The Core of Silence
I do not regard silence as the mere absence of sound. Silence is a state that exists before language, a realm where existence remains concealed and has yet to reveal itself. The philosopher Martin Heidegger described being not as a fixed object but as an event of disclosure. Yet not all beings are disclosed equally. Some are placed at the center of attention, while others remain hidden, overlooked, and unnamed.
This work began with a question about the nature of existence itself. We often believe that we recognize things as they are, but in reality we understand them through their names, functions, and social roles. The gloves trapped within ice are no longer tools of labor, nor do they belong to any identifiable individual. Stripped of their original function, they remain as traces of pure existence.
Ice does not serve as a material of preservation. Rather, it suspends time and temporarily delays transformation. Within this frozen state, the object is separated from utility and allowed to exist in another condition. As the ice melts, forms dissolve and boundaries disappear. Yet disappearance does not necessarily mean absence. Existence precedes form and continues beyond it.
Through the process of freezing and melting, I seek to confront the fragile and often overlooked condition of being itself.
The Core of Silence is an attempt to contemplate the traces of existence that remain within silence and to ask a fundamental question: What does it mean to exist?