Entitled THIS TOO, IS A MAP, the 12th Seoul Mediacity Biennale (SMB12) will open to the public at Seoul Museum of Art and several other venues across the city of Seoul from 21 September to 19 November 2023. A press and professional preview day will take place on 20 September. Developed to imagine the global aesthetics of the non-territorial, the project focuses on alternative concepts of mediating and relating that live outside of borders and looks to the necessity of abstractions and hidden and deliberately obscured languages to communicate shared existence. The project refers to the global relations that take place within Seoul and its industrial surroundings, and the positions and references of those willingly and unwillingly displaced, often multiple times over, whether within or outside of the city and state. The Biennale looks at systems imposed or created outside of national borders, including transnational solidarities, “underground” commitments, the coded mapping of data and infrastructure, as well as those of artistic and political communication.
Honoring Seoul Mediacity Biennale’s tradition of creating new and alternative networks, THIS TOO, IS A MAP spreads across multiple venues throughout Seoul. Each distinct location embraces objects and concepts that respond to the Biennale and reflect unique local and spatial characteristics. These venues include SeMA Seosomun Main Branch, the neighboring Seoul Museum of History, the outdoor Seoullo Media Canvas, and several underground spaces dispersed around the city such as space mm and Sogong Space―located in an underground shopping center―and SeMA Bunker. Augmenting these venues are a series of collaborating spaces that share programs, postcards, guidebooks, newsletters, and maps to offer additional means of navigating the Biennale and the city.
The largest manifestation of SMB12’s exhibition and programs takes place at SeMA’s Seosomun Main Branch. Spanning installation, time-based media, painting, sculpture, drawing, textile, wallpaper, and sound, the exhibition explores the global aesthetics of the non-territorial from physical and cultural displacements and replacements, to “unseen” infrastructures and media, to multisituated alliances. Each gallery explores a different approach to non-territorial aesthetics, including artworks that make alternative maps, abstract history and identity, re-present displacement and migration paths, and communicate through cybernetic and indigenous positions. Along with the museum’s gallery spaces, its lobby, courtyard, hallways, rooftop, Project Gallery, and Crystal Gallery also present new and commissioned works as well as special events.
시, language for new moons presented at the Seoul Museum of History is a survey exhibition of Jesse Chun, whose immersive poetics in moving image, drawing, installation, and sculpture invoke delicate questions about language and power. Chun was born in Korea and subsequently lived in Korea, Hong Kong, Canada, and the United States, where she observed the marginalization of non-English languages, particularly non-Western narratives and histories. Drawing from sustained connections to her own matrilineal history, Korean folk literature, and the country of her birth, Chun uncovers the “other side” of language, mapping its various cosmologies. By deconstructing languages into fragments of phonemes, characters, images, and constellations, Chun embraces linguistic abstractions that fracture its social and semiotic structures. In presenting these works at Seoul Museum of History, she extends to visitors an inimitable opportunity to summon new languages, hybrid memories of culture, time, meaning and the experience of beginning anew―from her grandmother’s shamanic dance to the act of translating cross-territorial becomings. In the context of the museum, Chun’s works unfold new ways of seeing the histories and poetics that percolate through Seoul, arising from preservation, complexity, devotion, and reinvention.
Seoul Museum of Art sema.seoul.go.kr
Seoul Mediacity Biennale mediacityseoul.kr