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Seungcheol is an artist who has explored how the concept of the “original” is
formed and operates within an environment where digital images are endlessly
reproduced and transformed. He begins with digital images found in visual media
such as comics, animation, films, and internet imagery, reconfiguring them into
vector images that function as a new kind of original. This line of inquiry was
clearly articulated in his early solo exhibition 《Un Original》(KICHE, 2018). In this
exhibition, he combined images of Japanese animation characters he encountered
during childhood with plaster casts commonly used in entrance-exam art
training, generating new digital originals and translating them into paintings
and sculptures in order to examine the tension between the origin of images and
their reproduction.
In early
paintings such as Matador(2018),
Dealock(2018), and Mimic(2018), the
facial images reveal the formal structure of the image itself rather than
emphasizing narrative or individual identity. The close-up faces with removed
backgrounds and flattened color planes erase the individuality of the
characters while simultaneously evoking a sense that is both familiar and
strange for the viewer. Through this strategy, the image functions less as an
individual portrait and more as a visual sign repeatedly invoked within visual
culture.
This line
of inquiry expands further in the solo exhibition 《JPEG SUPPLY》(KICHE, 2020). In this
exhibition, the artist highlighted the contrast between the lightness of
digital images that circulate rapidly across the internet and the physical
weight of painting and sculpture. In works such as
Screenshot(2020), digital original images are output in
multiple forms—including painting, print, and merchandise—circulating across
different media much like internet memes. Here, originality is no longer understood
as a fixed standard but as a condition that is continuously renewed through
processes of replication and transformation.
In recent
works, this perspective develops into the notion of images as states of
“becoming.” In the solo exhibition 《Prototype》(Lotte Museum of Art, Seoul,
2025), the artist explored how images generate serial derivatives through
repeated cycles of replication, transformation, deletion, and circulation.
Works such as Tylenol(2025), Taste of green tea(2025),
and Under the same mood(2025) demonstrate how repeated
images may dull perception or shift into new meanings. Through this process,
the artist reveals that images no longer exist as fixed or completed forms but
rather emerge within ongoing processes of transformation and recall.