BUSAN.- Three laboratories. Three months. One opens each month, and only when the last is illuminated does the whole reveal itself. Body, Under Experiment is structured as a sequence of monthly activations. Three discrete experimental spaces are opened in succession; each laboratory remains lit as the next is added. The full picture of the exhibition emerges only at the moment the final laboratory opens.
This structure engages directly with a problem performance art has never fully resolved: what does it mean to exhibit what exists only in the present? The assumption that documentation is already a betrayal of the live event has long produced an uneasy tension between performance and the exhibition form. Body, Under Experiment does not sidestep this tension but makes it structural, embedding it within the temporal architecture of the exhibition itself. Each laboratory is at once a trace of performance and an ongoing event, a field of latency for the one yet to come. The opposition between liveness and archive, disappearance and duration, is held here as a productive tension, exposed rather than resolved. This is not only a curatorial proposition but an institutional one: to open an exhibition before it is finished, and to hold that incompleteness as the condition of the work.
The bodies assembled here are not the gleaming mechanical forms promised by science fiction's utopian imagination. They are slow, hand-built, sustained by labor that is made deliberately visible.
Geumhyung Jeong's Studio/Storage fills the first laboratory with disassembled robots, anatomical models, and components held in suspension between past performances and future ones. Her DIY machines are built from salvaged parts and self-taught code; their ceaseless need for repair is not a failure of the work but its content. Studio and archive collapse into a single space, where bodies collected for experimentation, remnants already used, and forms awaiting future activation coexist on the same worktable. The performance-archive she proposes is not a record of what has happened but a field of what might yet happen, perpetually reconstituted from its own fragments.
Hoonida Kim's Fine-Tuning Training Room takes as its subject technology's penetration into human life and the ecological shifts it produces. Rather than closing the gap between technology and the body, the work proposes a training in sensing and re-perceiving from within that gap. Fine-Tuning Human Sense 2.1 and Soma Patch 0.5 invite visitors to wear, connect to, and utilize prosthetic environmental perception apparatus, instruments for sharpening sensation implanted, directly or indirectly, into the human body. Confronting the inevitability of our entanglement with technology, this laboratory treats the shifts in posthuman perception and sensibility as an unceasing question.
Kwon Byungjun's Robotic Sound Workshop sits at the intersection of technology, labor, and redemption, a sustained reflection on what it means to make something by hand in a technological society. When the final laboratory is illuminated, twenty collaborators join Kwon to build robots by hand, serving at once as researchers in the laboratory and as performers of the work itself. Visitors enter and watch. His robots emulate the gestures of human dance while existing as minorities and others within a community, unfolding through movement, sound, and light a shadow theater of the marginal.
When the third laboratory opens, the exhibition assumes its full form for the first time. Yet the bodies here are not perfect. They move haltingly, are ceaselessly reassembled, and refuse completion. That completion is not a conclusion. It is an opening. What remains is the fact of bodies in the midst of process, together, refusing to be finished. This, perhaps, is the most human shape of any future to come.