Exhibition poster ©Sungkok Museum of Art

This exhibition goes beyond a simple record of moments shaped by light and earth, exploring how time is accumulated and how acts of virtuous artistic practice are preserved and remembered.

“Jeokseon” (積善) refers to the accumulation of good deeds for the benefit of the world. The family precept of “Jeokseon,” bestowed by King Seonjo, the 14th king of the Joseon Dynasty, has long been upheld at the Nongam Jongtaek. While the concept of “Jeokseon” may feel unfamiliar today, the exhibition reinterprets it in a contemporary context, emphasizing how sustained repetition has comforted individuals and communities alike.

Photographer Lee Gapchul, who has long recorded moments of rupture and transience through dense worlds of ink-like blackness, offers a distinctive aesthetic experience through painterly, highly concentrated sensory elements that flow like ink. His works render the nature and accumulated time of Nongam Jongtaek in richly layered monochrome tones.

Ceramic artist Kim Seongcheol, who produces traditional oil lamps, engages in repetitive practices that mark the birth and extinction of light. By combining traditional techniques with contemporary sensibilities, he pursues form, function, and aesthetic beauty simultaneously.

Through the exhibition 《The Layer of Virtue》, visitors are invited to experience how these two artists explore the accumulation of time through light and earth, and how virtuous artistic acts are practiced and embodied.

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