Yongseok Oh, Vanishing, 2011 © Yongseok Oh

Yongseok Oh attempts to communicate between himself and the outside world through themes grounded in universal and everyday experiences familiar to anyone. However, although the subjects he addresses stem from shared human emotions—such as anxiety born from profound doubt, fear of death and violence, and guilt surrounding pleasure—his works, contrary to his intentions, often confront viewers with an ambiguity that resists easy understanding.

This ambiguity arises because the forms and colors presented in the works contain layers of metaphor and symbolism, while realistic and concrete images sourced from film stills and old photo books are rearranged and transformed alongside text. In other words, superficial narratives concerning universal aspects of human life and human nature are recreated into theatrical and distinctive forms through the artist’s various artistic devices, allowing viewers to interpret the works in multiple ways according to their own experiences.


Yongseok Oh, The Dark Era, 2011 © Yongseok Oh

The artist explains that the title of this exhibition, 《Tu》, serves as a clue that helps viewers understand his work more intuitively. The signifier 《Tu》, coined by the artist, refers to a parallel concept of “two”: when the subject is assumed to be “I,” it signifies the other, yet from the perspective of the other, it also becomes oneself. While the broader theme of the exhibition remains within the expansive framework of human life and human nature, its more specific focus narrows to the inner emotions derived from them—“hope and disillusionment, happiness and sorrow, love and hatred”—and the relationships formed with others through those emotions.

His two previous solo exhibitions, 《Michelangelo Antonioni ‘Blow Up’》 (2007, Gallery Jungmiso) and 《David Fincher ‘Panic room’》 (2002, Gallery HUT), both originating from homages to cinema, focused on sites of horrific incidents and accidents, presenting unstable emotions and signs of fear through multilayered perspectives. The artist primarily selected intensely sexual crimes such as affairs and sex-related offenses rather than public acts of violence, and from the position of observing both victims and perpetrators of death and violence, he particularly explored the desires, fears, and anxieties of the perpetrators.

In contrast, the present exhibition 《Tu》 shifts its focus away from the gaze of an observer looking outward and instead turns toward the relationship with the self. Although dealing with similar events, the works here embody the artist’s own desires rooted in more personal experiences.


Yongseok Oh, Faunus, 2011 © Yongseok Oh

Whereas the artist’s previous exhibitions borrowed dramatic narratives and imagery from cinema, the works in this exhibition stage personal and trivial narratives within scenes imbued with the atmosphere of rituals and ceremonies. However, rather than resembling solemn and rigid formal religious rites, these scenes evoke the feeling of a pagan festival akin to a Dionysian celebration. As a result, each work concludes not with realistic or concrete depictions of objects and figures, but with forms closer to fantasy or hallucination. Works such as Faunus, which references the forest god from Greek mythology, and Ritual are representative pieces that convey the overall atmosphere the artist seeks to create in the exhibition.

Meanwhile, paintings depicting the Hound of the Baskervilles or blazing fire function like gateways or signposts, much like sphinxes guarding the entrance to a temple. In addition, through the words written directly onto the walls by the artist, the exhibition acquires the nuance of an intriguing detective game in which viewers continuously search for clues to hidden crimes and traces of unresolved mysteries, as though moving through the pages of a detective novel.

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