Although the spirit is invisible, it governs our lives, and spiritual forms—material yet imbued with ritualistic meaning—control our consciousness through the mythological meanings embedded within them. The artist seeks to give form to the invisible wishes embedded within visible, realistic forms. The ‘Persornal Rinual’ series, which contains various wishes through imagined poetic landscapes, expresses spiritual culture that has acquired ritualistic meaning through human mental activity.
Through poetic landscapes that traverse the boundary between reality and the ideal, Jeongkeun Lee’s ‘Persornal Rinual’ expresses human hopes, desires, and aspirations as grotesque yet fantastical installation works that pray for fortune and avert misfortune. Through this ritualistic act of ‘personal rites,’ which invoke supernatural beings or mysterious forces to ward off disasters and bring blessings, the artist expresses vanishing spiritual values.
‘Persornal Rinual,’ a mythological space where fantasy and ideal are exquisitely combined, is an installation work that represents the landscape of the mind that seeks to realize imagination.
The artist attempts various approaches to express ‘jesa,’ one of the disappearing traditional cultural practices, as an imagined poetic landscape. One such attempt is the use of transparent vinyl gloves. These gloves, associated with the ritualistic meaning of “repelling insects,” are material objects that carry spiritual significance like talismans. By integrating the simple meaning of “repelling insects” with elements such as water, air, and wind, the artist transforms them into a captivating space imbued with magical meanings of fantasy and ideal.
Transparent vinyl gloves, as materials fused with nature, create a magical ritual space intended to resolve human fortune and misfortune, and the artist sensorially constructs a mythological space of blessing and protection that expresses various wishes of life like a beautiful poem.
Through installation works composed of various symbolic elements such as transparent vinyl gloves, dead trees, and the sky, the artist creates a ritual space that comforts and protects the exhausted lives of modern people. The ‘Persornal Rinual’ series, which embodies an idealized landscape of the mind, connects the past, present, and future.
‘Persornal Rinual’ is an installation work that reinterprets the disappearing traditional form of ‘jesa’ in a contemporary way, crossing the boundary between reality and imagination, and transcending the boundary of time. The artist’s ‘Persornal Rinual,’ which installs the contemplative landscape of the mind as a poetic space beyond reality, can be seen as one way of continuing Korea’s fading spiritual culture through the form of contemporary art.
Bang Jinwon (Director of SEOJIN ARTSPACE / Adjunct Professor, Department of Art and Cultural Welfare, Kangnam University)