Installation view © Sahng-up Gallery

The world exists along the axes of reality and thought. Then, where does painting reside—and where does the painter stand?

Born in the 1990s, Minjo Kim, Juan Oh, and Sejin Hong have lived through the shifts of media that define their era. They are a generation that has experienced and internalized the technological transitions from analog to digital, and now from digital to the age of AI. At the center of this era—where the physical world gives way to the virtual—they continue to paint. Through this primal act of “painting,” they perceive and sense the world.


Installation view © Sahng-up Gallery

In our present age, humanity spends more time with the beings and objects that exist within screens than in the material world. The dualism that separated the body and mind has evolved into a system that relocates the mind into the virtual, aiming to transcend the constraints of gender, nationality, and language in pursuit of freedom. Contemporary artists have responded to this condition by actively engaging with subjects rooted in virtual environments such as games, films, and the metaverse.

This may be understood as both a challenge to the authoritative systems that once dominated the physical world and an acknowledgment of new forms of subjugation that emerge with technological expansion. How, then, can painting speak within this context—and what can it still say?

This exhibition explores such questions through the perspectives of the participating artists, suggesting that painting, even before addressing the virtual as a subject, has always existed within the negotiation between reality and perception.

References