“Ever since I was a student, I’ve been deeply interested in new forms of art. I was curious about many different fields, and naturally I made all kinds of attempts. Trying, failing, revising, and trying again…. In many ways, the process was closer to research than to what is conventionally called art.”

These words by Sung Rok Choi (43) encapsulate the experimental spirit that has consistently driven his practice. Although formally trained in painting and fine art through both undergraduate and graduate studies, the path he ultimately pursued resembles an unpaved road rather than an orthodox trajectory. His graduation work revolved around mechanical imagery and games, and for his first solo exhibition he even built robots by hand.

His history of enjoying collaborative projects with scientists likewise reveals much about the identity of his practice. What he ultimately arrived at through these explorations was an entirely new realm: the visual phenomena manifested within scientific fields—in other words, virtual space itself. It is precisely upon this stage that media artist Sung Rok Choi continues to construct entirely new narratives, whether understood as art or as research.


The Artist © Sung Rok Choi

A Painter Escaping the Flat Surface, Stirring Multidimensional Space

Sung Rok Choi’s interest in discovering new “containers” for art began around the time he took a leave of absence following his military service. Having already felt, during his university years, that he was “overwhelmed by the weight of painting itself and gradually distanced from school life,” he found himself in need of a new opportunity.

His wide-ranging interests, experiments, and experiences became acts of searching—efforts to grasp that opportunity. He encountered moving images while following documentary film crews, and through assisting with stage design he also gained exposure to various forms of installation art.

Choi recalls, “Although I was a student majoring in painting, I was always more interested in new forms of art that moved beyond flat painting. After spending my leave of absence experiencing all kinds of things in different places, when I returned to school, painting felt even less interesting to me.”

As Choi gradually encountered worlds transcending the flat plane, he eventually arrived at science. He became fascinated by the way scientists structure theories through research processes, and was captivated by the possibility of connecting those processes to artistic creation in order to visualize narratives.

This distinctive artistic perspective became especially evident in his first solo exhibition. Among the works from that period, Choi singles out The Rocver Project–The First Landing as “personally the most memorable work.” Conceived as an homage to NASA’s Mars exploration robot Rover, the project imagined a fictional space-exploration robot through which the artist projected his own fantasies.

“It was literally a project about building a ‘robot.’ I attended private academies and received help from friends in engineering fields, but it definitely wasn’t easy. The robot was built in a rather reckless and illogical way. From the very first day of the exhibition, there were mechanical malfunctions and program errors everywhere. (laughs) Although the project forced me through countless trials and errors, it was extremely meaningful. It became the starting point that ultimately shaped the artistic perspective I have today.”


Sung Rok Choi, The Rocver Project : First landing, 2006-2007 © Sung Rok Choi

Following his first solo exhibition, Choi continued to move fluidly between the realms of science and art. Through this process, he became increasingly attentive to the visual phenomena emerging within scientific fields and to the narrative power generated by sequences of events unfolding within them.

The keywords “virtual space” and “narrative” gradually became inscribed at the center of his practice. Choi explains, “As the era evolved, digital domains expanded, and the boundaries between reality and virtual worlds became increasingly blurred. Watching these transformations unfold, I became deeply absorbed in the landscapes and stories produced through such phenomena.”

This is also why he identifies himself specifically as a “digital animation artist”: the methods of digital animation—which connect virtual digital images and narratives through VR, AR, high-resolution animation rendering, and simulation technologies—align precisely with the artistic vision he pursues.


Storytelling Within Virtual Space in 《Art in Metaverse》

The expansion of human vision made possible through advances in computing technology and image-rendering techniques—and the new narrative experiences made available through that expansion—are fully embodied in 《Art in Metaverse》, the exhibition that opened last month on the 21st at Understand Avenue in Seongsu-dong. The exhibition offers a stage through which the world of Sung Rok Choi’s practice may be experienced in its entirety.

