Installation view of 《No Shadow Saber》 (Hapjungjigu, 2017) ©Hapjungjigu

By wielding a constantly morphing blade—the “No Shadow Saber”—to cut sculptures and reveal their hidden internal cross-sections, the artist reassembles the fragments to question how three-dimensional objects are perceived. This can be understood as Choi’s response to an era in which even sculpture is easily flattened into images.


Installation view of 《No Shadow Saber》 (Hapjungjigu, 2017) ©Hapjungjigu

By extracting cut fragments and deliberately fragmenting sculptures to expose their cross-sections, Choi produces works whose original forms are difficult to reconstruct. This process compels viewers to trace prior forms and focus on modes of perception themselves. The artist describes this as a “trainable mode of perception,” offering a provisional breakthrough for contemporary sculptural inquiry.

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