Installation view of 《Epitaphs》 (TSA NY, 2023) ©DOOSAN Art Center

DOOSAN Gallery, in collaboration with Tiger Strikes Asteroid New York (TSA NY), presents a solo exhibition by the South Korean contemporary artist Eusung Lee, whose primary medium is sculpture. As part of its mission to broaden the landscape of contemporary Korean art, strengthen its international presence, and provide a practical platform for overseas advancement, DOOSAN Gallery continues to expand and diversify its “International Program.”

As one of the major initiatives within this program, Lee’s first overseas solo exhibition, 《Epitaphs》, will be held at TSA NY in New York from October 21 through November 19, 2023.

Installation view of 《Epitaphs》 (TSA NY, 2023) ©DOOSAN Art Center

Eusung Lee is one of the most compelling contemporary artists working today, creating three-dimensional works that heighten the sense of bodily presence and evoke narrative potential. In a world where the boundaries between virtual and real are increasingly blurred and rapidly digitized, Lee devotes herself to the physical richness of sculpture, real space, and the tactile engagement with materials.

She combines diverse and seemingly incompatible materials—wood, clay, metal, paper, readymade objects, fabric, thread, and more—allowing them to collide in her own distinctive manner, while foregrounding the tactile qualities inherent in the making process. Her work embraces the lineage of classical sculpture while inserting a sudden, contemporary sensibility, constructing a unique and compelling visual language.

In 《Epitaphs》, Lee’s sculptures emerge as “epitaphs”—condensed and inscribed embodiments of bodies and memories that are destined to disappear. Like an abrupt yet succinct exclamation, an epitaph is brief but carries within it a myriad of memories, relationships, and emotions that evoke the lived time of a body.

Through carving into solid materials and confronting dissonant symbols and substances, Lee’s sculptures summon both the artist’s personal narratives and the collective physical memories and sensations of those experiencing rapid societal change. These disparate elements call out to one another without order, pulling them into the present moment.

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