Installation view of 《Prototype》 (Lotte Museum, 2025) ©Lotte Museum of Art

Lotte Museum of Art presents the solo exhibition 《Prototype》 by Ok Seungcheol (b. 1988), an artist who has explored how perception is constructed within the digital image environment through painting and sculptural works. Focusing on four operational modes of images—replication, transformation, circulation, and deletion—the artist visualizes how images no longer function as fixed “originals” but instead derive sequentially, repeatedly undergoing disappearance and regeneration.

Featuring more than eighty new and recent works spanning painting and sculpture, this exhibition marks Ok Seungcheol’s first large-scale solo presentation, reconsidering images as unstable entities and reflecting on the conditions through which perception is continuously “becoming.”


Installation view of 《Prototype》 (Lotte Museum, 2025) ©Lotte Museum of Art

《Ok Seungcheol: Prototype PROTOTYPE》 is an exhibition that asks how the ways in which images are perceived are changing within the environment of digital space. Images no longer form an order based on a single “original.” In today’s visual culture, the flow of perception is structured through the repeated processes of replication, transformation, circulation, and deletion, while images branch out serially through continuous variations of similarity and difference.


Installation view of 《Prototype》 (Lotte Museum, 2025) ©Lotte Museum of Art

Artist Ok Seungcheol has explored the structure of such an image environment through painting and sculptural works. In particular, his paintings do not function as a fixed genre of representation, but rather as a field of artistic simulation that constructs unstable and indeterminate states. His portraits—depicting figures whose nationality or gender remain ambiguous—are composed through the processes of repetition, overlap, erasure, and reappearance.

His sculptural forms likewise follow this operational logic of images. Symbolic forms such as trophies or busts function as interchangeable surfaces as well as residues of the creative act, arranged in space through a variety of scales and material conditions.
 
Although the term “prototype” originally refers to the first model of something to be repeatedly produced, for Ok Seungcheol it is closer to an open series—an expandable database that operates reversibly—rather than a completed archetype. The more than eighty works, both new and recent, presented in 《Prototype PROTOTYPE》 are offered as states of perception that are continuously “becoming,” unfolding through the ongoing processes of replication, transformation, circulation, and deletion.

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