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The Project Series As seen from the window of an aeroplane or train, the landscape is blurred, abstract, from things coming into view too quickly. This is when I feel at home, when everything is indistinguishable from other places in my mind, before being located in Los Angeles, or London, or Lumpur. When the scenery is all three and more places, unidentified, dislocated, an imaginary (home)land.1 "In-Between Places: Recent Work by Soo Jin Kim" Kim's work resonates now precisely because it addresses these issues in a non-specific, open-ended fashion that leaves room for the viewer to find personal meaning. Kim's images work on many levels and range from culturally pointed, to intimate, to purely aesthetic. Her hauntingly beautiful photographs raise larger social concerns while, at the same time, explore the relationship between abstraction and pictorial representation. Many artists now use photography to focus on the questions that Kim does. Whether examining documentary issues, mechanical and digital manipulations, or narrative or pictorial concerns, artists are turning to photography to question the self in relation to global culture and its impact.
Instead of focusing on a specific place, the Speed series (1996-1997) represents a document of the artist/subject moving through an anonymous space. Reflecting her long-time interest in travel, and documenting the cultural exchange implicit in travel and migration, these photographs explore the idea of placelessness and movement. Instead of videotaping the countryside through the train window to convey movement, Kim wanted to take a moment of travel and render it still. Working with a long camera shutter and shifting from one point to another, the resulting photograph becomes an image of travel and motion. The image of "actual" movement, then, represents a sort of "in-between" space, neither here nor there, an invisible place that offers the viewer a sense of familiarity in the banal, the everyday, anywhere. Space emerges from this lack of context charged with potential. Free of specificity, non- places arrange and re-arrange their coordinates in an infinite number of ways, becoming amorphous as well as ubiquitous, space becomes uprooted, unlocated, and interchangeable. Once it gains the potential to be more than one place, it has a freedom akin to the boundlessness of the imagination.²
Kim's most recent series, Air, Land, Sea (1998), again focuses on "in-between" places, moments of "invisible" commonality, and the action of traveling. Depicting neither point of origin nor arrival, these photographs portray people and fragments of people on trains, buses, airplanes, taxis, against the background of a passing landscape or reflections of the vehicle's interior. While anonymous, and with the same sense of dislocation that work from the other series conveys, these placeless images suggest a more human dimension. They appear representational and, at the same time, non-specific. This double-edged view offers glimpses of the extraordinary in the ordinary. In contrast to the two-dimensionality of the photographic work, Kim's installation, Flight, carries ideas of travel and placelessness into three dimensions. Related closely to the Crowded Skies series in its graphic linearity, the installation projects an experiential, sculptural quality. Flight refers loosely to the travel diagrams found in airline magazines. These smoothly rendered drawings of journeys may clash vividly with the actual, often turbulent, act of traveling. By mapping abstract and invisible flight trajectories, Kim hints at the bodily displacement of travel and movement.
Kim's imaginary spaces and in-between places bear a strong affinity to the "any-place whatevers" discussed by Gilles Deleuze.3 Citing the impact of the French philosopher's theories on her work, Kim talks about places' being more than reminiscent of each other: they contain the possibility of being like other places altogether, or many places simultaneously. The in-between offers alternatives, different views of how things are and could be. Instead of merely referring to the place represented, Kim's work leads us to another understanding of our life and of what makes a place "home." She gives us the freedom to imagine and to determine our own visions of the places we inhabit within the world. 1. Soo Jin Kim, "Undoing Space," Art & Design, special issue, Art & the Home, Academy Group Ltd., London, England, 1996, p. 49. |
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