Installation view of 《Do Wetlands Scare You?》 © Foundry Seoul

A dense forest, thick with towering trees that seem to obscure the sky. A bleak, unsettling atmosphere lingers. The ground is heavy with mud, and plants such as perennials and reeds grow tall in stagnant water. It is a wetland. A place where, with a single misstep, one may sink and never emerge. Gripped by fear, someone stands frozen, unable to move a muscle. At that moment, something bursts forth from the swamp.


Miryu Yoon, Ghost Steps, 2024, Oil on canvas, 259.1 x 193.9 cm © Miryu Yoon

What might unfold in the next scene, following such a moment of urgency? Something approaches the figure, whose body is seized by fear at its peak, tightening every muscle. Will Näkki—the water spirit transformed into a monster—threaten the human? Or will Rusalka, the figure from Slavic mythology with long green hair, shimmering eyes, and a slick, feminine body, seduce and draw them into the depths?

In this way, the exhibition invites viewers to imagine scenarios unfolding within a swamp where life and death intermingle—scenarios shaped by spiritual entities from Scandinavian and Germanic folklore, often depicted as seductive or destructive female figures. Miryu Yoon, a painter, has conceived the exhibition space at Foundry Seoul for her solo exhibition 《Do Wetlands Scare You?》 as a vast swamp. Entering this space, viewers find themselves immersed, locking eyes with the figures in the paintings, searching for evocative clues and constructing new narratives infused with a contemporary sensibility.

The figures that appear in each of the large-scale paintings in this exhibition are the artist’s friends. The three women perform as if they have become mythological spirits inhabiting the swamp. One figure, resembling an aged Rusalka whose body is entirely covered in fur, emerges slowly from the water clad in a fur garment, gazing outward at the viewer beyond the canvas. In another scene, echoing the myth of the Rusalka who lures men to dance with her in the water until death, the three figures join hands in a circle beneath the surface, moving together in a shared gesture.

Once perceived merely as eerie beings that lure others into the swamp, their acts of holding hands, embracing, or whispering to one another evoke a different emotional register. At the same time, the artist’s characteristic, fluid brushwork renders flowing light, rippling water, and the gestures of the figures with vivid dynamism. Using the “Live Photo” function on a mobile phone to stage and capture scenes, the artist records subtle movements within a span of 1.5 seconds. This method allows her to translate the fleeting interactions between figure and environment into an abstract, sensorial language—one that extends beyond the surface of the canvas and into the viewer’s perceptual space.


Miryu Yoon, Don't Tell Anybody on the Land 1, 2, 2024, Oil on canvas, 130.3 x 193.9 cm each © Miryu Yoon

Immersed deep within the cool, bluish waters, a strange and unsettling sensation—the Uncanny—gradually reveals itself, filling both the works and the exhibition space with a mysterious narrative that unfolds beyond the canvas. Miryu Yoon poses a question to the viewer.

“Do Wetlands Scare You?”

References