The Korea Herald

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Culture Station Seoul 284 explores 2 border towns

By Im Eun-byel

Published : March 17, 2021 - 15:44

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Video image of artist Shin Je-hyun performing “Rotating Borders” (KCDF) Video image of artist Shin Je-hyun performing “Rotating Borders” (KCDF)

Exhibition “Border-less.site,” co-hosted by the Korea Craft & Design Foundation and Junglim Foundation, opened to the public Wednesday at Culture Station Seoul 284, which is the old Seoul Station building.

The “Border-less.site” exhibition was developed as part of Culture Station Seoul 284’s regional research and exhibition initiative, following the “DMZ” and “Kaesong Industrial Complex” exhibitions in 2019 and 2018, respectively.

The exhibition explores what a border means in two areas, Dandong in China and North Korea’s Sinuiju. The two towns are divided by the Yalu River -- also known in Korean as the Amrok River -- that runs between them.

Though the two cities are divided by the river, they connect the two countries in commerce, diplomacy and military. 

“Escape Fantasia” by Choi Yun (KCDF) “Escape Fantasia” by Choi Yun (KCDF)
“It was therefore interesting to revisit the meaning of the ‘borderless border’ via the various artworks and to recall the imagination evoked around crossing the border, much of which has long been rejected,” art director Park Seong-tae wrote in the introduction for the exhibition.

Inspired by the “discontinuity and mixed temporality” in the two border towns, 18 artists, including Seo Hyun-suk, Shin Je-hyun, Lee Won-ho and Jun So-jung, created paintings, sculptures, music, architecture and performances.

Professor Ahn Chang-mo of the School of Architecture at Kyonggi University, who specializes in the architecture of South and North Korea, provided the research data needed for the exhibition.

For audiences who cannot visit the exhibition in person, an online exhibition is available at www.border-less.site. On the online platform, references which the artists looked into for the exhibition are also available, enabling a different experience from the offline exhibition.

“We hope that the exhibition can be a chance to expand the meaning of borders from discontinuity to connectivity,” an official from the exhibition organizers said.

The exhibition will continue until May 9.

By Im Eun-byel (silverstar@heraldcorp.com)