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A system, whatever its structure, calls for us to intervene in the events of life. Of course, it doesn’t ask us to practice a specifically visible, concrete action. The system, however, is diversely in connection with the field of our consciousness, affecting people’s behavior. If its logic remains obscure, we go through the uncertainty of life along with some oppressive situations.

In “A Room of One’s Own” Jeong SoYoun demonstrates her belief that what she pursues as an artist presents the value of life and universality of our actions and cultures. Shown in the following she accepts as her main text is a quote from the writing of Virginia Woolf.
“Women not at all exist in history but their presence in a poem is consistently made from beginning to end.”

In this work the artist points out that women have been so far forgotten in history and portrayed as the object not the subject, arousing an awareness of their ontological rights. In this respect, Jeong transforms the matter of specificity as an individual into the justifiability or universality of woman’s life. Through artistic activities, she reveals the universality of life and embraces the value of aesthetic determination generating the forces of creative construction.

The revolving stage composed of three rooms is full of fragile items such as feathers, knitted bathtub, rose flowers, and so on. If viewed in the context of this work, they are more properly interpreted as the fleetingness of life rather than as the symbols of femininity. A female dancer and her performance are projected onto the wall of this stage. The dancer tirelessly moves right and left and puts on and off her outer garment repetitively. No narratives are found in her move. The movement is merely repeated endlessly, as does the revolving stage.

We become aware that the artist is in pursuit of the ontological truth of life, departing from clearly drawing a line between man and woman. What the artist seeks is ultimately the universal theme of recovering the essence and naturalness of life. On the one hand her “A Room of One’s Own” is a reference to something that could not be possessed and seen, but on the other it’s an extension of artistic attempts to emancipate her own self, pursuing progressively to attain dialectic self-awareness.
Jeong Yong-do (Art Critic)