Installation view of 《COPROLITHE!》 © Mimesis Art Museum

The exhibition space of Mimesis Art Museum is divided into two wings. Seulgi Lee designates the right wing as ‘Inside’ and lays out ten quilted blanket works, while the left wing is titled ‘Outside’ and presents sculptures of coprolites made from clay.

Titled ‘Blanket Project U’, ‘Inside’ consists of quilted blanket works that visualize the meanings of ten Korean proverbs through geometric patterns. The forms embedded in the ten blankets reveal their meanings through the five traditional Korean colors based on the yin-yang and five elements philosophy, as well as through the texture of quilting. For example, the work based on the proverb Killing a Chicken and Passing It Off as a Duck renders a rhombus and a duck’s foot in hemispherical forms.

The ground is quilted horizontally, while the duck’s foot is quilted vertically. A Drop in the Bucket features a pink bird’s foot shape pressed with a red circle. Lick the Watermelon. = Rush job. presents a clear contrast between a green oval and a red rectangle. The only black-and-white work in contrast to the vividly colored proverb series, Be crushed by a pair of scissors. = Not being able to wake up right after having a nightmare., is the first piece in the upcoming ‘Nightmare’ series. In order to render the meanings of the proverbs more distinctly through concise colors and forms, all works were produced in collaboration with master quilt artisans from Tongyeong.


Installation view of 《COPROLITHE!》 © Mimesis Art Museum

‘Outside’ presents Seulgi Lee’s new work COPROLITHE!. Made from clay collected from the riverside in Paju where the museum is located, the work consists of coprolites—fossilized excrement—shaped like human-sized dinosaur feces. Inspired by the French curse word merde (shit), the artist proposes coprolithe as a new form of “curse.”

The coprolite thus becomes both a fossil of excrement and a fossil of a curse. While coprolites are serious entities that contain the meaning of time and the history of the earth, offering insight into the ecology of long-extinct animals, they also retain the present-day humor of being, ultimately, excrement. By installing these fossilized feces in the museum, Seulgi Lee raises questions about the value system of high art.

The stark contrast between ‘Inside’ and ‘Outside’ connects to Seulgi Lee’s earlier works, in which everyday objects are allowed to “play” on their own, fostering intimate and playful forms of communication. Viewers may feel that if they were to sleep under these blankets, the stories embedded in the proverbs might appear in their dreams. Just as proverbs embody the wisdom of a community, coprolites resemble the embodied spirit of a region’s distant past.

The traditions embedded in the quilted blankets and the primordial state contained in the coprolites consciously resist the rational social critique and scientific frameworks often associated with Western contemporary art. Instead, the artist focuses intensely on folk beliefs, pre-rational and communal elements, traditions, and the magical.

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