Dongkyung Kwak, Repossessed Vehicles, Sabuk-eup, Jeongseon-gun, 2024 © Dongkyung Kwak

Gangwon Land, established with public funds to revive the economy of a former mining region, is home to the only casino in Korea where Korean nationals are allowed to gamble. When visitors play games there, they accumulate points called “comp” in proportion to the money and time they invest.

These points cannot be used for casino games, but they can be used like cash at Gangwon Land, as well as at nearby accommodations, restaurants, and shops. The official name of this payment method, derived from the English word “complimentary,” meaning preferential or free, is High1 Points.

On the surface, it looks like a win-win plan: casino visitors enjoy accumulating extra points, and local businesses benefit from the revitalization of the commercial district. In reality, however, these comps are often traded in the form of “comp cashing,” a method used by those addicted to casino gambling to secure cash. They sell points at a cheap price, reinvest the money into casino gambling, and then cash out the newly accumulated comps again in an endless cycle.

Comp cashing is difficult to regulate, and merchants, for their part, demand that the usage limit for comps be raised in the name of economic revitalization. It is a continuous dilemma. Like the odds of hitting the jackpot in a slot machine, where three identical symbols must appear, a solution seems equally unlikely.

Dongkyung Kwak’s 'Slot' series visually traces the underside and malfunction of the local economy mediated by these comps. The regional changes that emerged in the process of industrial transition from coal to tourism are quite contradictory. Coal generates money through extraction itself, while tourism has a different industrial structure in that investment must come first before it can become profitable.

There have also been many trials and errors in the process of reinvesting casino profits into the tourism industry. For example, even when a local fairy tale is created to attract tourists and a theme park suited to it is built, the project may fail to gain popularity and fall into disrepair as an eyesore. Conversely, a former miners’ bathhouse that had long been abandoned like an eyesore suddenly becomes an awkward tourist site after gaining popularity as a filming location for a famous drama.

Dreaming of becoming a tourist destination on the scale of Las Vegas while holding onto the glory of the past, yet faced with the harsh reality of a small city, the landscapes witnessed between that city and the people who came to the casino dreaming of sudden wealth only to remain there like ghosts are unnatural, unfamiliar, and at the same time lonely. Much like the way repossessed cars resemble rows of cars parked for a sunny suburban outing.

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