Won Seoungwon, The Character Islands, 2013 © Won Seoungwon

Since returning to Korea after completing her studies in Germany, Won Seoungwon has held four solo exhibitions between 2007 and the present. Although she majored in sculpture, she uses drawing and photography as her primary mediums. Her work employs real objects as materials, but she constructs situations and events that would be impossible in real life to unfold her own narratives.

In particular, her photographic work actively utilizes digital processes. She places objects that cannot exist in the same space together or constructs scenarios impossible in reality, creating images reminiscent of surrealist paintings or fairy tales. Among contemporary Korean artists, there are several who use photography as a material to express personal imagination and aesthetic subjectivity, and she is one of them—reconstructing reality through digital techniques.

Among digitally composited photographs, some completely eliminate reality, but in many other cases—such as in the artist’s work—the individual images still retain realism, while the final composite exists on a different plane from reality. Such works oscillate between the real and the imaginary, stimulating the viewer’s imagination. This is one of the charms of Won Seoungwon’s work. Her newly presented series, ‘Character Episode I’, like her earlier pieces, freely crosses between reality and fantasy.

The artist photographed animals in zoos across various European countries that suited her themes. She also photographs natural landscapes and spaces herself to use as backgrounds. However, she explains that the celestial images appearing in the background of this series were captured from the internet.

Using animals as symbolic characters, she constructs stories that allegorize various human personalities. The artist possesses a powerful imagination and delicate sensibility, coupled with an earnest and sincere artistic attitude. This sincerity is clearly evident in each work of the exhibition.

Over the past thirty years since modernism, many visual artists have used photography as a means of expression. Especially after the convergence of digital technology and photography, artists have been freed from technical limitations, allowing more creative freedom. However, digital composite photographs such as Won’s demand extremely labor-intensive manual work during post-production. To complete a final image by assembling hundreds of photographs on a computer often takes at least a month—requiring effort and time similar to the process of completing a painting. This is another factor that makes viewers deeply interested in her work.

In this exhibition, the artist also presented drawings. This curatorial decision helps the audience understand the fundamental roots of her imagination.
Narratively, her works are rich in storytelling, which is one of their greatest strengths. Visually, they offer abundant spectacle, and the large scale of the final images has an overwhelming visual impact.

A key characteristic of contemporary art and photography is the use of digital technology and a theatrical mise-en-scène. Some of the artist’s earlier works from 2007 and 2008 include elements reminiscent of cinema or theater. Later works from 2008 incorporate fairy-tale–like structures.

In the new works, fairy-tale narratives coexist with scenes that evoke science fiction. The combination of the artist’s imagination and the internal structures of these works enhances their completeness. The exhibition reflects a new stylistic direction in contemporary media art. Viewers now look forward to the next body of work where new layers of narrative will emerge.

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