Installation view of 《Trophy》 (KICHE, 2023) ©KICHE

In this exhibition, which takes the symbolic motif of the “trophy,” Ok Seungcheol shifts his focus from the process through which an original is produced and expanded—central to his previous exhibitions—to the icon itself. He examines how a single object (the original) can be interpreted and assigned meaning differently depending on the viewer’s perspective.

Accordingly, alongside the new sculpture Trophy, the artist’s distinctive facial icons presented primarily through paintings are not fixed into a single meaning but remain infinitely open regardless of their original intention. The exhibition consists of one new sculpture and approximately sixteen new paintings.


Installation view of 《Trophy》 (KICHE, 2023) ©KICHE

“With each step up and down the exhibition space’s staircase gazes push and pull against each other. Some faces study and turn away; some observe carefully then quickly glance away. Each face questions the identity of the ambiguous archetype in our memories: Was the apparition ever real? What is the original source of fiction that is mixed with truth and has the potential to infinitely evolve?

In the midst of the endlessly renewing days of reality, the boundary between the original and the replica becomes blurred every time. Meanwhile, Ok Seungcheol plants a flag on some of the images that freely float through today. It is to engrave the image of a specific moment in the form of a unique physical property here. As a brilliant emblem of the present, as a marker to avoid losing one’s direction.”

_Miran Park, Curator 〈Trophy: Paused, Versatile Components of the Image〉 partial excerpt


Installation view of 《Trophy》 (KICHE, 2023) ©KICHE

"In any case, what he is trying to show is not the cause or effect of an event. A series of trophies that have become sprite images is, after all, diversified perspectives for three-dimensional objects and an expanded time sprung out of the three-dimensions. Therefore, the yellow, gray, greenish-blue paintings and the gold-plated head sculpture in the small green room are “new oldness” that is not affected by any viewpoint and space of the past, present, and future. In this sense, the works scattered all over the exhibition space continue the legacy of a methodology of the previous exhibition.

We can observe this continued artistic contemplation of the loss of the original (《Un Original》), reference to an image of reduced clarity 《Jpeg Supply》), and recreating the design (《Creating Outlines》). Not only that, the new series, Trophy, distinguishes itself from the existing legacy and holds a temporary independence. Nonetheless, the artist hints to us that this group of works can create a patina of non-time-space-continuum by infinitely cross-editing, rather than staying perpetually fragmented."

_Hyun Chung 〈The Patina of A No-Time-Space-Continuum〉 partial excerpt

References