Julius Popp : bit.fall pulse

The Korean Air Box Project

The Korean Air Box Project

The Korean Air Box Project series features an artist who has suggested an artistic vision for the future in the domains of international contemporary art, show-casing a large-scale, site-specific installation at Seoul Box, National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art(MMCA), Seoul.

The next-generation media artist Julius Popp presents his latest installation work, bit.fall pulse, which is the largest piece of his signature series entitled bit.fall previously shown at various venues throughout the world. Inside of the each of the four large containers stacked toward the ceiling of Seoul Box, hundreds of water droplets form a word, which then disappears after a very short time. As the different words repeatedly appear and replace the previous word in a cascade form, the viewer’s curiosity is instantly stimulated.

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Designers
Hongsung Kim(Art Director)
Minju Kwon(Designer)
Collaborators
Youjin Choi(MMCA, Exhibition Design)
Yongkwan Kim(Unreal Studio, Photography)
Yohan Ji(Unreal Studio, Photography)

Identity built from bits

We deloveped typeface to visualize and identify the ephemerality of information, which exists only instantly as it falls in “bits,” the smallest unit of data in a computer, and how information is transported, like a pulse or flash that travels all over the world in a fraction of a second.

The silver catalogue designed for the exhibition documents the production of this beautiful reproduced images of the installation. This volume also includes a CD of artist's interview video, essay by curators, artist's biography and photography of artwork.

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