DHS: Once my fortuneteller
told me that I have five horses
and that means that I travel a lot.
So I’m basically destined to leave
home and live somewhere else.
I think I wanted to leave
home because of my father.
He’s a successful painter.
Somehow I felt that his fame
overshadowed me and I wanted to do my own thing.
You know, New York is crazy, really really noisy.
And I couldn’t sleep that well.
And I was thinking when it was my
last time to have a really good sleep
and that was back in Korea.
So, I thought, like, how am
I going to bring that space.
And physically it is impossible,
so I came up with this idea
of transportable fabric.
I want to carry my house, my home,
with me all the time, like a snail.
My house project, Seoul Home/LA Home,
is a replica of the interior of my parent’s house.
I grew up in the house.
It’s a very traditional Korean house.
My father built the exact replica
of this famous traditional building.
I just didn’t want to sit down and cry for home.
I just wanted to more actively
deal with the issues of longing.
My mom helped me to find national treasures,
basically people who keep traditional techniques,
craftsmanship, things like that.
Those ladies taught me how to sew certain seams.
There’s an expression in
Korea “You walk the house.”
People actually disassemble the house
and then rebuild in a different location.
So I had to make something that
you could put in a suitcase
and bring it with me all the time.
I was able to discover so many things
when I was measuring and that was really personal
and a kind of emotional experience.
You often finds like little
marks you did when you were a kid
and that brings all the
memories of your childhood.
And when you go through that process,
the space becomes really a part of you.
I really like this idea of my art
becomes a part of the architecture.
It started from my interest
in the notion of space,
particularly this notion of personal space,
or individual space.
Seoul is very crowded city,
and on the street people bump into each other.
And you know, somebody could just,
you know, hit your shoulder.
And that’s normal.
But I realize that’s different here.
So my perception of this personal
space has, I think, changed.
It was just for me very natural to
think about the interpersonal space,
the working at table space between people.
And so that’s how this idea of individual
and the collective came in.
I intentionally chose that pose.
If you look at the figures’ facial expressions,
they don’t look oppressed.
So it has kind of like a positive gesture,
but what they’re doing is
actually just bearing weight.
And I don’t really make any statement on that,
its just really up to the viewer.
I was asked to do some public
sculpture in this public place
and I started to think about
what it means, public space,
and what’s the meaning of public art or monument.
I tried to re-think this whole notion of monument.
…make sure it is polished very well.
I want it to be very shiny…
Usually, its bigger than life size
individual, illustrious figures.
But what I did was I took it down,
and make it smaller and make it into multiples.
I just want to recognize anonymous,
everyday life, people who pass that space.
For me it was more important actually
coming from Korea to the United States,
and that kind of displacement,
the cultural displacement,
allowed me to compare two different cultures.
So I was able to actually look back
and think about these issues of the individual
and the collective.
I scanned the portraits of sixty students
from my high school year book into the computer.
And I put my face first
and the rest superimposed on top of each other
so it creates this average of one class.
In a way it’s self-portrait.
I collected yearbooks from 1970 to 1993
or something like that
and I see same face from different year books,
so maybe we are not that unique.
I was curious what we share and what we don’t,
and how this sort of individuals converge.
The whole Korean society is actually
based upon this kind of militaristic,
very hierarchical structure.
When you finish your elementary school
you enter middle school in Korea.
That’s probably the age of 13.
Then you shave your hair.
And then you have uniform
And it came as some kind of
trauma for most of the kids.
And also you are called by numbers,
you know number 37 or something like that.
My number was 46.
–Ok, ready?…
Koreans, they all have this kind of nostalgia,
this kind of personal attachments to the uniform.
I mean it’s the funny thing about the uniform
because we hated to wear that uniform.
It’s very strict and if you don’t
follow that uniform, you’re punished.
But we tried our best to differentiate
our uniform from one another.
From the moment you are born,
you know you are going to be in the military
because everybody has to go.
So that’s a great deal of
the Korean men’s identity.
I was in the army for almost two years.
It was quite important part of my life
and I think it just comes out in my work.
I found this army surplus store
and the owner happened to be this old Korean guy.
And he have a lot of free dog tags
and allowed me to use this special
typewriter to type dog tags,
you know letters and numbers.
Every man talks about his own
experience in the military,
you know when you have a drink.
And they’re unbelievable stories.
I was really good at many things.
I was a sharp shooter and I had
a black belt before the military
and I could run really fast and
that was you know very helpful.
But the program was basically push
your psychological and physical to extreme,
so actually you can kill someone.
I really sort of experienced
what it means to be dehumanized.
So for me like everything was
something to think about.
In my work I can let other
people see things differently.
I think this desperate sense
of displacement gives me space
to have some kind of critical
distance to everything.