Installation view ©Small Museum Bogugot

Omyo Cho’s solo exhibition, 《Punch-Drunk》, is currently being held at Small Museum Bogugot, located at 373 Munsusan-ro, Wolgot-myeon, Gimpo-si, Gyeonggi-do, Korea.

Operated by the Gimpo Cultural Foundation, Small Museum Bogugot was remodeled from a former civil defense evacuation facility. Since its opening in 2017, the museum has hosted a wide range of exhibitions—including curated shows, exchange exhibitions, and outcome-sharing presentations—that reinterpret the region’s values and characteristics through the lens of contemporary art.

However, since its establishment, this marks the museum’s very first solo exhibition. It is also the first time the museum is presenting an installation-based exhibition. This decision reflects a high regard for the artistic merit of Omyo Cho’s work. The Gimpo Cultural Foundation also considered the potential of the exhibition as a medium to foster elevated cultural engagement.

Cho’s exhibition evokes a distinctly meditative atmosphere. Upon entering the space, one experiences repeated openings and closings of individual moments for contemplation and reflection. The gallery, designed to resemble a small movie theater, presents a contemporary narrative with “us” as the protagonist. Visitors are naturally drawn to imagine a personal storyline—spanning past, present, and future—into which their own identity is projected.

According to the artist, 《Punch-Drunk》 is a visualization of how we are reshaped by memory, imagined through the material forms of intelligent beings living in a distant future. The exhibition takes place in a time when life on Earth has become uninhabitable due to irreversible climate change.

“The exhibition is set in a future where life on the surface is no longer possible due to extreme climate change,” Cho explains. “In this unique bunker-like space of Bogugot Museum, visitors can encounter stories drifting in from a world they’ve never visited.”

For this exhibition, Cho presents several new works, including a 3-minute single-channel video titled Where the World Isn’t (2023); a variable glass installation titled Endless Waves and Ice Passing By (2023); and an aluminum object-based work titled Selected Foreign Entities (2023). These recent works by a compelling artist offer a rare encounter in an unconventional space.

The exhibition is open through September 22, and admission is free.

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