The Memory of the Eyes
Written by Habin Cho
The trapezoidal structure that has three shades of mirror stands still to fill the void of the space where the rose of Sharon used to bloom. After 80 years of living, the rose of Sharon died as if nothing had changed, which the artist, Myeongjoon Shin sublimated into an installation work questioning the identity of the space and the remains. Through the installation piece he traces back in his memory how his daily life has changed since a familiar space vanished, which tells the viewers that a lot of things in our lives are changing and fading away.
His work is like a memorial ceremony, in which he cherishes the past and the present of a space that is about to vanish. He appreciates every moment of changes that a space gets through, visually confirming that everything stays in the temporality of a dystopia. Since its death after 80 years of living, the rose of Sharon in his video is the clue reconstructing his daily life in a lot of spaces including the forest, ponds, and the bridge, etc.
In the aspect of the technique of directing his video work, he chooses to greet the legendary blue bird instead of looking for the legendary blue bird, by shooting certain landmarks of our town, Daegu and expanding his own narratives with the subject matters of the roads, islands, and panels in some construction sites. His work is based on the unfamiliar, unusual objects and figures found in ordinary places, bringing them into our daily lives.
Playing his video work in the structure that is installed with mirrors reflecting the viewers instead of the rose of Sharon, he makes the viewers participate in the new journey with the invisible rose of Sharon. Indeed, his work is like a footnote for the viewers, interpreting precious memories of the place.