Pre Order / Shipping mid September.
Session Press, 152 pages, Hardcover, 240 x 290mm, 2026,
First Edition of 1000 copies.
Photographed throughout the early 2000s and composed entirely of previously unpublished works, Kid Echo revisits the world of adolescence first explored in Park’s acclaimed monograph Kid Nostalgia (2014). Through a refined selection of direct encounters with his subjects, the publication celebrates Park’s extraordinary sensitivity toward portraiture. More than twenty years after all of these photographs were made, Park revisits the work with a deeper appreciation for its openness and emotional ambiguity. Born in Seoul and educated in New York, Park studied painting at Pratt Institute before returning to Korea, where he began photographing teenagers he encountered throughout Seoul and its outskirts. During his years in New York, Park encountered the work of photographers such as Walker Evans, Alfred Stieglitz, Paul Strand, and Diane Arbus, whose exhibitions shaped his understanding of photography as an expressive and psychological medium. He was equally influenced by French New Wave cinema, particularly the films of Jean-Luc Godard. Rather than constructing a fixed social portrait of youth culture, Park photographed instinctively, drawn to subtle emotional tensions visible in posture, expression, and gaze. In an interview with writer and curator Marc Feustel included in the publication, Park reflects on his search for what he describes as “the moment of emotion,” inspired in part by Henri Cartier-Bresson’s notion of the “decisive moment.” For Park, however, the goal was not perfect composition or narrative clarity, but emotional presence: “I wanted them to be completely relaxed so their innocence could emerge.” The emotional complexity of adolescence has long fascinated photographers around the world. Kid Echo resonates with the observational intimacy of Nigel Shafran, the emotionally charged portraits of adolescence found in Johan van der Keuken’s Wij zijn 17 (We Are 17), and the introspective emotional atmosphere explored in Yurie Nagashima’s Empty White Room.