Public bath two
A train that used to move and be operated stops at one place. It exists in another form and is used for a purpose other than its original function. A wagon of the train is connected to another wagon, but people cannot move to another or the train cannot be at a different point, moving with rolling wheels. The artist composes the most private space inside the wagon. Through the exhibition 'Public Bath', the artist shows conflicting objects and backgrounds, like the ironic combination of the words Public and Bath. If objects move from their original place and mix with a completely different environment, the audience observes the identity of the space, place, and human moving in it. The entrance space between wagons became a shower booth. In the gangway, above the rusty iron floor, the tailored flooring and shower curtain change the image and function of the space. The cell phone at the end of the shower emits radio waves, not water. One, two, and three people enter at the same time and leave their faces on the phone gallery. a fake artist and an interviewer whose face is covered with creepy video filters have an interview. A bright and happy interviewer asks about the artist's social identity, defined by herself. The daily photos of the three women displayed on the wall show a mini version of the public bath in which many strangers gather in an extremely private space (a space for private actions). Each private action, like taking a shower, cutting hair, watching it, laughing and taking a picture, is broadened into interaction as the three come together. The video in the bathtub shows the various scenes of Stuttgart mineral water fountains and the behaviour of living things around them. Surrounding the water, the collective life and experiences of humans and animals are accumulated. The experience is immersed and projected in a beautifully shaped bathtub and reflected onto Waggon's ceiling.