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Sunday, April 5, 2026 |
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| Ilmin Museum launches 'Gi.Gi.Gi' to map the fissures of contemporary reality |
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Agnes Questionmark, Opera Medica, 2024. 3-channel video, color, sound, 9:01 minutes. Photo by Studio Oscilloscope.
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SEOUL.- Ilmin Museum of Art presents Gi.Gi.Gi: Trials and Errors (hereinafter Gi.Gi.Gi), a group exhibition on view from April 1 to May 31, 2026. Marking the centenary of the buildings architecture, the exhibition inaugurates a sequence of relay programs extending through the end of 2026. The museum traces its origins to the Dong-A Ilbo headquarters, completed in 1926. Since then, the site has weathered the turbulence of modern and contemporary Korean history. Here, chance and causation have accumulated, resonating with the conditions of our times, where nothing remains entirely the same or is entirely new. Gi.Gi.Gi understands this sensation as a way in which the contemporary persists, proposing it as a starting point for imagining a space outside unyielding systems.
Each Gi in Gi.Gi.Gi represents different Chinese characters that are pronounced the same in Korean. The exhibition brings together seven artists (or teams) whose works address the weird that exceeds the normative, the self that arises chaos by its state of being unfixed, and the energysuch as reverberations, currents, or vibrationsthat is difficult to measure. While their works may initially appear to be trial and error, they are far from the process of seeking a correct answer. Instead, what the works rather intend is the relentless practice of errors, in the attempt to wake from a polished reality.
Agnes Questionmark transports the medical interventions of the MTF transition process into her artistic practice, including video installation and sculpture. Viewing diagnosis and surgery as political acts of surveillance, power, and control, she coalesces with a tentacled species as a means of entering a trans state of hyperimmersion. Yoo Jio explores an aesthetic that involves the appropriation of established systems, whether this involves confinement to set frames or pathways. Yoo weaves together substances of unclear origin and function to create sculptures as crystallizations of individual anxiety and trembling affect. Hong Eunju views contemporary technologies as a magnifying glass, amplifying human desire and deprivation. She focuses on the multiple emotions and substances that emerge when technology encounters systems. Eoghan Ryan brings together historical archives and 15 years of newspaper scraps sent by his father into weird and radical fables. His new work, Terrible Simplifiers, links the hall interior and the buildings exterior (the Ilmin Museum of Arts rooftop and the LUUX digital display on the Dong-A Ilbo buildings exterior) and extends the questions of how visual symbols acquire and utilize authority beyond the exhibition. Jennifer Carvalho presents archaeological paintings that excavate the ideas and promises that art has offered our era, drawing on a vast range of references, from religious art to contemporary film stills. Her paintings exceed mere restoration of the past and experiment with the possibilities of contamination and transformation through artistic intervention. Unmake Lab uncovers how our cultural errors as human beings are amplified through the byproducts of artificial intelligence. Finally, Song Min Jung focuses on the characteristic atmospheres of the era we are living in. Encompassing deliberately exalted spectacle and ordinary, uneventful images, her works touch upon both the solidity and the softness of our times. Rather than presuming a transcendental exit hidden in the existing system, Ilmin Museum of Arts Gi.Gi.Gi focuses on the unexpected external sensations that arise from the fissures and creaks of reality. In this attempt, the exhibition adopts as a foundation the omens of an endlessness of contemporaneitya perpetual loop in which nothing ever fully ends.
Artists: Song Min Jung, Agnes Questionmark, Unmake Lab, Eoghan Ryan, Yoo Jio, Jennifer Carvalho, Hong Eunju
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