For this exhibition, Choi presents two works. One of them, Genesis Canyon, is a 3D animation created using a natural simulation program, constructing a primordial fantasy landscape within a virtual 3D environment. The work is characterized by both the grandeur reminiscent of creation myths and the dynamic movements and expressions endowed upon its lifeforms.

As suggested by its subtitle, “the valley where all senses begin,” the work was conceived as a space through which viewers might encounter sensations inaccessible within ordinary daily life.

“I wanted to create a contemporary digital version of mythological narratives. I tried to express various elemental forces that constitute the world—electricity, fire, wind, water—in digital form. Most landscapes within conventional digital spaces mirror real-world environments, but my work attempts to construct an entirely independent world within virtual space itself.”


Sung Rok Choi, Genesis Canyon, 2021, Digital animation media facade, 5 min 30 sec © Sung Rok Choi

The second work, Great Chain of Being, is a 2D animation that unfolds a narrative concerning the structures of the world and the relationships and cycles among the elements that compose it. As suggested by its title, “Great Chain of Being,” the work vividly presents the structures and relations constituting the world through a hierarchical or stratified order.

Where earlier philosophers once defined the hierarchy of the world through God at the summit, followed by angels, humans, animals, plants, and elemental substances, Choi reinterprets this order through the lens of contemporary society by replacing those categories with robots, machines, humans, animals, and digital entities.

The stories unfolding among these beings are presented through a systematic landscape resembling a vast factory-like mechanism.

Choi explains, “I wanted to project contemporary digital culture onto the kinds of worlds earlier philosophers attempted to analyze, while also incorporating various landscapes into the work. The piece developed through imagining how processes of creation and extinction might be defined in the present or future, and how such systems might operate within virtual space.”


Sung Rok Choi, Great Chain of Being, 2019, 2D animation, color, sound, 9 min 50 sec © Sung Rok Choi

 Metaverse as an Infinite Expansion of Territory… Anticipating Experiences on an Entirely Different Level

The scope of Sung Rok Choi’s artistic practice, centered on exploring narratives within virtual space, continues to expand in direct proportion to the rapid development of virtual technologies themselves.

Since 2004, he has actively participated in more than thirty solo and group exhibitions. Beginning with his selection for the Pittsburgh Art Center Solo Exhibition Open Call in 2010, his career has been marked by numerous recognitions, including the Grand Prize at the 8th AHL Foundation Visual Art Competition (2011), selection for SeMA’s Emerging Artist Support Program (2015), the Excellence Award at the 2nd VH Award (2016), and selection for a solo exhibition through the Seoullo Media Canvas Open Call (2018).

Alongside his artistic practice, Choi has also been committed to educating younger generations of artists, teaching at institutions including Hongik University, Sejong University, and Sungshin Women's University.


Sung Rok Choi, Scroll Down Journey, 2015, HD 2D animation, 6 min 20 sec © Sung Rok Choi

Sung Rok Choi’s artistic world is expected to expand even further through its encounter with the recently “hot” phenomenon of the metaverse.

Choi explains, “The metaverse continues to broaden both its nature and territory as it becomes increasingly interconnected with blockchain technology, cryptocurrency, and NFTs,” adding that “both artists creating art and audiences experiencing it will be able to encounter entirely different layers of reality within the metaverse.”

This broader cultural context also informs the hopes surrounding ArtsCloud, the platform behind the 《Art in Metaverse》 exhibition, which aims to function as something more than a simple exhibition platform. The fluidity and expansiveness of digital art have become far too dynamic to be confined solely within traditional exhibition halls or museums.

More than ever, there is a growing need for platforms capable of encompassing not only artists’ creative processes and outcomes, but also their connections with broader audiences.

“When you think about it, most of our visual experiences in contemporary life already take place through digital screens. These experiences inevitably influence our lives, and that influence will only continue to expand. My role, as an artist, is to imagine those influences and create new narratives from them. My explorations will continue moving forward, and I hope that through them we can all encounter experiences that are more meaningful and more compelling.”

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