Three Artists'' Experiments Decomposing and Reconstructing Emotion, Technology, and Existence
Experiencing ''Anxiety and Resolution'' Structure Through Interactive Media, Painting, and Spatial Direction

Exhibition "Re-Build" presents new sensory experiences to visitors through the process of deconstructing and reconstructing the structures of emotion and existence — three artists using their respective media to decompose emotions, relationships, memories, and self, then recombine the pieces. Deconstruction is not mere destruction but a process for understanding existing structures — making this an "exhibition of process." Media artist Park Su-jin visualizes emotional structures through technology-art fusion: interactive installation "Proliferation" — tracking audience movements in real-time to continuously multiply virtual chairs; when viewers move or extend hands, one object becomes two, two becomes four — directly expressing "the process of worry creating more worry." Built on Unity engine, providing experience where physical space and digital environment overlap. "Worry, Anxiety, and Resolution" uses Arduino-based interface to connect physical viewer actions to emotional flow — pressing a button causes anxiety-symbolizing objects to fall; once accumulated sufficiently they rise and disappear, experientially embodying emotional expression and resolution. Painting series "Weight I·II·III" expresses invisible emotional weight and hope growing within through the symbol of empty chairs. Designer/media artist Kwak Dong-jun explores the relationship between individual and environment through repeated emotional structures — work where pressing buttons makes lights and sounds disappear while simultaneously triggering other responses, creating a system where "turning something off activates something else." The exhibition''s conceptual depth: by making visitors physically participate in systems that model emotional dynamics (anxiety spiraling, resolution following expression, control creating unintended consequences), Re-Build creates embodied understanding of internal psychological structures that static art forms cannot achieve.