Installation view of 《Ghost in the Machine》 (Space Cadalogs, 2022) ©Space Cadalogs

In the solo exhibition 《Ghost in the Machine》, the series of the same title by Dawha Jeon is a body of work in which the artist collects and organizes so-called “cursed images”—a category of meme-images—and transforms them into paintings.


Installation view of 《Ghost in the Machine》 (Space Cadalogs, 2022) ©Space Cadalogs

Jeon perceives cultural-historical value in “cursed images,” which are snapshots taken in the old world before digital images began to remediate reality following the advent of smartphones. She seeks to rescue these images from the lukewarm fate of disappearance that now befalls born-digital images, which are produced at an enormous scale and speed.


Installation view of 《Ghost in the Machine》 (Space Cadalogs, 2022) ©Space Cadalogs

Low-resolution digital images that have lost data during their circulation are enlarged by the artist according to a certain ratio and transformed into paintings, re-presented as physical, material bodies. Even after these images are converted into paintings, Jeon remains conscious that innumerable deteriorated, replicated “sisters” of these images continue to circulate and drift like ghosts in the ongoing process of sharing. Through this, she envisions the vast circulation of an image network interlinked with painting itself.

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