Delivery Dancer Codex
MoMA PS1
November 6, 2025–March 16, 2026
Queens

In 1927, German physicist Werner Heisenberg introduced what would later become one of the most fundamental concepts of quantum mechanics: the uncertainty principle. It states that certain physical properties—most notably, position and momentum—cannot be simultaneously measured with perfect precision. The more closely one quantity is pinned down, the more the other slips away. This slippage is less a failure of scientific instrumentation than a structural condition of the universe in which we reside: a reality composed of indeterminacies and multiplicities rather than fixed coordinates.

This notion of uncertainty serves as one of the conceptual touchstones for Ayoung Kim’s current solo exhibition at MoMA PS1, Delivery Dancer Codex. The artist’s first US solo presentation brings together a comprehensive assembly of Kim’s ongoing “Delivery Dancer” universe, including Delivery Dancer’s Sphere (2022), Delivery Dancer’s Arc: Inverse (2024), and Delivery Dancer’s Arc: 0° Receiver (2024). The impossibility of pinpointing movement, narrative, or temporality in a singular frame permeates the trilogy of works on view.

The exhibition opens with a triangular field of light cast across the central gallery. The three vast screens of Delivery Dancer’s Arc: Inverse, suspended from the ceiling, form a prismatic enclosure overhead, while sloping ramps in orange-red hues tilt the viewer’s balance beneath. Projected across the screens are multiple streams of two protagonists—Ernst Mo and En Storm—living in a parallel universe created by the artist. They race on motorbikes through digitized, hyper-saturated landscapes that constantly dissolve into new terrains before the eye can fully register the frame. The two swerve, accelerate, and clash in brief, combative encounters while undertaking a delivery mission whose purpose remains intentionally unknown.

Across the main entrance of the third floor, we find a smaller room, where a circular calendar sundial—part of the installation of Delivery Dancer’s Arc: Inverse—comes partially into view. A dark, vertically oriented sculpture stands at the center, surrounded by patterned floor markings that function as a physical counterpart to the temporal dislocations unfolding on the screens. Here, time becomes something to be deciphered through inscription, shadow, and measurement, rather than the linear, second-by-second progression that typically shapes our contemporary life.

A passageway to the left of the main entrance links the screens and the sundial, before opening into the final room of the first section. One end of the corridor is sealed with a mirror, and the long wall beside it is covered with Evening Peak Time is Back (2022), whose GL (Girls’ Love)-inspired imagery depicts the two female protagonists of the “Delivery Dancer” series suspended between hostility and intimacy. Opposite the mural, two life-sized mannequins are positioned amid shattered glass, as if hurled out from the digital realm and frozen mid-motion. Past the sundial, the exhibition culminates with the second work of Kim’s trilogy, Delivery Dancer’s Arc: 0° Receiver. Curved, three-channel screens arc across the wall, now carrying Ernst Mo and En Storm into deserts and skyscraper cities. Reflected in the mirror opposite, the rapid motorbike sequences wrap the room in motion, pulling viewers into a journey where the riders’ true cargo appears to be time itself.