When we, too, would flow by Yo-E Ryou and Ru Kim is a sound installation composed of conversations between rocks formed when the lava met the sea after Jeju's final volcanic eruption. The dialogue is accompanied by the sounds of water and the voices of the people of Jeju. Rocks express lamentation for their stationary existence over thousands of years, jealousy towards the ceaseless flow and mobility of water, love and hate towards humans who utilize them as needed, and longing for the sea creatures that once resided in their pores. The sound of the stones, which occupy a di erent spacetime from humans, echoes from structured and unstructured sculptures made of volcanic rocks gathered from the coast of Hado-ri. It leads us to reimagine the origins of the land and water we inhabit and our unique relationship with them from a completely di erent viewpoint.