For over three decades, Chung Seoyoung (b. 1964) has explored the multifaceted potential of object and language through sculpture, installation, drawing, sound, performance, and video. Emerging in the mid-1990s, during which South Korea experienced rapid political, social, and cultural transformations, the artist introduced fresh possibilities for the medium of sculpture that played a pivotal role in the formation of contemporary art in the nation.
Endless Facts, Chung’s first solo exhibition in the Middle East, assembles a number of significant works made throughout her career, tracing the evolution of her artistic language as it intersects with her lived experiences and collective memories. These include Untitled (1993), a key project from her formative years which was made following her graduate studies at the State Academy of Fine Arts Stuttgart; There is Nothing Left to Add nor Take Away (2008), originally commissioned for the 7th Gwangju Biennale curated by Okwui Enwezor; and a new site-specific installation, Endless Facts (2025-2026), produced in situ for the Fire Station. Together, they speak to Chung’s continued exploration of the “sculptural moment”—an unexpected instance in which the artist’s slow, sustained arrangements of commonplace materials and industrial objects cohere into a singular work of art.
The exhibition’s title, Endless Facts, reveals the layers of reality that are embedded in our everyday lives from which Chung draws inspiration. Though facts are usually thought of as unique, immutable statements, the artist suggests that they exist in concatenations that are uncovered continuously upon detailed and careful observations. Such thinking is reflected in the open-ended layout of Chung’s sculptures at the Fire Station, designed to reveal surprising systems of relations through the deliberate placement of works next to one another. By constructing a sculptural landscape that transfigures the ordinary upon close looking, Chung sheds light on the intricate complexities of daily surroundings and speaks to a human experience that transcends cultural and geographical specificities.
Harry C. H. Choi



