“
Truly, it has arrived—
the end of lovethat
no one believed in.
”
As in the song by Lee Chan-hyuk, we live in a time that declares the end of love.
With the Fourth Industrial Revolution, AI and smartphones have become central
to everyday life, and a cold, dry atmosphere seems to linger between people.
Yet paradoxically, the small screens we constantly look into are always filled with human presence.
From dramas and entertainment shows to vlogs, we endlessly watch others, consume their images, and ultimately return our attention to human beings.
Through the camera, this work stages moments in which we still need one another—moments when love is called for, when we attempt to exist together.
Subway stations and bus stops were chosen as settings to reflect the contemporary landscape of perpetual movement, where no one lingers for long.
In an era that proclaims the extinction of love, I wanted to ask, at the intersection
where the longing for connection collides with the paradox of disconnection and dependence
:What kind of time are we truly living in?