Yongseok Oh, MIRROR #1, 2018, Oil on canvas, 194 x 259 cm © Yongseok Oh

Oh's paintings illustrate a mixture of emotions, which bursts out of the intimate and instinctive realms of humans. Desires and uneasiness that arise from relationships are often expressed in the form of pornographic images or through overlaid paint flowing down as if erupting and smeared. Rather than trying to achieve a clear narrative through the display of obvious images and figures, he pursues images abounding with abstract emotions. He says that the image itself can be the epidermis of beauty that remains after a moment of sensual excitement has ended.

His perspective is in opposition to viewing the work as something that contains beauty in it. Therefore, the sexuality that dominates the first impression of his painting does not come from a single image but from superimposed images-emotions that are created when secret but natural language, acts, and voices that kept are in silence between the layers within the epidermis are entangled.


Yongseok Oh, MIRROR #2, 2018, Oil on canvas, 194 x 259 cm © Yongseok Oh

Mirror #1 and Mirror #2, the two works presented to the 2018 Gwangju Biennale, are both different from but, in a way, similar to each other at the same time. Brush strokes that float freely on the black background and the paint sprinkled on the canvas deliver a sense of liveliness as if one's deeply repressed internal desire was squeezed out on the canvas to the last drop. Crossing lines and sprinkled paint on a monotone background faithfully represent the eruption of emotions. The pieces take the same structure, revealing that the two which looked different from each other, are actually the mirrors that reflect each other, as their titles ‘mirror’ suggest. They are also screens onto which numerous reflections refracted from a single story a projected.

The artist believes that the voices that resisted discrimination and hatred and urged coexistence and the other voices that oppressed and opposed them might have been derived from one voice. In the end, these works are the self-portrait of the bipolarized ego of the artist that struggles in the unbearable reality when he loses the vision of what he trusted before his eyes, and also the portraits of the audiences who stand in front of them.

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