Marking its fourth edition, the Daejeon Art
and Science Biennale opened on October 25 under the title “Magnum Opus” As the only
biennale in Korea dedicated to the theme of science and art, it will run until
February 2 of next year at the Daejeon Museum of Art, Daejeon Creative Center, from
the corner (Jeong-dong, Dong-gu), and GONGGAN55 (Seonhwa-dong, Jung-gu).
This year’s exhibition serves as a
spin-off, reflecting on previous initiatives such as “Daejeon FAST,” “Project
Daejeon,” and the “Art and Science Biennale.” Featuring over 80 works by 23
artists from seven countries, it highlights the creative potential of the
intersection between science and art.
The spin-off exhibition examines the
ongoing theme of the biennale, which seeks to establish a shared ground where
science, art, humanity, and technology converge. It aims to evaluate whether
this vision has transcended theoretical proposals to manifest as practical
initiatives.
The
main exhibition consists of four sections. The first section begins with the
idea that alchemy, which was interested in the combination of different
elements and the phenomena arising at their boundaries, laid the foundation for
modern science.
By
setting science art as the “alchemy of today,” this section seeks to find
intersections between science and art through a return to the origins, sensing
the materiality of nature and recognizing human nature. Featured artists in
this section include Michael Joo, Woo Min jung, Seo Jaewoong, and Bill Viola.
The
second section revisits the boundaries between science and art through the
museum’s new media collection. Viewers can explore major works from Daejeon
Museum of Art’s new media collection, including those by Nam June Paik, Kira
Kim, Yongbaek Lee, Sejin Kim, and Laurent Grasso.
The third section reflects on the
propositions made by key artists who have collaborated on science art projects
with the museum over the past two decades. This section includes works by Agnes
Meyer Brandis, Jaeeun Shin, Marta de Menezes, Mioon, Leehaiminsun, Choe U-Ram,
Jonas Lund, Bae Sung Ho, Agi Haines, Heather Dewey-Hagborg, and Byeongchan Lee.
Notably, Choe U-Ram presents a new
large-scale piece visualizing the precariousness of human values. It also
unveiled a collaboration with Dr. Sanggyu Kim's team from the KAIST Department
of Life Sciences and Agnes Meyer, shown in Korea for the first time.
The fourth section contemplates the current
crisis driven by human desires and humbly embraces the hope for coexistence
through love, respect, and solidarity. This section includes works by BARE,
Bjørn Melhus, Jonas Lund, Katharine Dowson, and Theresa Reimann-Dubbers. Theresa
Reimann-Dubbers’ new work, returning after four years, is highly anticipated.
Additionally, at the Daejeon Creative
Center, visitors can view works by Lee Jaeseok, Suyeon Kim, Byeongchan Lee, and
Hains&Hinterding; at from the corner, works by Shinseungback & Kimyonghun,
Jihye Jung, Seongryong Kang, and Oh Wanseok are on display; and at GONGGAN55,
works by Jonas Lund are featured.
References
Ji Yeon Lee has been working as an editor for the media art and culture channel AliceOn since 2021 and worked as an exhibition coordinator at samuso (now Space for Contemporary Art) from 2021 to 2023.