Exhibition poster © Prompt Project

Prompt Project opened the new year with its first exhibition, 《Momentary Momentum》, held from January 18 to February 16, 2024, featuring five young artists. Although each artist presents a distinct perspective, they share a common focus on the “moment” and “instant” of memory, expanding their individual narratives and discourses through the eruption of images.

Artist Yubin Koo, who begins her work from the perception of images, captures subjects that continuously shift according to the feeling of light, using blending techniques to evoke a dreamlike atmosphere. By emphasizing the shapes of light, she creates accidental yet intriguing abstract forms. Her clear, bright color palette functions flexibly as a vessel for the residual traces of her emotions.

Artist Minseok Son interprets still life—“still life, yet ongoing life”—as an allegory for the persistence of existence. He depicts motionless objects from daily life that people rarely assign meaning to, focusing on the natural blending and interpenetration that occur among them. His paintings capture the quiet exchanges between objects, highlighting fleeting harmonies and presenting collected scenes through a contemplative lens.

Artist Kinam Yeom transforms the phenomena of light waves, their remnants, and the afterimages left on the retina into flashes of form situated within an amorphous space he calls the “prism.” The intersecting lines and planes that traverse vertically and horizontally generate a spatial sense, while the accumulation of color encapsulates temporality. By abstracting fragments of subjective emotion perceived from a fleeting movement, he reconstructs a series of visual narratives that stem from memory and experience.

Artist Jieun Oh visualizes personal moments and everyday scenes, leaving them as luminous pictorial fragments. The accumulation of pigment produces a dazzling aura, where melting and blending colors form dynamic rhythms. Her paintings vividly embody refined memories, projecting layers of afterimages and emotional echoes. Upon closer inspection, one can sense the transformation of emotion into a tactile sensibility, experiencing an aesthetic moment that transcends verbal expression.

In contrast, artist Dawha Jeon approaches the flood of memes and visual play in the digital age through her own iconic framework. Her exploration of meme images—multiplying exponentially across social media, often obscuring one another—questions their impact and meaning. She integrates the rapid speed and immaterial lightness of digital images into her practice, “reformatting” them into her own distinctive visual style. Her work cannot simply be described as “fun” or “fresh”; rather, it evokes a deeper elevation of consciousness, inviting viewers to experience the non-real nature and mimetic essence of her subjects.

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