Ok Seungcheol, Mimic, 2022 © Ok Seungcheol

In the exhibition 《After Effect》, the two artists actively exchange and resonate with each other’s artistic perspectives and methodologies. Rather than collaborating on a single work, however, they maintain their independent formats—sculpture and painting—while selectively applying the other’s characteristic elements or highlighting shared similarities. The term “aftereffect,” which can signify post-correction, residual marks, or effects, refers to the symbolic process through which an original image multiplies itself through repeated modification and re-reproduction.
 
Lee Byoungho works by dismantling form (the original) within the grammar of sculpture and re-recognizing the image based on this intentional incompleteness. Elements that had been concealed within fixed forms are brought to the surface, and piles of fragmented units break away from stable structures to be recomposed across time and space, continuously renewing the original.

This reflects an artistic attitude that presents the original as a fluid state through repeated processes of transformation and deconstruction. For this exhibition, Lee assigns physical form to images from Ok Seungcheol’s works, dismantles them again, and recomposes them into piles of units through a process of replication. These are then 3D scanned, printed, and painted, ultimately positioned as new originals within the context of his own practice.


Lee Byoungho, Eccentric Abattis, 2022 © Ok Seungcheol

Ok Seungcheol’s working process primarily involves using Adobe Illustrator to separate or extract partial images or formed shapes as vectors (original images). Within this process, minimal units of image sources such as outlines and colors are repeatedly reorganized and reconstructed. The extracted images are then transformed through different media and become individual originals in their own right. In this exhibition, Ok repeatedly uses the colors and facial components that compose the eyes, nose, and mouth across multiple images. Consequently, the faces appearing in the works function simultaneously as one face (the original) and as multiple proliferating faces (new originals).
 
Both artists persistently challenge fixed conventions and seek to depart from established norms. This two-person exhibition serves first as an opportunity for each artist to reflect on the underlying aspects of their own practice by using the other’s work as a mirror, while also generating new tensions and relaxations. Furthermore, it is expected to provide a chance to more closely examine the central facets of their working methods and attitudes, offering deeper insight into the direction of their artistic practices.
 
Yoon Doohyun, Director of Gallery KICHE

References