Eugene
Jung has explored ways of reflecting reality by navigating disaster images and
virtual imagery circulated through mass media. In her first solo exhibition, 《At least, Realistic》 (Site of Chuohonsen
Gallery, Tokyo, 2019), she reconstructed the ruins of the Great East Japan
Earthquake using fragile materials such as plastic boxes and paper in works
like Dustwall(2017), blurring the boundaries between real
disaster images and fictional scenes. Through this, she critically examined the
disturbances between reality and its reproductions when disasters are consumed
through media.
In 《Pirated Future+Doomsday Garden》 (Art Sonje
Center, 2019), Jung documented visits to disaster sites like Chernobyl and
Fukushima, capturing the process by which images of devastation are replicated
and consumed through an artificial jungle installation and documentary video. Pirated
Future presents the rift between the chain of media images and real
landscapes, while the artificial plant forest of Doomsday Garden
immerses the audience into an indeterminate post-apocalyptic space.
This
approach expanded during the pandemic in her solo exhibition 《Run》 (Museumhead, 2022), which dealt with a
world where disaster had become part of daily life. Her work Waves of
Wreckage (2024), exhibited at the Busan Biennale, metaphorically
reconstructs a world where even spaces of liberation, like a pirate ship facing
unfavorable winds and currents, ultimately wreck under the unstable forces of
contemporary capitalism.
In the
recent group exhibition 《Nostalgics on
realities》 (Thaddaeus Ropac, 2024), her ‘Earthmovers’
(2024) series addressed the duality of collapse and reconstruction, closely
observing the uncertain world following disaster. From the beginning, Jung has
consistently combined narratives and images of real disasters with variations
of virtuality and reality, reflecting a deep engagement with the structures of
contemporary media perception. Her recent work has shifted from criticizing
disaster imagery to actively constructing narratives of survival and
reconstruction through sculptural language.