Formally,
Oh traverses the boundaries of photography, video, installation, and
performance. Meeting Time invites audience
participation through documentary photographs and postcards,
while Where He Meets Him infiltrates the viewer’s
sense of smell and body through the burning of incense. This sensory expansion
exemplifies the artist’s orientation toward privileging process and experience
over material results.
In Lost
and Found, the artist utilized the institutional setting of the
Biennale, turning the act of visitors submitting and reclaiming lost objects
into an artwork. Photographs, objects, and records were juxtaposed, revealing
how ordinary actions could be transformed into artistic events within
institutional contexts. Meanwhile, the Name
Project series appropriated social sign systems such as
advertising trucks, billboards, and posters to occupy public space, bringing
voices outside institutions into institutional frames.
Security
Guard and I(2014) and Reciprocal Viewing
System(2015) transformed surveillance cameras—originally tools of
monitoring and control—into artistic media for documenting collaboration,
participation, and difference. Likewise, the posters of Name
Project: Ivan Party functioned not merely as prints but as
social devices, visualizing collective existence through layered signatures
while simultaneously protecting individual anonymity.
Even in
later works such as My Own Blind Spots(2015), the
artist continues to explore gaze, surveillance, space, and identity through the
metaphor of the “blind spot.” By marking areas invisible to CCTV with pink
tape, Oh reveals the limits of technological apparatus and imagines new spaces
for personal desires and differences within surveillance society.