

Images
of Exhibition
Absent Voices
April. 13 - May 29, 2004
Gone
Buried
Covered by the dust of defeat -
Or so the conquerors believed
But there is nothing that can
be hidden from the mind.
Nothing that memory cannot
reach or touch or call back.
Don Mattera, 1987
The erased or disappeared exist only as long
as they are remembered - their memory cherished
by others. To this end there may be a variance
in the way memory is related by nations and
individuals. There also may be differences in
the way men and women recall or relate the past
- particularly a violent history. The language
used to convey such memories may also be unconventional.
The writing of histories happens at the interface
of individuals and society. Memory, in order
to become recorded history, has to be shared,
spoken about and compared. Even in this process
of comparative recall certain memories will
be marginalized, repressed and silenced. In
building an accurate memory of the past, in
the recall of the individual or community erased,
it is important to listen to counter narratives,
to the unofficial voices, to the stories of
women, minority groups and displaced peoples.
Each has their own perception of how race, culture
and class discourses shape their social worlds
and have affected the fates of those they have
lost.
All societies and groups within them create
hierarchical belief systems which they oblige
their members to adhere to. These systems usually
have an economic base and are often at the expense
of some other groups and subcultures within
the host or in societies that reside in close
territorial proximity. These belief systems
can become lethally cancerous when there is
a perceived threat to the host or when groups
within the society become rigidly inflexible
in thinking.
Absent Voices is part of a series of exhibitions
and symposia included in the Disappearance project,
which brings attention, through the creativity
of artists, curators and writers, to the practice
of permanent or temporary removal of individuals
due to their ethnic, racial, political or religious
positions.
Absent Voices, exhibited at Gallery Korea,
features the works of six Korean artists whose
work mediates the subject, through personal
expression and their "localized" identities,
to a broader frame.
The major Korean cities today are highly technologically
advanced. Korea¢®?s citizens lead the
world in their use of the Internet and cellular
telephones due to the ready availability of
affordable and fast bandwidth. However, Korea¢®?s
new society has emerged from a history of great
turmoil - from the social and political upheavals
brought about by the Japanese Occupation of
1910 - 1945, the divisive Korean War (1950 -
1953), and a series of military governments
in the 1950s - 1980s that culminated in the
massacre of civilians by soldiers in May, 1980,
in Gwangju. Though Korea today enjoys a thriving
democracy and accountable governments, its strong
contemporary art and culture has grown out of
a past struggle against political censorship
and oppression.
Kyung-Ah Ham's documentary video work "Chasing
Yellow" was made in various Asian countries
including Korea, Singapore, China and Japan.
By tagging people with the color yellow she
records an intrigue of anonymity that unfolds
as the camera traces the activities of the subjects.
Her work examines how we are identified by our
daily activity and appearance and how this identity
can be erased.
Hey-Yeun Jang uses video and photography to
unravel the processes of existence. An expatriate
by choice, she investigates the nature of being
an alien. Her recent work, live/leave, is a
narrated diary-like text that engages the contradictions
of existence - of appearance and disappearance.
Yeondoo Jung¢®?s work celebrates the
commonplace - showcasing the everyday life of
the ordinary city dweller. Beat It (2003) is
a video depicting a group of youths break dancing
in an old market in Okinawa, Japan, in the evening
hours, after the businesses had closed. Jung¢®?s
reconstruction of events through video has a
strange temporality that questions the reality
of the moment and how it is retained or erased
from memory.
Atta Kim uses photography as the final stage
of his performance installations. His ongoing
performance work includes Museum Series, in
which volunteer performers are confined or suspended
naked in transparent boxes. For Atta Kim, expression
and experience are one. Though his work makes
a voyeur out of his audience, it forces a state
of awareness of self existence, in which there
may be transference of identity between viewer
and subject by virtue of their shared humanity.
His recent Broadcasting Series is an investigation
of the unattainable or ungraspable. His delayed
time exposures track the ephemeral presence
and disappearance of figures, thereby creating
a metaphor of human existence.
Ja-Young Ku uses video as a means of layering
the points at which a body exists in space and
emphasizing the leaves of this layered existence
by compressing it to a two dimensional plane.
Window II, a recent video, juxtaposes live performance
with projected overlays of recorded performance
in the same space through which the artist moves
and exits through a window. The result is to
compress the gap between the temporal images
of the performer and his actual presence.
Young Sun Lim has created many public works
projects, among them large figurative sculptures
and performances that have highlighted political
injustices. His new synchronized videos, which
are exhibited in Absent Voices, use documentary
footage associated with the May 18 Democratic
Uprising in Gwangju. Images, which are simultaneously
displayed on a number of monitors, relate recollection
and erasure, a passage through life and death
to memory. Though the work evokes a mechanical
process, they convey a poignant expression of
the frailty of human existence.
Yu Yeon Kim
2004
Yu Yeon Kim is an independent
curator based in New York. She was a curator/commissioner
for the 3rd Gwangju Biennale 2000 in Korea and
the 2nd Johannesburg Biennale 1997 in South
Africa.. She has curated Translated Acts - Performance
and Body Art from East Asia at the Haus der
Kulturen der Welt, Berlin, Queens Museum of
Art, New York and Museo de Arte Carrillo Gil
in Mexico City (2001-2003). Currently she is
a curator/researcher at the Liverpool Biennial
2004 in England.
Back
to the List