Motion poster made while working in Studio Hik.
Design research and reference, design concept developing, image making and motion making by me.
Working in the bilingual context. Exterminating the poetic interlink between analog and digital narrative.
AVS: Artists' View of Science is a convergence exhibition program organized by Soorim Cultural Foundation in collaboration with the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KIST), the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KIAS), and the Korea Creative Content Agency (KOCCA), and in partnership with Korea National University of Arts and Sciences and Korea University Medical Center. It is now in its fifth year as a project that allows artists and scientists to collaborate and produce artworks for about six months, expanding their perspectives and fostering creative thinking. The 2023-2024 edition will be held in two exhibition spaces, the Kim Hee Soo Art Center and Surim Cube.
"Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow"
Surim Cube: 84, Donhwamun-ro, Jongno-gu, Seoul, Korea
Surim Cube: 84, Donhwamun-ro, Jongno-gu, Seoul, Korea
Surim Cube will revisit three artists (teams) who participated in the last AVS project and present new works that are a continuation or evolution of their previous works and concepts. The title of the exhibition, "Tomorrow, Tomorrow, Tomorrow, Tomorrow, Tomorrow," is borrowed from the soliloquy in Act 5, Scene 5 of Macbeth and the novel of the same name by Gabriel Gavin. Macbeth refers to tomorrow as an empty time for humans that only creates 'all the yesterdays'. In Zevin's novel, which offers an insightful perspective on the nature of games, tomorrow is a resurrection, a return, and the possibility of operating a new future.
The exhibition is a reflection on humans reacting to predictions of what is to come, and on artificial beings and digital selves that mimic or overwhelm the human body and intellect. The participating artists collaborate with neuromorphic engineers, psychoanalysts, and robotics engineers, respectively, to bring technical perfection and humanistic reflection to their work.
The exhibition is a reflection on humans reacting to predictions of what is to come, and on artificial beings and digital selves that mimic or overwhelm the human body and intellect. The participating artists collaborate with neuromorphic engineers, psychoanalysts, and robotics engineers, respectively, to bring technical perfection and humanistic reflection to their work.

