Roh Choong
Hyun has long focused on everyday urban spaces—such as the Han River Park,
zoos, and the Hongjecheon stream—to capture the emotional resonance and traces
of lived experience embedded within the landscapes of life. His ‘Prosaic
Landscape’ (2005–) series is a representative body of work that
persistently documents desolate, overlooked spaces within the city,
particularly the barren stretches of Han River Park.
These
scenes function not merely as depictions of place, but as devices that reflect
on emotional undercurrents and prompt viewers to contemplate the human
condition within familiar but neglected environments. Works like The
Rainy Season(2008) and A Night in the Reservoir(2013)
layer sensory memory over physical impressions of place, inviting viewers into
a stratified emotional experience.
Beginning
in 2006, his ‘Zari’ series constructs a paradox of place by depicting
vacant zoo enclosures, thereby asserting presence through absence. In paintings
like Horn(2006) and Circus(2006), Roh
foregrounds the artificial and ambiguous character of modernity by removing the
animals—the protagonists—from the frame, thus highlighting the performative
absurdity of these man-made environments.
His solo
exhibition 《Closed-door Room》(2009, Project Space Sarubia) expands this inquiry into social and
political realms, translating historically repressive sites into the conceptual
framework of the “closed room.” Roh's paintings, therefore, are not simply
landscapes to be seen—they are visual reflections on memory, emotion, and the
lived spatial experience of the human subject.