Forest of Subtle Truth 4(2019) ©Arte
The following year, Kwon participated
in the 10th Seoul Mediacity Biennale, where he presented the second work in the
series, Forest of Subtle Truth 2 (2018), featuring sounds
recorded from Yemeni refugees in Jeju. As participants wearing the
location-aware headphones walked through the space, they encountered sounds
that evoked the refugees’ fears and anxieties—from the rumble of thunder
reminiscent of war to their songs.
From 2017 to 2019, the Forest
of Subtle Truth series collected and shared the sounds of various
marginalized groups in Korea, including the sounds of multicultural families in
Hongseong and the soundscapes of Gyodong Island near North Korea.
In 2022, Kwon expanded his sound walks
further with From Cheongju to Kyiv, presented at the “MMCA
Cheongju Project 2022: Urban Resonance” exhibition. Using RTK (Real-Time
Kinematic) technology based on GPS, Kwon created a more immersive auditory
augmented reality than his previous works, which used LPS (Local Positioning
System) technology.
This work was born from Kwon's
observation of the Korean public’s indifference toward the war in Ukraine
following the Russian invasion in 2022. Kwon observed how tragedies occurring
outside one’s immediate environment gradually fade from individual memory and
become "othered" over time. In response, he sought to use sound to
remind people of these forgotten realities.
He recorded both peaceful sounds from
Ukraine’s past and unsettling, anxiety-inducing sounds from everyday
environments—such as the sound of wood being broken in a sawmill or the
destructive noise of a Korean redevelopment site.
The contrast between Ukraine’s peaceful
past and its current war-torn reality was amplified through these sounds,
transferring the anxiety and fear experienced by the Ukrainian people to the
sensory experience of the audience.
Through his work, Byungjun Kwon explores how we might live together with others and how we might move forward. In doing so, he uses technology in a way that subverts the logic of capitalism, highlighting its role as a medium that reflects both society and the individual. His works encourage empathy and understanding, leading us to imagine a community of solidarity.
”We are all strangers.”
Artist Byungjun Kwon ©MMCA
Byungjun Kwon started his musical
career as a singer-songwriter in the early 1990s, and released six albums
covering the minimalist house from Alternative Rock. Since 2000, he expanded
his practice to movie soundtracks, fashion shows, dance, theater, and Korean
traditional music. After living in the Netherlands and working as a hardware
engineer at STEIM, he returned to Korea in 2011, where he continues to work as
a media artist.
Starting with his first solo
exhibition, “A little one to have all” (LIG Art hall, Seoul) in 2010, Kwon has
held solo shows at various venues including Alternative Space LOOP (Seoul,
2018), Platform L (Seoul, 2020), and Busan Museum of Art (Busan, 2021). He has
also participated in numerous group exhibitions at major institutions such as
the 10th Seoul Mediacity Biennale, Seoul Museum of Art (Seoul), Ilmin Museum of
Art (Seoul), Hiroshima Museum of Contemporary Art (Japan), and Arko Art Center
(Seoul). Last year, he was named the winner of the “2023 Korea Artist Prize,”
co-hosted by the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea (MMCA)
and SBS Foundation.