Forest _ Sound _ Motor _ Machine.mov
Forest_Sound_Motor_Machine.mov (2024) — Kim Hankyul
Forest_Sound_Motor_Machine.mov (2024) — Kim Hankyul
Forest_Sound_Motor_Machine.mov (2024) — Kim Hankyul

Kim Hankyul
Forest_Sound_Motor_Machine.mov
The Skylight Room
17.10.—17.11.2024

Kim Hankyul's project Forest_Sound_Motor_ Machine.mov is a multi­media installation that travels across dimen­sions and resolutions, reality and simul­ation, sound and visuals. The exhibition acti­vely adapts disso­nance as its main method of expres­sion, questioning the truth­ful­ness of media, that is, the platform of repre­sen­tation for culture and identities that we most famil­iar­ly encounter in our daily lives.

In terms of both visual and auditory aspects, the work utilises a broad spectrum of materials and tech­no­logies at hand, and repurpose them to serve for a plau­sible but necessarily failing imi­tation.

The exhibition, composed of two corre­spon­sive works, maximises inconsistent and inauth­entic traits of images through blatant ripoffs to imitate a forest, seeming as a part of a film production set. Sound images betray visual images, and the dramatic immer­sion is con­stantly inter­rupted by the bright expo­sure of back­stage settings.

The arrangement is devised from the artist’s interest in the trending of internet aesthe­tics and the arbi­trary nature of images. In the daily environ­ment of confronting an uncontrol­lable excess of images and infor­mation, the origins of images get lost and gone, while the images are being shuffled as memes and contents and being doomed to be misunder­stood. Images do not ‘re-present’ events, nor correspond to the events at their origin, and once they are born, they thrive in their own lives.

Kim Hankyul brings in this para­doxical dynamic between images and events, by clearly sepa­rating them on the level of historical events.

The project departed from a war veteran’s interview and his recounts on the events of death and injuries and the detached percep­tion of reality following the repe­ti­tive screening of those events. In con­structing the work, while images keep being created in a chain with pre­ce­dent images on site, they constantly slip away from one another, pulling our bodies between the authentic and the simulated expe­rien­ces. And through this, the work raises questions about what it means to be a respon­sible consumer of images, and how political under­standings are formed in this era.

Kim Hankyul (b. 1990, South Korea) is a visual artist based in Oslo. He holds a bachelor's degree in Aesthetics from Seoul National University in South Korea and a master's degree in Fine Art from the Faculty of Fine Art, Music and Design (KMD) at the University of Bergen. In 2022, Hankyul received the Spare­bank­stiftelsen DNB's Grant for his work in the grant exhibition in Oslo Kunst­forening. His solo exhi­bitions include Entrée, Bergen, 2023, Nitja senter for samtids­kunst i Lille­strøm, 2023, KRAFT, Bergen, 2022, Bærum Kunsthall, 2021, og EKKO Festival nr. 17, Bergen, 2020. Inter­na­tional exhibitions include Salón Acme in Mexico City, Pal Project in Paris, After the butcher galerie in Berlin and Galleria Sculptor in Helsinki. Hankyul is represented in the Astrup Fearnley Collection.

Generous thanks to Geoffrey Bowton.

The project is kindly supported by the Norwegian Visual Artists Fund (BKV).

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