Articles
[Critique] Persona of Youth, A Trembling Moment
2024
Cho Jae-yeon | Art Critic

Moka Lee, Ego Function Error 04, 2023, Oil on cotton, 162.4 x 130.7 cm © Moka Lee
Moka Lee paints portraits of contemporary youth, where elation and frustration are intricately intertwined. She captures the narratives and emotions embedded in images—found serendipitously on social media, of people whose names and circumstances remain unknown—and unfolds them onto the canvas. Anonymous figures gaze confidently into the camera or smile brightly; at a glance, they appear simply happy. Yet her paintings simultaneously contain the latent anxieties of youth that linger beyond the surface of the image. For the younger generation, Instagram has become part of everyday life.
However, everyday life itself is not synonymous with Instagram. The happiness posted on social media is often the result of performances shaped by an awareness of others’ gazes. What Moka Lee probes are the fissures within these staged images—those inner cracks that cannot be fully concealed. The vivid RGB of the digital display fades through the layered application of oil paint, while the darkness that escapes the camera’s aperture remains as abstraction, marked only by the traces of brushstrokes. The murky palette subdues the exaggerated mood of the image and serves as a device to evoke the subject’s candid emotional state. Under dim lighting, skin and wrinkles become more pronounced than they would under bright illumination.
The “imperfections” of the body—those that editing attempts to erase—reveal the hidden dimensions of the subject beyond the flat frame. Within the interstices of joyful expressions, the quiet sorrow of youth emerges. At the same time, the darkness abstracted into lines and planes of color metaphorically suggests a society that alienates the individual. In the composition, shadow approaches as if to engulf the subject. The visible trajectories of the brushstrokes become a metaphor for the subject’s breathing—inhale and exhale. Following this rhythm, youth either absorbs the absurdities of society or exhales in resistance.
Through this state of wavering—unable to fully take root in either happiness or anxiety, acceptance or resistance—Moka Lee explores the meaning of youth. As the artist adds, “True beauty lies in duality.” Youth is contradictory. And therein lies its beauty.