Exhibition view © O’Newwall

Since October 18, the solo exhibition 《Music from a decaying country》 by artist Choe Sooryeon (also spelled Choe Suyeon) has been on view at O’Newwall E’juheon in Seongbuk-dong, Seoul. In this exhibition, the artist translates images and texts borrowed from East Asian—particularly Chinese—classic films and folklore collections onto the canvas. Meanwhile, on one side of the exhibition wall, doctrinal texts from folk religions, whose credibility remains uncertain, are also displayed.

Choe Sooryeon, Seongun Study, 2018, Masking Fluid on Wall, Dimensions Variable ©Choe Sooryeon

This approach serves as a means to express the artist’s state of "unknowing," a mixture of estrangement, dissonance, and curiosity that arises from encountering cultural narratives she has grown up with in the East Asian sphere. The depiction of celestial beings such as the Jade Maiden or the Queen Mother of the West, rendered in oil paint—a medium traditionally associated with Western painting—functions as a crucial strategy that makes familiar imagery appear unfamiliar. At the same time, it evokes the paradoxical experience of discovering an exotic quality within one's own cultural heritage.

By exploring themes of the "reproduced Orient" and the "experienced/consumed classics," Choe positions herself as an observer of both time and generation. 《Music from a decaying country》 continues until November 10.

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