Installation view © Space Dimension Variable

Artist Note

Oily clay (Yuto) is the material I use to create the prototype of a sculpture. It softens in warmth and hardens in the cold. Dense and heavy, it’s a burdensome substance. It clings to every speck of dust, and once it stains your clothes, it’s nearly impossible to remove. It’s vulnerable to heat, and since it doesn’t cure at room temperature, even the slightest impact can reduce it to a shapeless mess.

After taking a mold, the Yuto prototype is torn apart—reset. To make space for the next work.

I live in Korea, where saying “no” is rarely accepted. Even when you say “no,” it’s often taken as “yes.” In 2017, once again, I couldn’t say no. I didn’t want to drain myself in an even more exhausting and uncomfortable situation. So I shut my eyes and let it pass.

I tear up the Yuto and mold it into small people. Every time I make a small person, I whisper a tiny “no.” I say “no” out loud—300 times. These figures are built from our resolve, shaped into Yuto prototypes. But I won’t cast them into molds. I’ll leave them just as they are.

Please carry these people—these pledges made from Yuto—with care, so they don’t get crushed.

Read their words aloud.

References