Hansol Ryu, Pimple, 2022, Latex, silicone, cotton swab, stainless, 38.4x15x15cm. Installation view of 《Sticky》 (MUMOKJEOK, 2022) ©MUMOKJEOK

The two-person exhibition 《Sticky》 by Hansol Ryu and Lee Naha is held from August 4 to August 24 at Gallery MUMOKJEOCK in Seochon, Seoul. The exhibition title, “sticky,” refers both to the adhesion of content and form and to the viscosity of materiality, functioning as a key term that binds the exhibition as a whole.

The modernist project of separating content and form and demanding that the two be appropriate to one another has often been criticized. It has been criticized for not dealing with life, for pursuing “art for art’s sake,” or for being detached (or believed to be detached) from the world. Yet whether one is an anti-formalist making that claim, or a formalist who is the target of such criticism, both have deployed rhetoric premised on the separation of content and form.


Exhibition poster of 《Sticky》 © MUMOKJEOCK

By contrast, this exhibition seeks to approach, as closely as possible, a state in which content and form cling so tightly together that they cannot be separated. Like wild Jirisan honey stuck to your hands, freshly pressed gum stuck to the pavement, or a piece of caramel lodged firmly behind the front teeth, the exhibition aims to show “the fusion of two worlds” (NCT 127, “Sticker”), where form adheres to content, or content adheres to form.

Meanwhile, under today’s dominant visuality symbolized by smart devices and Black Mirror, most people discriminate and experience the world through the smart devices and screens they own. Images on screens grow ever more realistic, yet, like seawater that makes one thirstier the more one drinks, they cultivate a hunger for materiality that is never satisfied no matter how much one looks. The popularity on platforms like YouTube of mukbang videos or videos of people handling slime follows the same trajectory.

In this context, the exhibition becomes a site for critiquing contemporary visuality through an immersion in materiality—or, more precisely, in materiality with viscosity.

References