Memorial Antenna: Son Kee Chung
A statue as an antenna, Shortwave receiver, Horn speaker, etc.
Dimensions variable, 2013
A statue as an antenna, Shortwave receiver, Horn speaker, etc.
Dimensions variable, 2013
Memorial Antenna: Son Kee Chung
A statue as an antenna, Shortwave receiver, Horn speaker, etc.
Dimensions variable, 2013
Dimensions variable, 2013
Memorial Antenna: Son Kee Chung
A statue as an antenna, Shortwave receiver, Horn speaker, etc.
Dimensions variable, 2013
Dimensions variable, 2013
Memorial Antenna: Son Kee Chung
A statue as an antenna, Shortwave receiver, Horn speaker, etc.
Dimensions variable, 2013
Dimensions variable, 2013
Memorial Antenna: Son Kee Chung
A statue as an antenna, Shortwave receiver, Horn speaker, etc.
Dimensions variable, 2013
Dimensions variable, 2013
Memorial Antenna: Son Kee Chung
A statue as an antenna, Shortwave receiver, Horn speaker, etc.
Dimensions variable, 2013
Dimensions variable, 2013
Archival Video from Memorial Antenna: Son Kee Chung
Single Channel Video, 04:23min, 2013
Memorial Antenna (2011 – ongoing) is a series of projects that uses historical, political, or religious monuments as antenna for receiving shortwave radio signals. Memorial monuments are usually installed outdoor, and for the durability reason they are made of metal such as bronze. A metal is a conductor, a material through which electricity can travel, and it can thus be used as an antenna for receiving radio signals. The shortwave receiver used in this project is a reproduction of an early model that is quite crude. It means that the quality of the reception would depend greatly on the performance of the antenna. Ultimately, the size, the shape, and the location of the monument become the decisive factors determining the bandwidth size and the sound quality of the receiver, as the receiver receives only the signals that resonate with itself among the cacophony of electromagnetic wavelengths floating in the air. The works in this series are composed of a public monument, functioning as an antenna, a receiver attached to the monument, and a speaker that transmits a live radio broadcasting program. The basic premise of this project is that what constitute an object are both its symbolic significance and material substance. The project then adds another dimension to the object by making it function as an antenna for receiving radio signals. It thereby brings to surface the material property hidden behind the intense symbolism of the object. A monument as an antenna exposes the potentiality of the material it is made of. It returns the monument to its premonument state, a state in which it has not yet been doused with an ideological significance, or a state in which it is not yet part of our cognitive system and therefore not yet defined as a monument.