Contemporary Art from Korea / Salon of the MOCA in Belgrade.

MOUTH TO MOUTH TO MOUTH: contemporary art from Korea

Museum of Contemporary Arts in Belgrade

www.msub.org.rs

Artists: Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, YOUNG-HAE CHANG HEAVY INDUSTRIES, Minouk 
Lim, Che, Onejoon, Sung Hwan Kim

Curators: Ji Yoon Yang and Ana Nikitovic

Mouth to Mouth to Mouth brings together the compelling works of five 
contemporary artists from South Korea.

The exhibition addresses questions on the notion of national identity, 
generated by a narrative of modernization within Korean society. 
Although the exhibition presents the artworks from a specific 
geographical region, it is neither a survey, nor does it construct a 
particular historical narrative. Instead, it engenders a space for 
alternative narratives which purposefully diverge from the official 
Korean epic of dynamic economic success and aims to recognize thirst for 
new voices.

Due to the intensive industrialization in South Korea since the 1950's, 
public consciousness of national identity has become conflicted over the 
issues of race, gender, family values, etc. Contemporary artists from 
Korea have provided critical views within the social situation of the 
constant mythification of reality. By presenting artistic positions 
that, each in their own way, relate to a cultural, political or social 
context of modern Korea, this exhibition faces the ethnocentric 
assumptions in contemporary art discourse. In particular, the exhibition 
responds to the complexities of identification and positioning what has 
been described as 'Korean contemporary art.'

The title of the exhibition is inspired by Theresa Hak Kyung Cha's 
seminal video Mouth to Mouth from 1975. In this work, Cha explores the 
potentials and limitations of her mother tongue through the silent 
articulation of Korean vowels. The noise which disrupts the picture may 
symbolize the loss of language through time. The discourse of Korean 
Cultural Diaspora of 1970's and 80's in Cha's works has been evolved 
into one of globalism in the 21st century. Selected artworks in the 
exhibition reconstitute her conceptual art practice to mediate current 
social relations, creating a conversation with Cha's linguistic and 
tautological approaches.

Minouk Lim's SOS – Adoptive Dissensus is a video documentation of a 
performance, which invites audiences on a boat trip along the Han River 
to listen to personal stories of lovers, prisoners and demonstrators 
against the live background of Seoul. Translated into Serbo-Croatian, 
two works of YOUNGHAE CHANG HEAVY INDUSTRIES, Samsung Means To Come and 
My Pretty Peacenik, convey evocative stories about sex, violence, 
capitalism and ideologies. Che, Onejoon documents, photographs and 
archives the aftermath of the recent withdrawals of US army bases in 
South Korea. Sung Hwan Kim's video installation, Washing Brain and Corn, 
tells the complex narrative of a South Korean boy in 1968 who got 
murdered by North Korean spies after exposing his hatred towards communism.

The works of this exhibition disclose a conscious use of irony and a 
certain approach to organize this exhibition of contemporary art from 
Korea in Serbia. We do not aim to present a self-exoticised cultural 
product but aim to provide opportunities to critically re-consider 
questions and doubts of modernity in Korea. Accordingly, this exhibition 
attempts to shed light on displacement and alienation. It pursues the 
process of modernity and contemporaneity under different regional 
conditions in the global era.

Exhibition MOUTH TO MOUTH TO MOUTH: contemporary art from Korea was 
realized with the support of the Arts Council Korea.
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