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  1. 0perati0n Nuk0rea

    The tale of a fictional war between North Korea and South Korea/the USA. As opposed to many other works produced by Young-Hae Chang Heavy Industries, the text in this piece moves upwards from the bottom of the frame, giving the reader an experience closer to that of reading a book.

    The work was converted from Adobe Flash format to video around 2021.

    Meri Alexandra Raita - 08.09.2011 - 21:45

  2. Samsung Means to Come

    Samsung Means to Come

    Meri Alexandra Raita - 08.09.2011 - 21:46

  3. The Art of Silence

    An interview with Young-hae Chang and Marc Voge by Jemina Rellie that has been created into a work of art by Young-hae Chang Heavy Industries.

    Meri Alexandra Raita - 15.09.2011 - 13:37

  4. Les Amants de Beaubourg

    This work was made in the event of the 30th anniversary of the Centre Pompidou. Thirty works each represented a year from 1977 to 2007 and Young-hae Chang Heavy Industries represented year 2007 with the work Les Amants de Beaubourg. The work deals with more philosophical questions than other more narrative-based works, such as Bust Down the Doors!, by Young-hae Chang Heavy Industries and has many references to the creation of art by artists, especially Marcel Duchamp.

    Meri Alexandra Raita - 15.09.2011 - 13:59

  5. Onrust (Restlessness)

    The hyperlinked title on the homepage of the author activates a Flash movie showing handwriting appearing against a greyish background - not only the writing, but also the empty screen is reminiscent of paper. The most important difference with Oosterhoffs paper work is the fact that this digital work is time-based, and plays like a movie. The text is not a finished object, it is actually being written as we watch it, or so it seems. There are no images in the work and no hyperlinks. The digital or internet context is thus not activated in any way, and the ‘permeability’ (Tabbi 2004: 215) of reading in an electronic environment is thus reduced as much as possible.

    yra van dijk - 22.09.2011 - 10:21

  6. Hospital Tent

    Hospital Tent

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 22.09.2011 - 12:19

  7. No matter

    No matter

    Giovanna Di Rosario - 22.09.2011 - 17:21

  8. Basquiat meets Mario Brothers? Digital poet Jason Nelson on the meaning of art games

    An interview with the self-described digital poet Jason Nelson on the semiotic pleasures of playing and creating "art-games," indie works produced outside corporate game studios, which, Nelson predicts, will eventually be recognized as the most significant art movement of the 21st century. While explaining how he came to be a digital author, Nelson addresses topics such as his continued love of Flash as a production tool, despite its likely obsolesence, his appreciation for gamescapes that allow for aimless wandering, and the intense reactions his art-games provoke in players. Alluding to the fact that Digital Poet is not the most lucrative of professions, Nelson signals his desire to design "big budget console games," provided he could do so on his terms. 

    (Source: Eric Dean Rasmussen)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 28.09.2011 - 12:44

  9. Cunnilingus in Nordkorea

    This piece places a purported text by Kim Jong-Il in conversation with Nina Simone’s “See-Line Woman” in perfectly sexy YHCHI fashion. Whether the text is real or not is beside the question (I would like to believe it is) because the “Dear Leader” of North Korea provides a speaker and frame of reference that shapes how we understand the text particularly when juxtaposed with the music and lyrics sung by Simone. The text displayed on the screen is mostly by Kim Jong-Il, interspersed with some “Oh”s by Simone, creating a dialectic where male and female, communism and capitalism, North and South Korea, East and West, meet. Consider how the contrast between the seductive, commodified sexual politics sung by Simone’s and the political propaganda of sexual liberation offered by Kim Jong-Il’s text come together to help us rethink the granting or denial of sexual favors as a type of currency.

    (Source: Leonardo Flores)

    Meri Alexandra Raita - 30.09.2011 - 12:10

  10. L0tus Bl0ss0m

    The work L0tus Bl0ss0m is a tale of two people meeting in a subway. One of them, a cleaning lady, seem to suggest similar ideas as the philosopher Jacques Derrida, while the other helps her with the garbage in exchange for hearing her thoughts.

    The work was published on Young-Hae Chang Heavy Industries' web page in 2002 according to the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine, and was converted to video format around or after 2018.

    Meri Alexandra Raita - 30.09.2011 - 14:45

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