Inyeon

Inyeon is a Korean word for the connections between people that feel deeper than coincidence. In this series, the relationship between father and son unfolds slowly and intuitively, without a fixed narrative, focused not on specific moments but on presence itself.

Words and Photography Aram Tanis


Inyeon is a Korean word used to describe connections between people that feel deeper than coincidence. Rooted in Buddhist thought, it suggests that some relationships are shaped long before we fully understand them – carried through time, memory, and shared experience.

The images were made slowly and intuitively, without a fixed narrative. Rooted in everyday life and time spent together, they move away from documenting specific moments and instead focus on presence itself.

While the work comes from a personal place, it also speaks to a more universal experience: the evolving bond between parent and child. Through the idea of Inyeon, the relationship between father and son is understood as something enduring yet difficult to fully explain – a connection shaped quietly over time through shared life, memory, and closeness.



Inyeon is a Korean word used to describe connections between people that feel deeper than coincidence.



While the work comes from a personal place, it also speaks to a more universal experience: the evolving bond between parent and child.



About Aram

Aram Tanis (Ji Hyun Song), born in Seoul, South Korea; lives and works in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. After studying photography at the Gerrit Rietveld Art Academy in Amsterdam, he continued his artistic practice in a postgraduate program at De Ateliers in Amsterdam. His work has been exhibited at Kunstverein für die Rheinlande und Westfalen (Düsseldorf / DE), Korean Cultural Center New York (New York / USA), Frankfurter Kunstverein (Frankfurt /DE), Van Abbe Museum (Eindhoven / NL) and Frontviews (Berlin / DE), among others. 

To see more of Aram’s work, visit his website or follow him on Instagram


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