Installation view of 《Ironclad Fragger》 (Alterside, 2023) © Kim Yesul

In the exhibition 《Ironclad Fragger》, Kim Yesul brings in the standard form of coming-of-age boys’ narratives mass-produced in past subcultures. The protagonist, who for some reason is given the fate of having to struggle, passes through a typical structure in which she grows through training that guarantees enhancement and achieves victory over the figure designated as the enemy.

The sequence of the video also corresponds to the editorial policy of Tadasu Nagano, the founding editor-in-chief of the boys’ manga magazine Jump, who incorporated the elements of effort, victory, and friendship.

In the story, the protagonist Seoyeon loses her father Junghoon to Sungjin, who plots the destruction of Earth, and through coding lessons, she defeats Minjun in the Block Code Arena Championship, protects the peace of Earth, and becomes friends with him.

Kim Yesul, Sub zero excidian, 2023, Video, color, sound, 3min 7sec. © Kim Yesul

《Ironclad Fragger》, in which lingering codes from a story that is no longer new are mixed together, touches the immature self of childhood that remains in our declining bodies. The figures of characters who will remain forever children on the screen stimulate a strange nostalgia, but it is difficult to fully accept, as we once did, a landscape in which only problems that can be overcome exist.

In this way, the passage installed in the exhibition space functions both as an entrance that induces immersion into a worldview and as an exit that returns us to reality, reflecting our double position.

Kim Yesul, Tech titan 2023, Video, color, sound, 3min 38sec. © Kim Yesul

When a child learns that Santa is a figure born from a lie that takes place within a limited period of time, the child finally becomes an adult. Santa, who rides a reindeer and delivers gifts, functions as a dead story that makes the child feel for the first time the melancholy brought by individual maturity.

Although we want to look forward to the gifts placed by our bedside, from the moment we already know of his absence and recognize that our only protector is ourselves, we come to look at the world with a descending sensation. Yet this lie is endlessly inherited as a story for children.

Just as “Fragger,” the name of the robot Seoyeon pilots in place of her dead father, means a person who kills a superior officer with a grenade, the artist deletes adults within fiction and continues the lie for children. However, if we consider that the battle between Seoyeon and Minjun occurs with each serving as the agent of their respective fathers, this can be read not as a lie but as a kind of spoiler for the future they will face.

In this way, 《Ironclad Fragger》 is a story about us, trapped in a loop in which we must weave codes to effectively discipline children not as new protagonists, but as substitutes.

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