Installation view of 《Peripheral Youth》 © Project Space SARUBIA

Lee Eunsil, an ink painter who has openly revealed taboo subjects in Korean society such as sexuality, excretion, and the expression of desire, begins in this exhibition to address the implicit social norms that fail to accommodate diversity and the constrained boundaries of life.

This body of work also constitutes a process of recognizing the structural framework that defines her as an unmarried female artist in her late twenties within Korean society, and of positioning her own identity through that awareness.


Installation view of 《Peripheral Youth》 © Project Space SARUBIA

The artist visualizes social mechanisms as a “thin veil,” moving across the boundaries of inside and outside to expose suppressed and distorted psychological states. Ambiguous forms concealed behind veils of water, light, and wind; architectural structures that indirectly metaphorize the institution of marriage; animals and sexual organs representing a youth unable to fully emit its vital energy—these dualistic symbols are objects observed from the artist’s contemplative perspective.

Obscured by the veil, unable to see clearly, and uncertain of where they stand or which direction they are heading, they become representations of “peripheral youth” that has lost its sense of orientation.


Installation view of 《Peripheral Youth》 © Project Space SARUBIA

These works simultaneously articulate the artist’s statement on a “youth that is no longer young,” ambiguously positioned within the covert framework of social norms, while also reflecting her perspective on the world.

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